summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/69589-0.txt12120
-rw-r--r--old/69589-0.zipbin244317 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69589-h.zipbin315576 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/69589-h/69589-h.htm14743
-rw-r--r--old/69589-h/images/cover.jpgbin59102 -> 0 bytes
8 files changed, 17 insertions, 26863 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1347173
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69589 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69589)
diff --git a/old/69589-0.txt b/old/69589-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 353dc52..0000000
--- a/old/69589-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12120 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook of To-morrow and to-morrow, by Stephen
-McKenna
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: To-morrow and to-morrow
- A novel
-
-Author: Stephen McKenna
-
-Release Date: December 20, 2022 [eBook #69589]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines, John Routh & the online Distributed Proofreaders
- Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
- BY STEPHEN McKENNA
-
- _NOVELS_:
-
- TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW
- VINDICATION
- THE COMMANDMENT OF MOSES
- SOLILOQUY
- THE CONFESSIONS OF A WELL-MEANING WOMAN
- THE SENSATIONALISTS:
- I _Lady Lilith_
- II _The Education of Eric Lane_
- III _The Secret Victory_
- SONIA MARRIED
- MIDAS AND SON
- NINETY-SIX HOURS’ LEAVE
- SONIA
- THE SIXTH SENSE
- SHEILA INTERVENES
- THE RELUCTANT LOVER
-
- * * * * *
-
- BY INTERVENTION OF PROVIDENCE
- WHILE I REMEMBER
- TEX: A CHAPTER IN THE LIFE OF ALEXANDER TEIXEIRA DE MATTOS
-
-
-
-
- TO-MORROW AND
- TO-MORROW . . .
-
- _A NOVEL_
-
- BY
- STEPHEN McKENNA
-
-
-
-
- BOSTON
- LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
- 1924
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1924_,
- BY STEPHEN MCKENNA.
-
-
- _All rights reserved_
-
- Published, October, 1924
-
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- MARION
-
-
-
-Three years ago, _The Secret Victory_ brought to an end the trilogy
-which I called _The Sensationalists_. This book and the antecedent
-volumes—_Lady Lilith_ and _The Education of Eric Lane_—described the
-fortunes of certain men and women who constituted part of the larger
-groups which I had approached in _Sonia, Midas and Son_ and _Sonia
-Married_.
-
-By the accident of birth, fortune or talent, “these our actors” were
-made to fill a position—before, during and after the war—which
-attracted to them more attention than was warranted by their historical
-importance. My defence—if I must defend myself—is that the butterfly
-in every age has claimed more notice than the bee. The social scene, to
-change my metaphor, presented by so single-minded a writer as Mr.
-Greville has to find room for the D’Orsays, the Egremonts, the Sidney
-Smiths and the Madame de Lievens, who throng his stage in act after act,
-as well as for the Peels, Wellingtons and Melbournes.
-
-Is a defence still necessary for continuing the life of a character from
-one novel to another? Mr. Disraeli, in his splendid progress through a
-part of Mr. Greville’s period, refused to cut the thread of an imaginary
-existence at the moment when his last page was bound into its cover; and
-the novel-sequence which aims to describe a social and political scene
-must, no less than succeeding volumes of memoirs, call back to the stage
-the same leaders and the same camp-followers. If this present series
-have any artistic or historical value, I should like it to be found in
-the completed picture.
-
-I attempted, in _Sonia_, to trace the adolescence of the generation that
-grew to manhood in time to meet the shock of the war. That war ends in
-the first line of the present volume; and, before the last page, the
-government that was charged to bring peace back to the sparse survivors
-has itself passed away. One phase in history has been concluded; and
-this series, which aimed at describing a single English scene in the
-life of a single generation, ends with the end of that phase.
-
-I ask no one to share any regret which I may feel in taking leave of
-characters that have been my constant companions for more than eight
-years. If they are no more likable than the men and women we meet in
-daily life, I have at least never allowed parental affection to cover up
-their shortcomings. I present them to you as a small mark of a deep
-devotion.
-
- STEPHEN MCKENNA.
-
-
-
-
- “All our yesterdays have lighted fools
- The way to dusty death.” . . .
-
- SHAKESPEARE: _Macbeth_.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- PART ONE
-
- CHAPTER
-
- I TRUCE
- II RETROSPECT
- III THE DAWNING OF MORN
- IV AFTER THE DELUGE
- V THE RED ACCOUNT
-
-
- PART TWO
-
- I THE NAKEDNESS OF THE LAND
- II THAT WHICH REMAINED
- III AS YOU SOW
- IV IN A GILDED CAGE
- V “UN SACRIFICE INUTILE”
-
-
- PART THREE
-
- I TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW
- II THE TEST
- III TWO IN THE FIELD
-
-
-
-
- PART ONE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
-
-
- TRUCE
-
-
- “‘Rise up, rise up, thou Dives, and take again thy gold,
- And thy women and thy housen as they were to thee of old.
- It may be grace hath found thee
- In the furnace where We bound thee,
- And that thou shalt bring the peace My Son foretold.’”
-
- RUDYARD KIPLING: _The Peace of Dives_.
-
- 1
-
-“_The eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month_ . . .”
-
-Though the departmental order was marked “secret”, I did not hesitate to
-give my wife a hint of its contents. All the world—if the armistice
-were accepted—could read the news next morning. And the armistice would
-be accepted. Silence hung over town and country throughout the misty,
-long hours of Sunday: it was, I felt, as though all England were at
-prayer. Faint restlessness muttered throughout the lagging, cold hours
-of Sunday night: it was as though all England were keeping vigil.
-
-“You _can’t_ doubt,” I told Barbara, as we parted at the door of the
-Admiralty. “With any luck, the news is waiting for me.”
-
-“I can’t _believe_,” she answered. “Four years and three months. Nearly
-a fifth of my whole life. I’m used to the war . . . almost. I don’t see
-why it should ever stop.”
-
- 2
-
-It was my turn for late duty; but, when I reached my room, I found a
-message:
-
- “Captain Hornbeck’s compliments; and it will not be necessary
- for Commander Oakleigh to stay unless he wishes.”
-
-Peace was not yet come, then, or Philip Hornbeck would have told me; it
-would come that night, or he would not have granted me leave of absence.
-The Admiralty, meanwhile, could not have been more silent if the old
-world had died in giving birth to the new.
-
-“You got my chit?,” Hornbeck asked in an undertone, when I went to
-report. “Unless you _want_ to hang about here . . .”
-
-“My taste for bureaucracy,” I answered, with a glance of loathing at his
-“IN”, “OUT” and “PENDING” trays, “has been cured.” How long did Barbara
-say the war had lasted? Since 1914? Yes, four years and three months had
-passed since I began to masquerade unconvincingly as an officer of the
-Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve. With the actors, artists, barristers and
-stockbrokers who combined to make up my section of the intelligence
-department, I had talked a hundred times of the day when we should have
-taken our last undeserved salute and laid aside the latest of our
-comic-opera uniforms. Now it was come. “As I’m here, I may as well lend
-a hand. I suppose they’re bound to sign?”
-
-Hornbeck unlocked a row of japanned boxes and glanced perfunctorily at
-his secret files before plunging them in the fire.
-
-“It won’t come through in time for the morning papers, so I’m getting
-rid of the evidence before I’m told not to,” he chuckled. “‘_The
-eleventh hour . . . of the_ _eleventh day . . . of the eleventh month._’
-Sounds as if a journalist had had something to do with that!” One file
-slipped to the floor; and I read on the faded docket “_Goeben and
-Breslau, 1914_”. It had been a very long war. “Lord! These papers are a
-satire on the vanity of human wishes!,” he drawled. “You can give all
-your people leave for the day. They won’t be in a fit state to work
-. . . even if you had any work to give them. And I suppose you won’t
-have. It . . . takes you some time to grasp that it’s all over,” he
-added, checking half way to the fire and staring bemusedly at the papers
-in his hands. Looking at him, I needed time to recall that he had been a
-young man when war broke out. “What are you and Lady Barbara going to do
-with yourselves?,” he asked after a pause.
-
-“Get away to the sun,” I answered with the grim determination of a man
-whose vitality was spent for lack of rest and good food.
-
-“Wonder . . . what will happen . . . to _us_,” Hornbeck pondered,
-punctuating his words with abrupt shrieks of rending paper. “No more
-wars; . . . no more navies . . . or armies.”
-
-“Well, you of all men are entitled to a holiday,” I said. Four years of
-Whitehall had made him short-sighted and round-shouldered; his square,
-wooden face was pallid; and his slow speech argued a tired brain.
-
-“Everything will seem a bit flat now,” muttered one of the most powerful
-men in England, who within the next few days or hours would be as
-inconsequential as myself. Beyond a narrow circle described round the
-Treasury Exchange, the name of Captain Hornbeck was unknown; the weight
-and cunning of his hand, however, had been felt for more than four years
-in Mexican revolutions, Greek _coups d’état_ and Russian
-counter-revolutions. The papers which he was destroying ranged from
-reports on South American credit-transfers to track-charts of North
-Atlantic commerce-raiders. “This is what the N.O. has been training for,
-ever since the old Britannia days,” he went on. “Now that we’ve finished
-it . . .”
-
-Wiping the sweat from his forehead, he threw open the window. From force
-of habit, he switched off the lights before pulling up the blind; then,
-as the last night of the war engulfed him in a grey eddy of fog, he
-laughed at his own forgetfulness.
-
-“There’s still a fair-sized mess to clean up,” I reminded him, as he
-raked with irresolute fingers the memoranda that constituted the
-Admiralty’s suggestions for the peace conference.
-
-“Ah, I must leave that to you politicians,” he laughed. “And I don’t
-envy you the job. A world without war . . . It’s a thing we’ve never
-seen, George. And when you consider that we’re all of us demoralized and
-most of us bankrupt . . . I suppose friend Woodrow knows what he wants,
-but I don’t believe any one else does. . . . Doctor feller once told me
-that, when a baby’s born, it comes into the world with its fists
-clenched. I sometimes wonder if war isn’t a natural instinct.”
-
-“Self-preservation is the first natural instinct,” I answered; “but it’s
-not consistent with modern methods of fighting.”
-
-“Oh, I know. This war will be a friendly scrap by comparison with the
-next.”
-
-“It’s stopping,” I said, “just when we were beginning to learn something
-of mass-production, mass-enlistment, mass-mobilization of resources,
-mass-destruction.”
-
-Hornbeck strolled to a vast wall-map of the world and stared at it, with
-his hands dug deep into his pockets.
-
-“In the next war, we shan’t attempt to distinguish between combatants
-and non-combatants,” he predicted. “The air-raids and the blockade have
-caught the civilian.”
-
-“And no country will be allowed to remain neutral,” I added, “any more
-than Luxemburg and Greece in this war.”
-
-“Until, at the end, when the human population of the earth has been
-destroyed with typhoid-germs and poison-gas, you’ll be left with two
-submersible flying-tanks chasing each other among the ice of the North
-Pole.”
-
-He stirred the fire to a blaze and began once more to feed it with the
-papers from his private safe. I might have helped him; but this news of
-approaching peace seemed to relax all my muscles. For the first time in
-more than four years I could look beyond the work of the moment and see
-myself as an individual. When I was less tired, I could go back to the
-old life; and, for a man with a competence, life in England had been
-more than tolerable until the fourth of August, 1914.
-
-“Don’t let’s talk about the _next_ war,” I said. “Unless we can find a
-substitute . . .”
-
-“People talked like that after Waterloo,” Hornbeck murmured.
-
-“I expect they talked like that after the siege of Troy; but they always
-sowed their peace with the seeds of the next war.”
-
-The night air was chilling the room; and Hornbeck interrupted his task
-of destruction to shut the window.
-
-“Well, what kind of peace do you want now?,” he asked, with a smile half
-mocking, half wistful playing over his tired face. “This war followed
-inevitably on the war of ’70, which followed inevitably on the
-nationalist wars, which followed inevitably on Napoleon’s conquests.
-Will you divide the world now according to nationalities? I’m afraid
-you’ll have new wars in Poland, Alsace-Lorraine, Austria, Turkey; not to
-mention Egypt and India. People talk about a United States of the World;
-but, when you’ve been getting the last ounce out of national spirit for
-all these years, you won’t persuade white men to take their orders from
-an international committee of dagos.”
-
-I turned from the wall-map to the official estimates of casualties in
-all countries.
-
-“When people remember what a bloody business war is . . .” I began.
-
-“We had South Africa and Japan to warn _us_!” he interrupted. “The next
-generation . . . George, I promise you that, unless you get your new
-heaven and your new earth functioning at once, you’ll drift back to the
-only kind of life a nation knows. Fear and arrogance; insane hatred and
-colossal stupidity. Periodically the world will panic into war, which is
-the only final solution known to history.” . . .
-
-“The only one we’ve tried; and it’s a solution of nothing,” I answered.
-“My God, if I didn’t believe this was really a war to end war . . .”
-
-I paused as Hornbeck was called to the telephone. He listened for a
-moment, nodded to me and took down his coat and cap. Even he could work
-no longer; and, as I walked home alone, I tried to understand that the
-“war to end war” had itself ended. In four years I had forgotten how
-London looked before the lamps were shrouded and the hoardings placarded
-with patriotic appeals. Their purpose was accomplished; a uniform would
-soon be as rare as civilian clothes were now; the hospitals would empty;
-the blue coats and red ties of the convalescents would disappear.
-
-The city was very silent; but at eleven o’clock, I imagined, there would
-be such a silence as would make men think that the earth was halting in
-her course. Out there, over the water, some would adventure amicably
-into the enemy’s lines; some would drift back to their base; most would
-wait dumbly for orders; and one man would be the last to die in the
-Great War.
-
-At the top of Waterloo Place I found a policeman flashing his lantern on
-the doors and shutters of the shops.
-
-“I think you’d like to know that the Germans have accepted the
-armistice,” I said.
-
-“Thank you, sir,” he answered with a salute.
-
-A taxi crawled westward across Piccadilly Circus; and I told the driver.
-
-“They ’ave, ’ave they?,” he muttered in perplexity. “Oh, they
-_’ave_. . . . Well . . .”
-
-I hesitated long before reckoning the number of those for whom peace
-came too late. In ’14 my generation was of an age to be called for the
-hottest and the longest of the fighting. Sam Dainton had escaped with a
-flesh wound, Jack Waring with a split head and a broken nerve, David
-O’Rane with the loss of his sight; these, with the five or six who had
-failed to pass the doctors or had been tied to a mission abroad, were
-all that remained of the friends who had said good-bye to their schools
-in the last years of the nineteenth century.
-
-A lifetime had passed since we all talked of what we would do “on the
-day peace is signed”; and yet, when we spoke of “last summer”, we always
-meant “the summer before the war”. It was, at the same time, an eternity
-and an episode.
-
-“So,” I reflected at the door of my house in Seymour Street, “one school
-of political thought in France looked upon the Revolution and the
-Empire.”
-
-From force of habit, I headed for the hot milk in my dressing-room and
-rang to have my bath prepared. Then I recollected that I need never
-again work by night and sleep by day.
-
-“I’ll breakfast first,” I told Barbara’s maid. “And I shan’t go to bed
-this morning. The armistice has been signed.” The girl tried to speak,
-but could only turn away with a sob that sounded like “dad”. “Has her
-ladyship been called?,” I asked.
-
-Still unable to speak, the girl shook her head and nodded in the
-direction of a breakfast-tray.
-
- 3
-
-Barbara was asleep, with a light burning by her side and an open book
-face-downwards on the bed. At last, I told myself, I could see something
-of my wife. I should be able to read the new poets and novelists who
-overflowed her cases. At last we could entertain our friends again. At
-last, after eight months, we could have our honeymoon. Barbara looked
-dangerously fragile. As I watched her, one hand was drawn slowly up the
-sheet; and the fingers were almost transparent. Her head turned
-restlessly from side to side; and I knew that she was dreaming. There
-was a whispered sigh; and I felt that her dreams were unhappy.
-
-“George! Oh, it’s you!,” she exclaimed with a throb of relief; and, as
-she brushed the cloudy hair back from her face, I saw that her big,
-deep-set eyes were black and anguished.
-
-“Who else should it be?,” I asked, as I draped a shawl over her thin
-shoulders and kissed her flushed cheeks. “They’ve signed, Babs. It’s all
-over.”
-
-“It’s . . . all . . . over?,” she repeated dreamily.
-
-“Yes. I telephoned to your mother from the Admiralty. They’re safe:
-Neave and Charlie.”
-
-Silence fell between us until Barbara covered her face and murmured:
-“Thank God!” Then she sat up and stared round the shadowy room:
-
-“What . . . what are we going to do now?”
-
-Within an hour I felt that most people would be asking themselves that
-question:
-
-“I don’t know. For this morning Phil Hornbeck suggested that I should
-invite a few friends to my room in case there’s anything to see.
-Afterwards . . .”
-
-“Afterwards you must take me away!,” she cried. “You’re quite sure
-there’s been no mistake?”
-
-“Quite sure!,” I answered, as I sat down by the telephone and tried to
-remember which of our friends we should both care to have with us at the
-moment when peace dawned.
-
-A change had overtaken London by the time that I set out to collect my
-party. As on August bank-holiday four years earlier, when I drove about
-Gloucestershire, with Loring and O’Rane, waiting for news, the city had
-an air of suspended animation. Of the twenty strangers who interrogated
-me on my way across the park, not one had more doubt that the terms
-would be accepted than that the sun would rise on the morrow. And yet,
-so nicely balanced were hope and fear, I should have been surprised if
-any one had laid me long odds on peace. Like Barbara, they were grown
-used to the war. As I spread the news from house to house, every one
-said: ‘What time is it now?’; and it seemed as if the eleventh hour of
-the eleventh day would never come. There was a muddle-headed point of
-honour, too, that no one should betray even impatience.
-
-“Oh, yes, I’ll look in, if I have nothing better to do. You might have
-called here instead of bringing me to this infernal contraption,”
-growled my uncle Bertrand, who always visited his hatred of the
-telephone on the heads of those who addressed him by it. “That all you
-have to say? Filson! Filson!,” I heard him calling to his man. “They’ve
-signed!”
-
-Lady Dainton, whom I invited for the sake of old associations, murmured:
-“Thank you so much. I know Roger will be interested,” as though I had
-announced a minor change in the cabinet. Raymond Stornaway said: “I
-trust this doesn’t mean a general holiday: I’ve the very devil of a
-day’s work ahead of me.” My sister Beryl hoped that I had not gone to
-the expense of buying that new uniform.
-
-I had already warned old Lady Loring by telephone; and, when I reached
-Curzon Street, I found my cousin Violet dressed to go out and playing in
-the hall with her boy.
-
-“I’m waiting to be told what to do next,” was her greeting.
-
-Though she had worn her deep mourning for more than three years, her
-little white face looked pathetically young and helpless. I wondered
-what kind of life she could expect from the armistice.
-
-“We’re all in the same boat,” I answered. “I called to suggest that you
-should bring Sandy to the Admiralty. My father could just remember the
-Famine; my mother remembers the crowds in the streets when Sebastopol
-fell. Sandy may carry away something to fix this, eighty years hence, as
-the day when the Great War ended.”
-
-“I wonder if people will talk about it then as ‘the Great War’?,” Violet
-mused.
-
-As she buttoned her boy into his coat, I felt that she was thinking only
-of the day when her husband of a month, with all that health, fortune,
-rank and riches could give him, drifted whimsically to France, in the
-meshes of a machine which he ridiculed, there to die in defence of one
-country, which he faintly despised, against another, which he mildly
-disliked. Violet had been left with a son to bring up and a vast estate
-to administer. She would never, I knew, marry again; and, now that the
-war was over, she saw herself fading into the twilight of life to dwell
-with ghosts and memories and dreams.
-
-“The Great Waste,” I suggested, as we set out. “If any one could have
-foreseen, four years ago, how this would end, I wonder if there’d have
-been a war? I tremble to think what the world will look like when we
-have time to take stock.”
-
-In our passage from Loring House to the Admiralty, I found that the news
-had spread before us; and young Lucien de Grammont, speeding towards the
-French Embassy, stopped long enough to vent on us his disappointment
-that the allies had not insisted on unconditional surrender.
-
-“Those accursed Americans!,” he cried. “But for them, peace would have
-been signed in Berlin! Now in fifty years’ time . . . Well, let us hope
-we shan’t be alive to see it.”
-
-As he flung off in furious disappointment, I ventured the opinion that,
-but for the Americans, a German peace might have been dictated in Paris.
-Then we pressed through the crowd in the Processional Avenue and took up
-our positions to see at least the greatest war in history ending. My
-secretary had cleared the table of its trays; and we sat in a row,
-looking through the mist of Horse Guards’ Parade and trying to guess
-what was going to happen. The Crawleighs had arrived before us and were
-talking to Raymond Stornaway; Sir Roger and Lady Dainton followed on our
-heels; and our last inch of space was filled when my uncle Bertrand,
-puffing and growling at the stairs, lumbered in with heavy tread and
-demanded in the loud voice of incipient deafness why it was necessary to
-collect this nest of magpies.
-
-“Disreputable old wrecks we are!,” he muttered with a glance of sour and
-comprehensive disfavour from Lord Crawleigh to Sir Roger Dainton and
-from Sir Roger Dainton to Raymond Stornaway. The grey November light,
-shining on a row of bent backs and haggard faces, made us older than our
-years. “We’ve _had_ our chance,” he continued; “I believe the only way
-of stopping war is to have conscription for all men and women over fifty
-and to call up the oldest classes first.”
-
-“So that you could hear men of thirty boasting that they’d ‘given’ two
-grandfathers to the army?,” asked Raymond.
-
-“They’d still be of an age to be kicked, if they tried that kind of
-cant. . . . No, but I’m sufficiently sick of everything to feel it’s
-indecent for me to be alive when mere children are wearing black for men
-who might have been my grandsons. Eighty-four. . . . Most of my friends
-will tell you I’ve lived twenty years too long; and, on my soul, I
-believe they’re right.”
-
-“You said something of the kind on the day war broke out,” I reminded
-him. “Now that it’s all over . . .?”
-
-Bertrand gathered himself for attack, towering over me with his hands on
-his hips till the silence of the room daunted him. Then he shrugged his
-shoulders and turned, with a savage tug at his black walrus-moustache,
-to shake hands with his neighbours:
-
-“I don’t detect any great reason for optimism. Um, Crawleigh. You
-English have seen a million or two of your best men killed or
-wounded. . . . Whose child is that? . . . You’ve seen new debt piled up
-to the tune of thousands of millions. . . . How do, Lady Crawleigh?
-. . . I’m an Irishman. . . . Violet, my dear! . . . And a liberal. I’ve
-seen liberalism stamped out of existence and the Irish party
-broken. . . . Lady Dainton, your humble servant. Find me a seat, George,
-there’s a good boy.”
-
-Most of us knew my uncle well enough to imagine his violent anger if any
-one else had dared to be so despondent. My father-in-law, however, felt
-obliged to pick up the gage.
-
-“You mean that we should be no worse off,” he suggested, “if the Germans
-had drawn up the terms and we had accepted them?”
-
-“Not quite,” Bertrand conceded, “not quite. . . . I beg your pardon,
-Barbara my dear, I didn’t see you! . . . If you know your Bible, my dear
-Crawleigh, you’ll recollect that a Jew called Samson tried to get level
-with the Philistines by pulling a heavy roof down on their heads. He got
-level; but he paid for it with his life. Some one pulled away the
-pillars that had been holding up our civilization for Heaven knows how
-many centuries. Credit, commerce, law and order, faith and morals,
-production, exchange, distribution: they’ve all toppled; and they’ve
-toppled on the heads of _all_ of us. You’ll see as soon as peace really
-sets in. No! No, Crawleigh! This war should have ended two years ago,
-while there were still a few tiles left on the roof!”
-
-I recalled my uncle’s warning, on the day war broke out, that freedom of
-speech was dead; on the day it ended, he asserted his right to it with a
-truculence that had been shouted down when he pleaded for “a patched-up
-peace” at the end of 1916, before the United States came in, and again
-in 1917 when the Lansdowne letter was published.
-
-“Lucien de Grammont wants to go on to Berlin,” I said.
-
-Bertrand clasped his hands over the crook of his stick and nodded
-scornfully at a headstrong world that refused to take his advice. His
-expression and attitude reminded me of Dr. Johnson, in the celebrated
-picture, awaiting an audience with Lord Chesterfield.
-
-“He forgets, perhaps, that we at least went into this war to uphold the
-neutrality of Belgium. We stayed in to make the Germans pay for the
-damage they’d done there. Later . . . Later, we were told that the
-French must have Alsace-Lorraine, Russia must have Constantinople, Italy
-must have an infernal place called the Trentino. And any stray islands
-or continents where a German or the ally of a German has ever set foot
-must be taken away and given to somebody else. It may be all very right
-and proper; but that wasn’t our aim in 1914.”
-
-More was coming; but his audience began to shew signs of hostility; and
-Violet intervened by setting her boy on the old man’s knee and
-whispering:
-
-“You mustn’t quarrel on a day like this. Help me to shew him the
-different nationalities, Uncle Bertrand. Sandy! Sandy! You see the
-little man down there by the tree. D’you know what he is? He’s a Jap.
-Japanese.”
-
-“Jap-an-ese,” Sandy repeated slowly.
-
-“Those are Americans,” she continued, with her finger pointing to three
-grave, lean-faced young officers. “Amer-i-cans.”
-
-“Call ’em ‘Yanks’, most noble marquess,” grunted Bertrand, who—with
-much else that was Johnsonian—exhibited the doctor’s unreasoning
-antipathy to the new world.
-
-“Merry-cans,” Sandy repeated.
-
-“There’s a Frenchman! There’s a Canadian! See, Sandy? Uncle Bertrand,
-find me an Italian,” Violet pleaded. “I don’t know how much this mite
-will remember, but it is rather marvellous to see them all together.
-That’s a South African, isn’t it? Oh, and a poor soul with only one leg.
-There’ll still be plenty of them for him to see when he’s grown up. I
-_wish_ I could find an Italian!”
-
-The open space under my window had filled so rapidly that it was hardly
-possible for any one to move. Typists from the government offices, in
-short skirts and transparent blouses, were standing on tiptoe,
-bare-headed in the biting cold, staring bright-eyed over the shoulders
-of those in front. There were soldiers, in uniform and in their hospital
-undress; sailors; nurses; government messengers with battered red boxes;
-a park-keeper; two clergymen; some errand-boys; and a thousand
-nondescripts. At one moment they were very silent; at another, they
-broke into feverish conversation with unknown neighbours, occasionally
-shaking hands and cheering a foreign uniform.
-
-“Five minutes to eleven,” muttered a voice which I could not identify.
-
- 4
-
-The emotions of the crowd were reacting on us. Behind me, I could hear
-murmurs like the soughing of wind, rising and falling with the murmurs
-of the crowd. When hands were excitedly shaken below us, I felt
-Barbara’s fingers gripping my wrist and saw Violet bending to kiss the
-silken curls of her child’s head.
-
-Out there, over the water, the ‘cease-fire’ must be travelling down the
-unending shambles of the two opposing lines. The shadow that had
-darkened the world for more than four years had at last been driven
-away; and no one was going to be mutilated or killed any more. All—more
-than all—that we set out to do in 1914 had been accomplished; and the
-bound heads and empty sleeves of the survivors, the black dresses of
-those with no survivors to welcome, testified to the cost. Of the
-uniforms below us, some had first been donned in Tasmania, some in
-Natal, others on the Alaskan border. Belgium and Servia, Russia and
-France, Portugal and Japan, Italy and Rumania: all had joined hands with
-our English-speaking peoples to hem in the wild beast. Throughout the
-night, the news had crackled from Poldhu to the Azores, from Arlington
-to Seattle, that the wild beast was subdued. It had flashed to lonely
-patrols through the frost of the North Sea and the fire of the Persian
-Gulf; two hundred million men were now standing silent, with their eyes
-on their watches; and I fancied again the unearthly hush that must drop
-on the world when the last war ended.
-
-In spite of Bertrand, in spite of Lucien de Grammont, in spite of
-Hornbeck I believed that it was the last war.
-
-_Burp! . . . Burp! . . . Burp!_ The maroons were like the rending of
-colossal drums. _Burp! . . . Burp! . . . Burp!_ Sandy turned wide eyes
-of alarm upon us and buried his face in Violet’s bosom. _Burp! Burp!
-Burp!_
-
-“Eleven o’clock,” muttered Roger Dainton in a quavering voice.
-
-My secretary collapsed into a chair, murmuring “Air-raid”; and, though I
-knew that air-raids had now passed into history, I imagined for a moment
-that the last ‘scrap of paper’ had followed the first and that London
-and Paris were to be laid in ruins.
-
-_Burp! . . . Burp! Burp!_
-
-There was no concerted cheering from the crowd below; but I had a
-curious feeling that the next man but one, down all that line from the
-Admiralty Arch to Buckingham Palace, had opened his lips and was waiting
-for a neighbour to cheer with him. Heads were turning in every
-direction; eyes were gazing upward, as though they expected to see
-“Peace” written across the sky in letters of flame; bodies, for a
-moment, were very still.
-
-Then that vast sea of men and women gathered itself up and poured with a
-hoarse roar towards the Palace. There was a check, and I fancy the
-first-comers must have been pressed against the railings; I threw open
-my window in time to hear a mutter rolling from lip to lip: “The king!
-They’re calling for the king.” Later, though we could see and hear
-nothing of it, the word was passed: “The king! He’s speaking”; later
-still: “He’s finished! Give him a cheer! Hip, hip! _Come on._”
-
-The human sea must have eddied at the Palace. Five minutes later, as the
-crowd below my window surged forward, a returning stream poured down the
-Processional Avenue into Trafalgar Square; and a new current set in
-towards the Abbey. There was little cheering now, though every one made
-individual noises of greeting and laughter. A War Office car hooted its
-deliberate way across Horse Guards’ Parade and was promptly seized by
-three wounded soldiers and four girl-clerks, who ranged themselves along
-the running-boards and perched on the bonnet. As though all had been
-awaiting a signal, the crowd broke into little groups and swept like
-swarming bees upon every vehicle in sight. So long as all could move, it
-did not matter whither they hurried: something, all seemed to feel, must
-be happening somewhere else.
-
-“The war’s over!,” some one cried; and mechanically, like hysterical
-children, a dozen others repeated uncomprehendingly: “The war’s over!
-The war’s over! The war’s over! The war’s over.” . . .
-
-“And the funny thing,” said Raymond Stornaway, blowing his nose
-vigorously, “is that they don’t know what to do next.”
-
-“Do _we_?,” asked Bertrand; and, for once, he seemed less anxious to
-instruct than to be instructed.
-
- 5
-
-No one wanted to speak first. No one wanted to move. No one cared to
-look any one else in the eyes. Lady Crawleigh, I think, was the first to
-recover; and she was slipping out of the room, with a twisted smile,
-when Raymond put his back to the door and took the position in hand with
-a general invitation to lunch with him at the Carlton.
-
-“No speeches or ‘celebrations’,” he promised. “If you’ll fight your way
-there as best you can, I’ll telephone for a table.”
-
-With the exception of Violet, we were glad to have our minds made up for
-us. Bertrand was right: we none of us knew what to do next. The
-movements of the crowd had become rhythmical by the time that we set
-out. Every cab and bus was loaded with excited clusters of men and women
-who seemed ready to do anything but remain still. Boys with paper caps
-and empty tins marched aimlessly at the head of irregular battalions;
-overwrought girls and grave grey-beards tramped with arms linked,
-sublimely unselfconscious. The streets were carpeted with torn paper. An
-indistinguishable hum of voices floated over and about us, still
-seeming—as before—to come from our next neighbour but one; and on
-every face was written vague relief, vague good-will, dawning
-disappointment and vast perplexity.
-
-“‘They order this matter, I said, better in France’,” quoted Raymond, as
-we drifted slowly through the crowd to kill time before luncheon. “The
-English don’t know how to express their emotions.”
-
-“They haven’t had much time yet to think what their emotions are,” I
-reminded him. “What’s the next stage? Babs and I are going off to the
-Riviera as soon as we can. But after that?”
-
-“_My_ work will go on,” Raymond murmured with a rueful glance down Pall
-Mall. We were within sight of the unwieldy mansion from whose roof young
-Deryk Lancing fell or flung himself on the eve of the war. The estate, I
-believe, was valued at about twenty-five million pounds sterling; and a
-freakish will had laid upon Raymond’s shoulders the task of distributing
-a fortune which Deryk himself could not control nor keep from
-increasing. “You can come and help me, if you like, George.”
-
-“Thanks, I’ve done the last day’s work of my life,” I answered; “but
-I’ve lived so long at other people’s orders that I’ve forgotten how to
-take a holiday.”
-
-The rest of our party was awaiting us by the door of the restaurant; and
-throughout the meal we talked, for talking’s sake, of the fourteen
-points and the probable terms of peace. Though we had all accepted
-Raymond’s invitation with relief, we were more sincerely relieved when
-luncheon came to an end. We wanted to think; and, when I had written a
-formal request for immediate demobilization, I took Barbara home. The
-streets were emptying as the silent crowds began to feel that they could
-not for ever tramp to and fro or steal aimless rides. Hunger was driving
-them in search of food; and the sunless November afternoon, already
-touched with frost, was mottling their white faces and chapped hands.
-
-“I feel . . . dazed,” Barbara signed, as we got into a taxi with her
-parents.
-
-“We all do,” answered Lady Crawleigh.
-
-As we drove away, I watched our party scattering. From their silence I
-judged the Crawleighs were trying to realize that their two elder boys
-were safe at last; the Daintons, walking close together with bent heads,
-were no doubt thinking of the son who would not return. As my uncle’s
-big, lonely figure disappeared from sight, I fancied that he might
-indeed be feeling he had lived too long. William the Fourth had
-completed half his reign when Bertrand was born: a man who had survived
-the nineteenth century, the Victorian era and the greatest war in
-history might well shrink aghast from the unknown future.
-
- 6
-
-At Barbara’s thoughts I could make no guess. Before the war, she had
-been more mercilessly pursued by publicity than any one of her
-generation. When our engagement was announced, I slunk like a criminal
-past the contents-bills that proclaimed a “_Famous Society Beauty
-Engaged_”; and, on the day of the wedding, when the traffic was held up
-for three hours and the auxiliary police were numbered by hundreds, the
-London crowd was certainly far more concerned to catch a glimpse of Lady
-Barbara Neave than to hear that the Channel ports were safe. Since our
-marriage, she had hardly appeared in public; but, as she crouched over
-the fire without speaking, I wondered what picture she was composing for
-her life in the unknown, new peace.
-
-When her maid came to dress her, I went to my own room. Night had fallen
-silently; and, when I looked towards the corner of Park Lane, the
-streets were more empty than on the night of an air-raid. Once or twice
-I heard the echo of subdued revelry; but, in ten minutes, I counted only
-four men and two women walking rapidly westward, closely buttoned
-against the biting air. Any vision of what this day would be had nothing
-in common with the patchwork I had seen. Dawdling luxuriously—for the
-first time in four years—over my dressing, I could recall scraps of
-altercation with Bertrand, flashes of speculation with Hornbeck,
-confidences with Crawleigh. Jerkiness, incompleteness, artificial
-reserve, an overwhelming perplexity and a relief too great to be
-expressed were what I carried away from the armistice; and I should
-think that most people in England experienced the same confused emotions
-and lay down that night with the same confused recollections.
-
-There was none of the vulgar debauchery that had disgraced the capital
-of a great empire on Mafeking night: in nineteen years our pride was
-more chastened and our thankfulness more heartfelt, even if we did not
-know how to give it words.
-
-“I thought you promised to arrange a survivors’ dinner,” said Barbara,
-as we went up to bed.
-
-“Only about six of us survived,” I answered. “And we’re all scattered.
-We’re tired, too. The war went on too long.” Though I was almost too
-exhausted to think, I remembered a far-away debate at Melton on the
-first anniversary of the war, when the greatest headmaster and the
-wisest man that I have met warned me that a long war would be followed
-by an even longer moral reaction: a bruised world, said old Burgess,
-would go back to the ways it knew and to the fleshpots it loved. “We
-shall be useless for years,” I said.
-
-“I wonder if it was worth it,” Barbara mused.
-
-“That depends on what you expected or wanted. We’ve secured our terms.
-And, if it’s not too rhetorical, I believe that every man who
-voluntarily offered his life, at a time when we thought we were
-degenerating, has to a great extent saved his soul. This country has
-been spared invasion.”
-
-Barbara parted the curtains in her room and looked down on the silent
-street.
-
-“The first night of peace since Jim’s last party at Loring Castle,” she
-murmured. “We . . . Well, I suppose we go on from that?”
-
-“If we want to.”
-
-“Well, don’t you? For the last four years we haven’t been able to call
-our souls our own.”
-
-“I wonder whether we ever shall again,” I said, as I filled my final
-pipe. That last night of peace lingered more vividly in my memory than
-any since. War was certain. We had read Grey’s speech; and I walked with
-O’Rane up and down the valley-terrace, trying to decide what we were
-fighting to preserve. “We want something more than the _status quo_,” I
-told Barbara. “That night . . . There was no question, then, of a
-general levy: the war must be over in a few months, and only the regular
-army would fight. Well, we’d seen Jack Summertown and a car-load of
-officers driving off the night before: they were a small minority who
-were quite clearly going to risk their skins for the rest of us. Were we
-worth it? I told Raney that I’d like to shew something that was better
-worth fighting for.”
-
-“And haven’t we? When you think how every one has worked and fought
-. . .”
-
-“But now that it’s all over?,” I persisted. “Raney said that people
-couldn’t come back from the war to take up the old futility; you
-couldn’t set up social barriers between men who had undertaken the same
-charge. It was unthinkable to save a country from invasion in order to
-perpetuate things like sweated labour. I wonder.” . . .
-
-“What a long time ago it all seems!”
-
-There was no cynicism in Barbara’s voice; but, if anybody spoke nowadays
-of a new world, his words were dismissed as Fleet Street rhetoric or
-Downing Street claptrap; and, though not one man of all the thousands
-who would be returning in the next few days was likely to say that he
-had risked his life to perpetuate sweated labour, I could not imagine
-that many would exert themselves to abolish it.
-
-Exertion! I was too tired to undress! The world might be bankrupt and
-yet survive; the world might be decimated and yet make good its wastage;
-first and foremost, the world was weary to the marrow of its bones.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
-
-
- RETROSPECT
-
-
- “Now tell us what ’t was all about,”
- Young Peterkin, he cries;
- And little Wilhelmine looks up
- With wonder-waiting eyes;
- “Now tell us all about the war,
- And what they fought each other for.”
-
- “It was the English,” Kaspar cried,
- “Who put the French to rout;
- But what they fought each other for,
- I could not well make out;
- But every body said,” quoth he,
- “That ’t was a famous victory. . . .
-
- . . . . . . .
-
- “With fire and sword the country round
- Was wasted far and wide,
- And many a childing mother then,
- And new-born baby died;
- But things like that, you know, must be
- At every famous victory. . . .
-
- . . . . . . .
-
- “And every body praised the Duke
- Who this great fight did win.”
- “But what good came of it at last?”
- Quoth little Peterkin.
- “Why that I cannot tell,” said he,
- “But ’t was a famous victory.”
-
-ROBERT SOUTHEY: _The Battle of Blenheim_.
-
- 1
-
-When we set out for Cannes three days after my demobilization, I
-intended to remain out of England for at least a twelvemonth. Since the
-night when Hornbeck and I waited for news of the armistice I had thought
-many times of his blank and puzzled confession: ‘_This is what the N.O.
-has been training for, ever since the old Britannia days._’ If I had not
-also been preparing for the peace and for the war which preceded it, I
-had at least toiled for the whole of my adult life to preserve the peace
-which preceded the war. Now I could have adapted Hornbeck’s reasoning of
-‘_no more wars, no more armies and navies_’ to my own case; and, when my
-friends asked me what I was going to do now, I might have said: ‘No more
-wars, no more politics or journalism on the old lines.’
-
-And this, I take it, was the attitude of all who had even a smattering
-of modern history. From the moment when I warned Barbara that we should
-perhaps never again be able to call our souls our own, I realized that
-the armistice had ended nothing but the long business of killing. The
-victors would now contend for the fruits of their victory, as Russians,
-Prussians and British had contended in the Congress of Vienna; the
-vanquished would struggle to preserve in defeat all that compassion,
-adroitness and obstinacy could secure them, as Talleyrand had struggled
-for France after Waterloo. The alliance, if it was like any other of
-modern times, would be strained and perhaps broken in the first weeks of
-peace, as after our wars with Louis XIV and Napoleon. We should hear men
-speaking, as de Grammont and Hornbeck already spoke, of “the next war”.
-Any one who was concerned to avert that must be prepared for a continued
-effort in which he might truly be unable to call his soul his own.
-
- 2
-
-Such energy or ability as I possess were ready to be thrown into the
-common stock. I had told Philip Hornbeck that the war would have been
-fought to no purpose if we failed to discover a means of preventing
-future wars. My difficulty was to know where my own very moderate
-ability and energy were to be applied. The leading articles and public
-speeches of these days, taking their time from President Wilson, were
-familiarizing the idea of a league of nations. Neither speech nor
-article, however, made clear how the league could be helped to birth by
-the good-will of insignificant, isolated individuals. I debated with
-Bertrand whether I should stand again for parliament; but my radicalism
-from 1906 to 1910 was too strong for the taste of Frank Jellaby and the
-other liberal whips; it would be repugnant now to every section of an
-assembly that had sunk party divisions and was aiming at an agreed
-peace. Very much as Bishop Blougram counselled Gigadibs to “overhaul
-theology”, my uncle suggested sardonically that I should examine the
-creeds which I had been professing for the last quarter of a century and
-see how much of them the war had left. He did not, however, urge my
-returning to the House; and, if the outbreak of war had justified him in
-discontinuing our propaganda in _Peace_, the end of the war was hardly
-the occasion for resurrecting it.
-
-“I’m more completely out of a job than any of you,” I told Hornbeck when
-my old colleagues at the Admiralty entertained me to a farewell dinner
-on my last night in England. “An obsolete political editor . . .”
-
-“Lucky man!,” he sighed enviously. “I’ve been warned for duty when the
-peace conference opens. And, after that, I’m to convert the intelligence
-department here to peace uses. Beating swords into plough-shares; and
-what not.”
-
-“If I thought I could be of any use to you . . .,” I began, with
-temperate enthusiasm; but Hornbeck shook his head and nodded meaningly
-towards the men at the far end of the table.
-
-“I’ve already more than I know what to do with,” he murmured ruefully.
-“_You_ don’t _need_ a job, but most of these fellows do; and it’ll be
-harder for them to find one than for you. The war was the opportunity of
-a lifetime for most of them; but when it’s a question of conventional,
-peace-time billets . . .”
-
-Hornbeck shrugged his shoulders and looked with mingled pride and
-amusement at the flock which he had collected. There were men and women,
-married and single, old and young; drawn from a dozen different
-professions, they were alike in nothing but their admitted ignorance of
-civil-service ways. And, in the hands of Hornbeck, this ignorance had
-been converted into an asset. As the department is dead, I can praise
-it—without offence—for loyalty, hard work and efficiency such as I
-have never seen excelled; without offence, too, I hope, I can say that
-we were the strangest collection of government officials that one man
-ever assembled below one roof. The war, if it did nothing else, gave
-scope to our versatility. At this dinner I recollect that Bellamy, the
-actor, sat next to Clayton, the paper-manufacturer. On his other side
-was Whitburn, the chancery silk; and, beyond him, old Norton, the
-banker. Next to him sat my private slave and fact-finder, Spence-Atkins,
-who had reached manhood as a traveller in Manchester goods and, on being
-discharged for neglect of business, had drifted about the world,
-collecting figures and languages. Next to him, again, was Jefferson
-Wright, who began the war as a mathematical coach, lost a hand at Neuve
-Chapelle, formed the statistical branch of the Purchase-and-Supply
-Department, seconded himself to the Admiralty and ended mysteriously as
-a brigadier on the pay-roll of the Ministry of Labour.
-
-“It takes all kinds to make an intelligence department,” I said.
-
-“I wish I could find something for them to do now,” answered Hornbeck;
-and I remember his words as the first hint of the human dislocation that
-would come as the country declared itself in a state of peace.
-
-In the meantime, our conversation at this dinner strengthened my feeling
-that I could do no good by remaining in England at present; and I had
-excellent private reasons for wishing to go abroad and to keep my wife
-abroad. Until conditions were normal, we did not even know where to
-live. Most of my income was derived from Ireland: sentiment and duty
-required that I should spend part of my time there as soon as the
-country was habitable; and, now that my sister was married and my mother
-had made her home in the south of France, Barbara might well grasp at
-the chance of escaping from England.
-
-“Quite deliberately, I feel as if I never wanted to go back,” she
-announced next day, as we watched the white cliffs of Dover fading from
-view.
-
-“But London, without you, would simply not be London!,” said Lucien de
-Grammont, who was taking us to stay with him at his father’s house by
-the Etoile.
-
-“It will perhaps be better for London, certainly better for me, if we
-both make a fresh start,” she answered. “I’m rather tired of it all.”
-
-“Of London in war? Naturally!,” Lucien persisted. “And for the first
-months after the war, when we look for the familiar faces and have to
-tell ourselves that they will not come back . . . Later on . . .”
-
-“Later on, we must see how we feel,” I said; and the conversation swung
-on to a less dangerous tack.
-
-Though we never discussed her adventures in the days before our
-marriage, I felt that Barbara was thinking less of the familiar faces,
-which she would not see again, than of those which would inevitably
-reappear in London when each man returned to his own place. Among our
-distressingly free-spoken friends it was commonly reported that she was
-half engaged at the beginning of the war to young Jack Waring; and,
-though she never pretended to be in love with him, the
-engagement—according to the Crawleighs—kept her from marrying Eric
-Lane, with whom she was in love beyond all shadow of doubt. Jack was in
-England looking for work. Eric had been lecturing and travelling in
-America and Japan; he would be coming to England as soon as he had a new
-play to produce. I did not want Barbara to be reminded, I did not want
-to be reminded myself, that she only married me when Eric vanished from
-her world.
-
-“We want to begin our married life in some place with no associations,”
-she went on, half to herself. Then, as though to protest that she was
-not thinking of Eric, she looked up with a smile and took my arm.
-“George and I have had no honeymoon yet; and my beloved parents didn’t
-make things very comfortable for us when I married without a
-dispensation. Perhaps they’ll be more reconciled if we give them a
-holiday. . . . How soon will peace be signed?”
-
-“That depends how soon the conference opens,” Lucien answered with a
-shrug. “You are to have your general election first; and we . . . you
-will not find we are in any hurry. There are nearly five lost years to
-make up. France too is tired.”
-
-The lost years were being recovered when we reached Paris in the last
-days of November. We had seen the war ending in London; here we watched
-it being buried. Every one who could get a passport and a ticket seemed,
-like us, to be heading for the Riviera and spending a week in Paris on
-the way. Every one, too, seemed to share our vagueness and indifference
-to what lay ahead of this holiday. For the first time in four years, our
-time was our own; for the first time in four years Paris could dine and
-dance without fear of being bombed or shelled. Barbara bought frocks;
-Lucien arranged parties; and I added the hall of the Ritz to the brief
-list—headed by Port Said and Charing Cross—of the places where a man,
-without waiting unduly long, can be sure of meeting every one who has
-ever crossed his path before.
-
-I doubt if in any other single week I have eaten so many meals or spent
-so much money. From time to time Lucien grumbled half-heartedly at all
-this waste of time: he had been recalled from the embassy in London to
-assist in drafting the agenda for the conference, and I felt he owed a
-grumble to his conscience. For myself, I blessed every hour of delay
-that enabled us to shed the memories of the last five years and to
-forget the acerbities of the last five months. Lucien had long been an
-old enough friend to drop his diplomatic reserve in talking to me; and
-there were times, before and after the expeditions to Gallipoli and
-Salonica, before and after the United States entered the war, before and
-after the Italian reverse and the Russian collapse, when the alliance
-would have been severed if we had been responsible for it. Now, as I
-told him, this brief spell of dissipation had saved us from becoming
-stale. With Victor Boscarelli, from the Italian embassy, and Clifford
-van Oss, from the American Red Cross, we formed a private international
-alliance, each entertaining the others by turn and all swearing
-friendships that death itself would be powerless to sunder. A critic
-might have been puzzled to say whether Clifford’s Italian was worse than
-my French; but our radiant good-will transcended the halting
-interpretation of words, and I felt a warmer liking for my neighbours
-than I had ever, in my pitiable insularity, been able to achieve before
-with men of another race.
-
-“At last,” I pointed out to Lucien, “we can talk amicably without
-discussing whether one country did all the work and another made all the
-money. There’s a real understanding. France, England, America: all are
-at the very top of their prestige. If we can pull together, we can make
-what we like of the peace.”
-
-“I still think we ought to have gone on to Berlin,” he persisted.
-“However, if you back us up and if we can get what we want without it, I
-shan’t complain.”
-
-“Remember you’re all coming to stay with us at Cannes,” I said.
-
-And, on that word, we set out for a house where the rumour of war and
-world-settlement seemed never to have penetrated.
-
-Looking back on the three months which we spent with my mother, I am in
-one way reminded of the two years which Jack Waring passed as a prisoner
-in Germany. So complete was our isolation that, when we emerged from it,
-we found a world of peace hardly less different from the one we had left
-than Jack’s war-world of tanks and gothas and tear-shells was different
-from the one which was blotted out in the early days of 1915. In the
-first weeks we saw no visitors; we read no papers; and, when we were
-rested enough to think and talk, we turned to the days when the world
-had last been at peace and speculated why the war had come and how other
-wars were to be prevented.
-
-The last of my reasons for hurrying abroad was that I could take up no
-work in England until I had discharged the task which Violet Loring
-imposed on me within a few hours of her husband’s death. As the world in
-which we had been brought up was swallowed by the war, she asked me to
-set down my memories of it for the later instruction of her boy. I had
-carried my account to 1915; but, after that, the mass of material was
-too great for me to attack in odd hours after my work at the Admiralty.
-A steamer-trunk, filled with memoirs and monographs, kept me company to
-Cannes; and, in the few weeks that remained before my cousin came to
-demand her bond, I philosophized about the deluge and described the
-world before it and speculated about the world that would appear when
-the waters had subsided.
-
-Small wonder if at this time, with my mother placidly dipping into
-Victorian biographies and with Barbara dreaming over her share in the
-history I was writing, we knew little and cared less about what was
-happening in Paris and London, Washington and Rome! While Lucien de
-Grammont drew the lines of a recreated Europe, I was living again
-through the years when Sandy Loring’s father and I were fellow-fags and
-fellow-monitors at Melton, when we were freshmen at Oxford, when we
-ventured together into Edwardian London. The dead so came to life, as I
-wrote about them, that sometimes I would lay down my pen and forget the
-war for the days before David O’Rane was blinded and Tom Dainton killed,
-the days when every one was quoting Barbara’s latest epigram and
-discussing Val Arden’s last novel, the days when Sonia Dainton broke a
-heart a week and an engagement a season. Musing of days and nights
-softened by time, I felt that never had there been such years in the
-life of any country, never had there been women and men like those of
-our generation.
-
-“In two or three years I expect everything will be very much as it was
-before the war,” predicted Barbara.
-
-“The people will be different,” I answered; “and they’ll make everything
-else different. Sandy’s world will never be like Jim’s.”
-
-And then I fell to wondering what Sandy’s father would have made of the
-new dispensation which was taking shape before our eyes. He and I, who
-agreed on little else, agreed that we were saying good-bye, that last
-night at Loring Castle, to a phase in history. The old ruling families
-had lost their power since the first marquess commanded his fifteen
-seats in the unreformed House of Commons and “Trimmer” Crawleigh dodged
-in and out of George the Fourth’s ministries, leaving a broken
-government in his train; under a new distribution of wealth they might
-lose their prestige. The _arrivistes_ of the nineties, who had floated
-on waves of beer and diamonds into the arid heights of a depressed
-territorial aristocracy, would find their places taken, in the
-nineteen-twenties, by social adventurers of ambition equal to Lady
-Dainton’s and of wealth greater than Sir Adolph Erckmann’s. A new class
-of politician, officer, publicist and financier must inevitably be
-brought to birth by the new demands of public life: the sons of the new
-men would quickly preponderate in the old schools and universities,
-their daughters would soon come to dominate a new society. That which I
-had denounced, in my hotter radical days, as “privilege” would count for
-less in Sandy Loring’s life.
-
-It was not within my terms of reference to say if the one order was in
-any way better or worse than the other: it was different. My haphazard
-recollections, covering a period of about fifteen years, were chosen
-solely for the light which they threw on the generation that was of
-military age when war broke out.
-
-“_As_,” I wrote in conclusion, “_the French Revolution challenged and
-overthrew the territorial aristocracies and feudal kingships of the
-middle ages, so the Great War challenged the systems which the French
-Revolution had evolved in their place._”
-
-There—for the moment—I stopped, for no one could say what systems the
-Great War would evolve in place of those which it overturned. Later, in
-brooding over these reminiscences of a vanished generation, I began to
-read a moral into them; and, on the morning of Violet’s arrival, when
-Barbara bent over my chair to ask if I had finished my work, I had to
-answer that, so far as I could see, it was only beginning.
-
-“If I’m right,” I explained, “the old governing classes are being
-superseded, under our eyes . . .”
-
-“The new lot will pick up the old ideas,” she interrupted.
-
-“That’s just what I’m afraid of,” I said.
-
- 3
-
-My discovery—the one incontrovertible moral that I could read into the
-war—had been made by others before me; and I doubt not that some at
-least of them reached it by the same road after toiling conscientiously
-through the official explanations and apologies which every foreign
-office in Europe issued in proof of its own innocence. The polychromatic
-outpouring of white papers, green books and red books was succeeded by a
-vaster flood of unofficial polemics, in which defensive chancellors and
-prime ministers, field-marshals and admirals demonstrated that some one
-else was responsible for the war and that peace would have been
-preserved or victory secured if only their advice had been followed. To
-the strategical arguments I paid little attention: nothing will make me
-understand strategy by land or sea, and it was hardly relevant to my
-main enquiry. The diplomatic defence, on the other hand, I studied with
-care, deciding—as, I imagine, most people outside Germany have decided
-independently—that, while Berlin was guilty of starting the
-conflagration, every other power lent a hand in piling up an inflammable
-heap of suspicions, jealousies and misunderstandings. It was this
-conclusion that pointed me my moral.
-
-“And what do you make of it all?,” my mother asked as I laid aside the
-last of these bitter, aggressive manifestoes.
-
-“Well,” I said, “whoever made the war, it’s clear that no single
-country, no single form of government was able to keep the peace.”
-
-With that conclusion no one could disagree.
-
-“In contrasting Jim’s world with the present,” I told Violet Loring,
-when my essay was ready for her criticism, “the outstanding lesson is
-that the government of man by his fellow-man has broken down in every
-form that’s been tried. You had constitutional monarchy in England,
-absolutism in Russia, a republic in France and America, a feudal
-kingship in Austria-Hungary. None of them could perform the elementary
-duty of protecting the life and liberty of their citizens. Those who
-took no part lived on the sufferance of the belligerents. From China to
-Honduras . . .”
-
-“When once war breaks out . . .” Violet began helplessly.
-
-“The governments that allowed war to break out failed in their first
-duty,” I maintained. “By negligence or malignity or impotence they’re
-responsible for the death or mutilation of some ten million human
-beings. It’s not enough to put the blame on Germany or the kaiser or
-Bernhardi. If a homicidal maniac runs amok in England, we blame the
-police for not stopping him.”
-
-While my cousin turned the pages of my manuscript, I flung a similar
-cold douche of first principles over the head of Philip Hornbeck, who
-had come to us for a week between dismantling his old department and
-erecting the new.
-
-“If you’d had a bigger police-force,” he suggested, “your homicidal
-maniac would have had no run for his money. If we’d smashed the German
-navy while it was building . . .”
-
-“And turned homicidal maniac on our own account?,” I interrupted.
-
-“If you like to put it that way. It’s not much use arguing with me,
-George, because I’m one of the old impenitents who believe that there
-will always be wars and what not. _Admitting_ that it’s the duty of all
-governments to keep the peace, _admitting_ that every government has
-failed in its duty, what are you going to do then?”
-
-“Try a different kind of government,” I answered.
-
-“A soviet?,” he asked. “If the aristocracy and _bourgeoisie_ have
-failed, that’s all you have left.”
-
-“I’d sooner have a soviet that thought it could keep peace than an
-aristocracy that admits it can’t.”
-
-“You should go and live in Russia,” Hornbeck recommended.
-
-The battle-piece which I was composing for Violet seemed naturally to
-take the form of a triptych; and the first two panels shewed that the
-governing classes in all countries had failed to keep the peace and had
-bungled the business of making war. When the third panel came to be
-painted, I wondered whether they would be more successful in making
-peace.
-
-“Is this going to be a _lasting_ settlement?,” I asked Lucien de
-Grammont, when he came to refresh himself after his work on the agenda.
-
-“We’re doing our best,” he answered. “As I told you at the time, the war
-stopped too soon. If we’re to secure that France is never again to be
-menaced, we must to some extent carry the war on into the peace.”
-
-“Do you still think there will be another war in fifty years’ time?”
-
-“I won’t pin myself to a date, but you’ll never abolish war.”
-
-“Then,” I said, “it’s time you made way for somebody who will. The old
-systems, the old diplomacy, the old men who ran the old system, are a
-self-confessed failure.”
-
-Lucien twirled his neat moustache and addressed to his neatly-shod feet
-a muttered confidence about doctrinaire idealists. Gerald Deganway, for
-the honour of the old diplomacy as practised in the British Foreign
-Office, screwed his eye-glass into place and exclaimed:
-
-“I say, you know, George, you’re an absolute bolshevist!”
-
-And Hornbeck administered the most damaging criticism by accepting my
-premises and proceeding to a diametrically opposite conclusion.
-
-“You’re proving too much, old son,” he argued. “I agree that governments
-should prevent wars, I agree that every government in the world failed
-to prevent this last one. That only shews you’re asking governments to
-do an impossibility. Take every nation in turn, from Belgium to the
-States, and tell me how the government of any one could have kept out of
-the war. When once the racket begins . . .”
-
-“We must go back a stage, then,” I said, “to the time before it begins.
-We must have a ‘will to peace’.”
-
-“Didn’t we have that in England?,” asked Violet. “Honour apart, we
-couldn’t afford to stay out in 1914.”
-
-“You must go beyond England,” I told her. “We want an international
-‘will to peace’; a solemn league and covenant, not between foreign
-secretaries, but between the units of the world’s cannon-fodder. War
-will end of its own accord when you can’t fill your armies.”
-
-“And how will you set your solemn league and covenant to work?,”
-Hornbeck enquired sceptically.
-
-I could make no reply until I had found more time to think; time, too,
-perhaps, to talk with my uncle Bertrand of the old Disarmament League
-and of the propaganda that issued from _Peace_ office before the war.
-When I told Barbara that, so far as I could see, my work was only
-beginning, I felt that in all likelihood the task before our generation
-would be to create a ‘will to peace’ out of the present disgust with
-war. If history was human nature repeating itself, there had been the
-same disgust at the end of every great war; but the memory of that
-disgust faded quickly. It was no match for the urgent plea that honour
-or security was at stake; no match for the cynical resignation of those
-who said that there always had been wars and always would be.
-
-“Of course you’re right to try,” was the utmost encouragement that I
-could win even from Violet, “but these Hague Conventions and things
-haven’t done much good, have they?”
-
-“No one has yet appealed to the rank-and-file,” I answered. “No one has
-appealed while the full horror of war was vividly remembered. No one has
-shewn the dumb millions of the world how much alike they all are, how
-they swim together and sink together. In all I’ve been reading these
-last few weeks I’ve been amazed by the sameness of conditions in all
-countries. If we can work on that till the sameness becomes a oneness
-. . .”
-
-In aiming at perspective for my second panel, I tried to set my own
-impressions and experiences of the war beside those of the cosmopolitan
-population that floated through Cannes in these first weeks of the
-armistice. When we had passed the stage of fancying that our individual
-histories were unique, I was more struck by the similarities of what I
-heard than by the differences. Necessarily, the islander and the
-continental must always disagree on foreign politics; and in Cannes I
-met for the first time the chronic terror that is begotten of land
-frontiers. “It’s all very well for you,” I was told by Italians, Greeks,
-Poles and Dutch: “You’re an island.” With allowance for this, I felt
-that the war had left on every country an almost identical mark. The
-Austrians and Germans whom I met in Monte Carlo, old journalistic
-allies—for the most part—, were as bitterly convinced that the war had
-been forced upon them as we in England were convinced that they had
-forced it on us; but, when we had agreed to differ, their description of
-the last four years in their own countries might have been applied,
-almost without a word changed, to England. There were, I discovered,
-idlers, _embusqués_ and adventurers of both sexes in all classes
-everywhere; and it was amusing, for one who thought of a German
-alternately as a sheep and a genius, to hear the tribute of Austria and
-Germany to our more than Teutonic docility and enterprise. France had
-her rapacious profiteers, Prussia her bloated munition-makers. The
-drinking that was said to obtain in English high-places could be matched
-by the drugging that was reported to be corrupting Austrian society. I
-was assured, without calling for proof, that there was little to choose
-for courage and endurance between the best troops of any two countries;
-and, when the public morale broke, any one class in its own way cut as
-sorry a figure as any other. If I despaired of the populace that
-believed the grotesque stories in the Pemberton-Billing case, I
-despaired more profoundly of Lady Dainton when she told me that Prince
-Louis of Battenberg had been executed in the Tower for treason.
-
-“The moral is,” I told Violet Loring, “that, under an abnormal strain,
-the sublime and the dastardly go hand-in-hand. Five years ago, we didn’t
-know the meaning of danger or suffering. To face it without breaking, we
-called up the primitive beast that lies inside all of us: he was a very
-brave beast, but he was also very treacherous, savage, credulous.” . . .
-
-As Violet turned my pages, I looked through a palisade of palm-trees to
-the sparkling blue of the Mediterranean and filled my lungs with warm,
-scented air. Cannes, after London, was like the open street after an
-opium-den; and, in thinking of the strange shapes seen in the long, mad
-half-light of the war, I almost fancied that I had been dreaming. The
-political intrigue and chicanery that began with the high-explosive
-controversy in 1915 and continued until the 1918 election was incredible
-unless one likened it to a panic on board a burning ship. If Violet had
-told me four years earlier that one common acquaintance would be
-imprisoned for trafficking in cocaine and that another would commit
-suicide to avoid prosecution for forgery, I should not have believed
-her. I could now hardly believe my own certain knowledge until I
-remembered that every war has claimed its civil casualties.
-
-“How long does it take to chain up your primitive beast?,” Violet asked.
-“I mean, . . . these are the people that the war has left us to live
-with and work with.” . . .
-
-To that I had no answer ready. It was easier to say that Sonia O’Rane
-would not have run away from her husband before the war than to be
-certain she would not run away again. And it seemed idle to talk of
-international conferences and a reconstructed world, of a new spirit and
-a ‘will to peace’ while the passions of the war were still unfettered.
-
- 4
-
-My triptych, displaying—in its centre—the war and—on either side—the
-peace that preceded and should follow the war, spared no space for
-dividing or linking frame-work: though I was working in the
-transition-period between full war and full peace, I made little attempt
-to describe the condition in which we all found ourselves at the moment
-when a truce was called.
-
-To some extent—in these blissful, lazy days, when we had nothing to do
-but sleep and eat and smoke and gossip—we filled the blank by
-discussing the present and future states of our friends. My battle-piece
-was subjected to a more general scrutiny than I had intended; and for
-many rather embarrassing days I was challenged to defend myself against
-critics who opened wide fields of speculation with the words:
-
-“_If_, as you think, the old political game is really played out . . .”;
-or
-
-“_If_ you’re right about the redistribution of wealth . . .”
-
-In the morning, as we idled in long chairs on a glowing marble verandah;
-at night, as we sat in a half-circle while Barbara played to us; in
-leisurely afternoon walks and occasional peripatetic sessions from one
-bedroom to another, we discussed war-literature and war-religion, the
-new position of women, the fate of the demobilized soldier and the
-day-to-day life which we expected to lead when peace was proclaimed.
-
-Most of our predictions were unbelievably wild, in their assumption
-either that everything or that nothing would be the same as before the
-war; and our discussions were so formless that they could never be
-summarized or recorded. When we abandoned conjecture for the concrete
-plans that each was making for himself, I felt that—in the words used
-at a dinner to Eric Lane in New York—‘the convulsion’s as great, when
-you turn a soldier into a civilian, as when you turn a civilian into a
-soldier.’ Sam Dainton, after ten years’ service, was leaving the army,
-“to prey on society”, as he put it. Deganway was saying good-bye to the
-Foreign Office; Barbara’s cousin, John Carstairs, to the Diplomatic.
-Professionally, the climax in both their lives had been reached and
-passed; the first wanted to make money, the second to look after his
-estates.
-
-At this time I began to detect the rise of that adventurer-class at
-which history points a punctual finger after every great war but which I
-somehow did not expect to see in my own time. When I was called back to
-London, I found new men in Fleet Street and the City, new names at
-Covent Garden and in the candidates’ books of the clubs; at Cannes I
-discerned, in the good-looking person of Violet’s brother Laurence, an
-adventurer in the making. As I became acquainted with his friends in the
-course of the next three years, I saw the natural, perhaps the
-necessary, evolution of a type which has not yet found its place in the
-social void. My cousin had been snatched from Melton on his eighteenth
-birthday and thrust into the Irish Guards, where his precocious
-development as a man-of-the-world had been won at the expense of his
-small aptitude for learning. The Hunter-Oakleighs could not afford to
-maintain him in idleness; and Laurence, recognizing this, quartered
-himself on Loring House and allowed Violet or any other of his relations
-to maintain him. In theory, he was reading for the bar; and a text-book
-on Roman law was always at hand to rebut the charge of idleness. In
-practice, he blandly awaited pecuniary compensation from a society which
-had taught him expensive tastes at a time when he might have been
-teaching himself the means of gratifying them. The army had paralysed
-his initiative; he believed—or affected to believe—that, at
-one-and-twenty, his life-work was done; and already he had learned that
-personal charm and rich friends were a fair substitute for industry.
-
-“I wish you’d advise me about Laurie,” said Violet one day, with a
-troubled glance down the verandah to the bed of down cushions where her
-brother was devoting to _La Vie Parisienne_ the hours demanded by the
-institutes of Justinian. “He’s rather a problem.”
-
-“The whole of his generation is a problem,” I said. “He stands between
-Jim, who’s dead, and Sandy, who’s still a child. He and his like have
-already borne the burden of the war; now he’ll have to bear the burden
-of clearing up after the war.”
-
-My proposal found less than no favour in the hearing to which it was
-directed.
-
-“I’m not bearing any more burdens till I’ve made myself secure,”
-Laurence declared. “Nor’s any one else. Half the men I know have come
-back to see another fellow doing their job; the other half are like me
-and never had a job to come back to. And, while we were away, you let a
-pack of women into all the professions,” he grumbled.
-
-“Laurie will marry a rich wife,” Sam Dainton prophesied. “I’d do the
-same myself, only I’m so precious ugly.”
-
-“That doesn’t matter when men are scarce,” said Laurence reassuringly;
-“but I’d much prefer it if _you_ married the rich wife and let me blow
-in as the _tertium quid_. That’s the way all the best marriages are
-arranged nowadays.”
-
-“I wonder what the modern girl will turn into,” drawled Philip Hornbeck
-at a tangent.
-
-“The modern girl is a contradiction in terms,” answered Lucien de
-Grammont. “To modernize yourself is to change; and woman never changes,
-she only adapts herself.”
-
-“She adapted herself in the war, good and plenty,” said Sam Dainton with
-authority.
-
-“She was brought up to know nothing,” rejoined Barbara; “she thought she
-knew everything. With luck she’ll learn enough to bring her daughters up
-better than she was brought up herself.”
-
-“This from you!,” Violet laughed.
-
-“It’s only now that I see what narrow squeaks I had,” said Barbara
-reflectively. “Whenever a girl makes a mess of her life, I believe it’s
-the parents who are to blame.”
-
-While this theme was developed in the uneasy hearing of my mother,
-Violet took a last look at my manuscript before handing it back to me.
-
-“You say nothing about religion,” she commented in an undertone. “It’s
-the biggest thing in life for many people.”
-
-“For women more than for men,” I submitted. While we were still at
-school, Darwin, Huxley and Renan were made accessible to us in cheap
-reprints. I have felt, ever since, that, if my salvation depends on
-faith in something that ignores ordinary rules of evidence, I would
-prefer not to be saved. “And you couldn’t have had a bloodier war, if
-we’d all been followers of Anti-Christ. By a paradox, the only people
-who tried to live up to their religion were persecuted as conscientious
-objectors.”
-
-“What will you put in its place?,” Violet asked.
-
-I should only have hurt her feelings if I had suggested that
-Christianity might now be given a trial: to her, that faith is
-synonymous with the Holy Roman Catholic Church; to me, it is the service
-of man, and the Christian churches with their deadening forms and dead
-rules, their deferred punishments and rewards, their proscriptions and
-feuds and exclusive salvations have gone far to stifle Christianity.
-
-“If people thought less about the next world,” I answered, “they might
-make a more tolerable place of this.”
-
-And it was in some such words that I ended my criticism of the war. The
-folly and suspicion and malevolence of all the nations had made it
-possible; when it came, all the nations engaged in it exhibited much the
-same endurance, if simultaneously they exhibited much the same savagery.
-
-“Well, is it ‘the Great War’ or ‘the Great Waste’?,” Violet asked. “Jim
-was over age when he gave up the staff. They didn’t want him to go. He
-felt that every one who got so much out of England in peace _must_ go.
-_I_ felt that, too. I shouldn’t like to think I’d helped to have him
-killed for no purpose.”
-
-If we had taken a poll of the eager disputants at the other end of the
-verandah, I doubt if the verdict would have satisfied her. On their own
-admission, the mailed fist of Philip Hornbeck, the diplomacy of Lucien
-de Grammont and the first-hand experience of war which Laurence and Sam
-Dainton had won on four fronts provided no more security than the
-religion of Violet Loring that another war, equally or more cruel,
-unnecessary and futile, should not break out as soon as the memories of
-one generation were grown dim and the exhaustion of one generation had
-been repaired.
-
-“Doesn’t that depend on the people who’ve survived?,” I asked. “Until
-the conscriptionists turned a crusade into a hunt for cannon-fodder, the
-war had a moral grandeur. Whether Jim’s death served a useful purpose
-for any one but himself depends on our power to recapture the spirit of
-1914.”
-
-For this elastic formula I can claim little credit. The cynic is now
-sure of his laugh if he mocks the idea of “a war to end war”; but I saw
-too much of my contemporaries in 1914 to join the later chorus of
-fashionable disparagement. Before their first idealism became jaded, the
-young men who had been reared in an atmosphere of war-preparations and
-war-scares, who aspired to a world orderly and a life beautiful and who
-saw their aspirations thwarted by men too old for hope or faith,
-resolved to create from the war a world of which they need not be
-ashamed. They enlisted in the service of man. From their deaths I
-learned the phrase. One of them, the last and best of my friends, who
-was literally and awfully crucified, came back blinded and broken to
-tell me that he was unrepentant.
-
-“_I was in New York_,” O’Rane wrote at this time, “_when the armistice
-was proclaimed. If you’d shouted ‘as you were’ from the Woolworth Tower,
-you couldn’t have scattered people more quickly. ‘As you were before the
-war’ is the general feeling. I expect it’s been the same in England. We
-must do better than that._” . . .
-
-“I’m not sure that I know what you mean,” said Violet.
-
-“And I’m not sure that I can put it into words,” I answered. “In general
-terms, no sacrifice was too great in the war; I want people to feel no
-sacrifice is too great in peace. It’s an empty victory if a high
-proportion of the victors are diseased, hungry, verminous, discontented.
-Any one of imagination must be ashamed of the slums in our big cities;
-but we _won’t_ make the effort or the sacrifice to cure them. I want to
-fan the crusading spirit of 1914 back to life. . . . Before that,
-though, we must make sure that we aren’t going to drift into another
-war. That means a crusade covering the whole inhabited world.”
-
-“I don’t know how you’ll begin.”
-
-“Nor do I yet. I may be able to tell you more in a week’s time. Have you
-heard that the O’Ranes are coming here? He cabled to say that he was in
-urgent need of my advice. I cabled back that I was in much more urgent
-need of his.”
-
-Glancing at my manuscript for the last time before sending it to be
-typed, I felt that, in a week’s time, I might know better how to paint
-my third panel. We had to see now whether those who had failed to avert
-war were capable of ending war.
-
- 5
-
-Though I charged O’Rane at the time with disturbing the repose of our
-retreat, I can see now that, even before I invited him to Cannes, I was
-resigned to moving at least one stage nearer to the heart of politics.
-It is true that my uncle Bertrand’s appeal for help in his election was
-answered with a lame reference to Barbara’s health; simultaneously I
-told Frank Jellaby, without a trace of lameness or indecision, that I
-was too little in sympathy with the liberal party to fight a seat on my
-own account; all the time, however, I was conscious of a chilling
-remoteness. I did not want to go back; I was thankful that Barbara
-seemed content to vegetate; but, if I was right in thinking that the
-fruits of the war remained to be gathered, I was right in thinking that
-they could not be gathered in Cannes.
-
-I hoped that O’Rane, with his knowledge of other countries, would tell
-me whether my derided ‘will to peace’ was practicable or even necessary.
-If he shared my misgivings, I wanted his help in planning a campaign
-that would be bounded only by the confines of the inhabited earth and
-would engage our energies for the rest of our lives. A train of
-reasoning is sometimes so persuasive in its premises and overwhelming in
-its conclusion that human intelligence rejects it without argument; and
-a train of this kind was presented to me on the eve of the armistice,
-when Hornbeck declared in succeeding breaths that another war would be
-synonymous with the end of the world and that nothing could prevent
-another war. His first premise was substantiated by all the evidence of
-the late war; his second was at least supported by every soldier and
-statesman whose memoirs I had been reading for the last month. The
-syllogism could only be refuted by a general strike against war. This
-was my revelation and mission; and I had suffered too long from the
-revelations and missions of others to trust my own until I had been put
-to the question.
-
-The O’Ranes arrived, with my sister and her husband, a week before
-Christmas. It was characteristic of the times that I should first set
-eyes on my brother-in-law two years after his marriage. Beryl wrote in
-1916 to say that she was engaged to a certain Gervaise Maxwell, whom she
-had nursed at the Lorings’ hospital in Scotland. They parted after a
-week’s honeymoon: Beryl went back to House of Steynes, Gervaise rejoined
-his battalion in Mesopotamia; and they met for the second time four days
-after the armistice.
-
-Now they were coming to exploit my influence in finding work for
-Gervaise; and I, knowing the slender proportions of that influence and
-recollecting the claims already advanced by Sam Dainton and my cousin
-Laurence, wondered helplessly whether the government did wisely in
-releasing men from the army before they had found civil employment. For
-a week before leaving London my telephone had been agitated by the
-voices of anxious friends who assured me that they could be demobilized
-at once if I would invent some urgent private business for them. “Good
-pay, light work and decent holidays,” they all said. I suppose the army
-let them go because the army could not retain them. At Wilminster and
-Yareham the troops demobilized themselves and walked home; at Enstaple
-and Durncliffe they threatened to mutiny if they were ordered back to
-France. It was one thing, however, to kick a uniform into a cupboard;
-and something quite different to find civilian clothes that would fit.
-Gervaise, I decided, must wait until I had discussed with O’Rane my own
-plans. It might be that, within a few months, I should want all the men
-I could get; or it might be that I should be cultivating my garden in
-Ireland. I must wait, too, until I had heard O’Rane’s proposals.
-Eighteen months had passed since I hunted him out to America, nominally
-to lecture on the war and really to make a fresh start with Sonia after
-her disaster with Vincent Grayle. In that time I had purposely not
-enquired how they were getting on, as a fresh start might well be the
-fresh start only to more trouble. The woman who jilts two men, marries a
-third, runs away with a fourth and returns with his child, all before
-the age of thirty-three, has either too much emotion in her nature or
-else too little.
-
-I must confess to a feeling of embarrassment as the train drew in. The
-feeling passed as Sonia waved ecstatically from her window and announced
-breathlessly that no one would believe what a success she had had in
-Paris, that she was insolvent, that this no longer mattered, that she
-had the most wonderful news for me, that she was going to have an
-unprecedented success in London, that it was heavenly to see me again
-and that she was really going to enjoy herself in Cannes.
-
-A woman who lived only for the moment was not likely to be disturbed by
-regrets or fears; and, as Sonia swung down from the train into my arms,
-her eyes were as limpid and innocent, her lips were as moistly red and
-provocative, as when I took her to supper at her first parties fifteen
-years before. Then and now, she was of those who make the world take
-them at their own valuation. Then she had babbled of her earliest
-ball-room triumphs; now she described the men who had thrown themselves
-at her feet from San Francisco to Paris.
-
-“Then you enjoyed yourself?,” I asked, when she paused for breath.
-
-“_They_ enjoyed _me_,” she answered complacently. “I don’t think they’d
-ever seen anything quite like me before. Oh, George! Has David told you
-our news? We met Mr. Stornaway in London; and he wants us to come and
-work with him! Say, kid, can you beat it? I asked him what the work was;
-and he said it was just helping him to spend money. If there’s one thing
-I _do_ know about . . . We’re going to be the new big noise in London.
-Collect David; and we’ll tell you all about it!”
-
-If my embarrassment returned as I went forward to give her husband a
-hand, it vanished as he took up the interrupted tale. In voice and
-manner there was nothing to hint that he had ever been estranged from
-his radiant wife; and I decided that, in a sense, he too lived only for
-the moment. When we first met, a small boy without a friend in the world
-had decided that he must put himself to school. His father had been
-killed, fighting for Greece against Turkey; and David made his way to
-England, with enough money for one term, by working his passage round
-the world. When he had sucked in all that Melton and Oxford could give
-him, he banished them into the past, as he had already banished his
-wanderings, and concentrated all his energies on making money; when the
-money was made, he turned his back for ever on the oil-fields of Mexico
-and devoted himself to English politics until the war imposed on him a
-more urgent duty. On the day that he was discharged from hospital,
-blinded and maimed, he called to tell me that he had already secured new
-work. When Sonia left him, he set himself to get her back; and, when she
-returned, I am sure that he set himself with equal singleness of purpose
-to forget that they had ever been parted.
-
-Now he could think of nothing but Raymond Stornaway’s proposal.
-
-“That’s where I want your advice,” he explained gravely, as though in
-all his thirty-five tempestuous years of life he had ever taken advice
-from anybody.
-
-“And I want yours,” I told him. “I’m sorry to find Raymond butting in: I
-expect to need your help much more.”
-
-That evening after dinner, when the others had gone away to gamble, we
-talked of the war and of that other evening, when we stood on the
-dividing ridge between two worlds. Of the men who dined at Loring Castle
-on the last night of peace, he and I alone had survived. We talked of
-the war that was over as then we had talked of the war that was coming.
-I quoted him the words in which he had described his vision of what the
-world might be after the war; and I challenged him to say whether he
-still believed in the perfectibility of man.
-
-“I’ve acquired a lot of patience in the last four years,” he answered.
-
-Then I tested him with Hornbeck’s prediction that wars would be fought
-so long as the human race survived to fight them.
-
-“I want you to help me organize a general strike against war,” I said,
-as I began to blow out the candles. Then I paused to frame a question
-which I had kept unasked since our last evening of peace: “D’you
-remember blowing out the candles that night?” He nodded. “You left two.
-Why?”
-
-As he hesitated, I saw that he was frowning. I saw also that, like the
-rest of us, he had aged in the last five years, though the thin face had
-its old passionate vitality and the fine black hair its old gay
-disorder. Slight as ever, boyish as ever, he was none the less lined
-with the mental and physical tortures of the war. His very hesitation
-was a subtle mark of decline, as though for the first time in his life
-he doubted himself.
-
-“I knew in my bones that only two of us would come through,” he
-muttered. “I should be one; I couldn’t make a guess at the other.”
-
-“There aren’t more than half-a-dozen left out of all our generation,” I
-told him. “The old club-groups at Oxford. . . . I can’t look at them.”
-
-“And I couldn’t see ’em if I _did_ look. Not that I need to be reminded
-of them.” . . . The unseeing eyes flashed in sudden exaltation. “What
-death takes away, George, is very little by comparison with what he
-leaves! The men I’ve loved best in the world have been my father and
-your uncle and old Burgess and you and Jim. Three of you, thank God!,
-are alive: I stayed with Burgess for his last night before he retired
-from Melton; but you’re no more alive than my father and Jim. Nothing
-can take away the time I spent with them. . . . I shan’t see again in
-this world, but nothing can take away all that I’ve seen in the past. I
-still see the men I recruited, the men who trained with me, though I
-helped to bury more than a few.”
-
-“Some of them were here to-night,” I said.
-
-“Yes! And what death has done is just to put their bodies out of action
-. . . . That means there are fewer hands and more work.” . . .
-
-As I led him to the door, O’Rane’s fingers ran lightly down my arm.
-
-“It’s about twenty years since you first came to stay with us,” I
-reminded him.
-
-“I suppose it must be. Good, full years.”
-
-“I was feeling middle-aged till you came. Middle-aged and depressed.”
-
-He laughed and gripped my hand:
-
-“We’ve no time to grow middle-aged. It’s the next twenty years that will
-count. We must pull together. In a sense we _are_ the last two.”
-
-As I blew out the remaining candles, the room once more seemed to fill
-with our friends of other days. We were indeed almost the only
-survivors; and I could not tell these ghosts that they had given their
-lives, I could not tell O’Rane that he had given his sight, to no
-purpose.
-
-“Think over what we’ve been saying,” I suggested. “Tell me if you can
-see any reason why just such another war shouldn’t break out with just
-as little reason.”
-
-“If it does, then this war wasn’t worth while. . . . And it’s our
-business to make it worth while,” he answered.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
-
-
- THE DAWNING OF MORN
-
-
- “‘Rise up, rise up, thou Satan, upon the Earth to go,
- And prove the peace of Dives if it be good or no;
- For all that he hath planned
- We deliver to thy hand,
- As thy skill shall serve to break it or bring low.’”
-
- RUDYARD KIPLING: _The Peace of Dives_.
-
- 1
-
-Average, sensual man is no match for an enthusiast. When O’Rane wrote
-that he wanted to ask my advice, vague instinct warned me that he wanted
-the costlier, if no more valuable, privilege of my personal cooperation.
-
-And it was my intention that he should cooperate with me. If I seemed a
-doctrinaire to Lucien, a fanatic to Hornbeck and a
-‘bolshevist’—whatever that might mean—to Deganway, I seemed to myself
-the mildest revolutionary that had ever schemed to carry out a
-revolution by deputy. When, at this time, people talked of “winning the
-peace” and asked what we meant to do, I felt and said that no active man
-or woman who had survived the war was justified in sitting idle. I was
-ready to write, speak and subscribe money on behalf of any organization
-that would rouse the world to the danger which I saw threatening it. I
-would work for my “will to peace” as others worked, in the years that
-followed and along lines which I deplored, for the League of Nations. I
-lacked the fire and the endurance, however, to inspire a crusade. This,
-I felt, was O’Rane’s part.
-
-Nevertheless, from our first conversation I divined that we were
-thinking on different planes. To “make the war worth while”, in my view,
-was to secure, first and foremost, that there should be no future wars.
-Perhaps because he had spent so many months in America, where by now the
-world seemed already to have been made “safe for democracy”, perhaps
-because he had seen too much of the late war to fancy that any one
-wanted more of it, O’Rane assumed the end at which I was aiming.
-
-“If the war is to be made ‘worth while’,” he pronounced at the end of
-our first night together, “we have . . . in some way . . . to make
-England . . .”
-
-“‘A land fit for heroes’ and what not,” Philip Hornbeck interrupted
-flippantly.
-
-After that, though we conducted our debates in private, I felt that
-O’Rane’s enthusiasm was sapping my will to the point when I should be
-drawn from my own leisurely crusade and pressed into his. If, at the end
-of ten days, he returned to London without me, I can only explain his
-failure by saying that in the meantime I had fallen to the assault of a
-yet more formidable enthusiast.
-
- 2
-
-“You heard what Sonia said about Stornaway’s proposal?,” O’Rane began on
-the second day.
-
-The rest of the party had disappeared to Monte Carlo; and I was
-imprisoned in the shade of a palm-tree until I surrendered or bolted.
-
-“He made the same proposal to me,” I said. “I turned it down because I
-thought there was more important work nearer to hand.”
-
-“Our work won’t lack in importance.”
-
-“Then you’ve accepted his offer?,” I asked. “You’re giving up the
-House?”
-
-“I’m committed in principle,” he answered. “Yes, I shan’t stand again:
-this coupon business leaves no scope for the independent member. Why the
-prime minister wants an election at all, when his position is
-impregnable . . .”
-
-“He wants to keep it impregnable,” I said. “Well, you’re going in with
-Raymond to succeed where Deryk Lancing and his father and every
-millionaire in history has so far failed? It’s easier to make money
-honestly than to spend it wisely, you’ll find. How much is there?”
-
-“About twelve hundred thousand a year.”
-
-“You can do a lot of harm with that,” I said. “How will you spend it?”
-
-“For the first year or two it’s ear-marked for universities and
-hospitals.”
-
-“And after that?”
-
-“We might make the war worth while,” he laughed. “But you must help. The
-trouble with England at present is that we’ve so little sense of
-responsibility. Isn’t it about time we educated people up to a civic
-conscience? In the war, I admit . . .”
-
-“You found a hundred men who would die for their country to one who
-would live for it.”
-
-“Because, in peace, we call people ‘good citizens’ if they obey the laws
-and pay their taxes. That’s not enough for a civilized state, George!
-Good God, when a man commits murder, we hire another man to hang him!
-It’s you and I who ought to be hanged for not teaching him our own
-reverence for law. We hire people to persecute other people for beating
-their wives or neglecting their children or concealing their diseases!
-It’s _we_ who ought to be persecuted. Illness, to me, is the wound
-inflicted on society by the indifference of the healthy. Poverty.
-Degradation.” . . .
-
-“And your civic conscience . . .?,” I reminded him.
-
-“Another word for imagination! You’d be ashamed of yourself if your
-tenants in Ireland died of want; if the men drank or the women turned
-prostitutes. Yet I’ve seen sights in different parts of the world that
-would make your blood run cold. Famines and pestilences and massacres.
-Things we don’t allow in England: we’ve got _that_ far. Now it’s time we
-went farther. If the war’s to be worth while, you must satisfy yourself
-that what has been saved was worth saving.”
-
-“But how on earth are you to do it?”
-
-In other days I had heard Aylmer Lancing, as he wheeled himself with
-slow impatience about his workroom, muttering of a dread project to
-corner the raw material of high explosives throughout the world. Some
-Central American republic was causing him trouble; and he had decided to
-make future wars impossible. Later, I had been present when Raymond
-Stornaway schemed to force up the standard of living for manual labour
-by paying uneconomic wages in one place and raising a storm of envious
-discontent in every other. Both men had been wonderfully convincing; but
-they had done nothing. Behind O’Rane’s shining eyes, in a stain of
-shadow between two white sheets of sunshine, I seemed now to see
-Raymond’s tired face at his luncheon-party on Armistice Day.
-
-“So far,” said O’Rane thoughtfully, “no one’s gone about it in the right
-way.”
-
-“It was not for want of intelligence. Can it be that the modern world
-has grown too fast for any one to control it?”
-
-If I had not parted with my little monograph on the war, I should have
-liked to explore this idea that civilization was bursting like an
-overripe fruit. Everywhere, in my own lifetime, I had seen
-fourth-dimensional energy collecting in a world of three dimensions. At
-a far distance, I had watched the Harrimans and Carnegies and
-Rockefellers bowing under wealth too great for a single man’s direction;
-and, since we began to raise men a hundred thousand at a time and to
-spend money at the rate of millions a day, I was convinced that we were
-operating forces which we could not control. For twenty years I had
-tried to “think imperially”, but I doubt if Mr. Chamberlain himself
-would have recognized the British Empire as I saw it represented from my
-window at the Admiralty on Armistice Day: in fifty years it had changed
-to something that might become a federation of British states but had
-certainly ceased to be an empire. America had ceased to be a nation
-without becoming even a federation. When I heard of a gas that would
-destroy whole cities, when I read of private fortunes that could buy
-whole countries, I felt that the earth was hardly big enough for its
-Rockefellers and Hearsts and Fords; the Rockefellers and Hearsts and
-Fords themselves seemed hardly big enough for the monsters they had
-created.
-
-“No one,” said O’Rane, “has spent twelve hundred thousand a year to
-spread his own doctrines. We’ll buy up derelict palaces like Braye and
-Eldridge; turn ’em into schools for the new poor who can’t afford Eton
-and the new rich who can’t get in. We’ll stuff them with scholarships to
-attract the brightest wits; we’ll have our subjects taught, as we want
-them taught, by giving prizes at Oxford and Cambridge. And, when the
-best men in every profession, every walk of life, are men who’ve been
-through our mill, we can convert the world.”
-
-What the text-books of a civic conscience were to be I did not enquire
-at this stage. If O’Rane aspired to make each man love his neighbour as
-himself, that was an aspiration towards which the Christian churches,
-usually with relatively greater wealth, often with the power of the
-sword and always with a grip on the fears and hopes of the faithful, had
-been working for nearly two thousand years.
-
-“The late war,” I propounded, “was not a good advertisement for
-Christian teaching.”
-
-“Because Christianity has never been brought to men’s doors and into
-their lives.
-
- ‘_What ragamuffin-saint_
- _Believes God watches him continually,_
- _As he believes in fire that it will burn,_
- _Or rain that it will drench him?_’
-
-I often wonder what would have happened to Christianity if it had come
-into the world with our modern means of communication.”
-
-We were still arguing when the rest of the party returned; and, until
-the brief winter twilight faded, we sat and spent Stornaway’s money for
-him. To this day I can see the half-circle of light dresses and the
-fire-fly movements of the men’s cigarettes; I can see faces white with
-avarice and eyes dark with excitement.
-
-“Over a million a year . . .,” Barbara gasped.
-
-“I told you we were going to be the big new noise in London,” said Sonia
-complacently. “George, of course, thinks he’s very superior.” . . .
-
-“I only think it’s a tremendous responsibility,” I defended myself.
-
-“If the job’s too big, we can turn it down,” said O’Rane.
-
-“The others thought that, too,” I warned him.
-
-It was a strange discussion, which ultimately became a monologue of
-foreboding. As all the world knows, Aylmer Lancing made his first
-fortune by chance and then found that he could not help adding to it;
-after buying the site of a burnt city, he had to build a city on the
-site; he constructed railroads to feed his city and manufactured
-agricultural machinery to pay for the food. Daily, until his breakdown,
-he grew richer; and, in the long years of his dying, he was to find
-that, while the hospitals, the universities, the museums and galleries
-could live on his bounty for a year, after that he must invent new
-outlets.
-
-“If your income’s too big, you can always reduce your capital,” Sam
-Dainton contributed. “I’ve been doing it for years.”
-
-“With a capital of five-and-twenty million?,” I asked. “It’s not a
-simple question of dropping bags of gold into the sea.”
-
-Early in his career, as I told them, Aylmer Lancing had tried to sell
-the New-Mexico-Montana Railroad when it was threatened by the
-South-Western Trunk. As he unloaded, the price fell; and, as the price
-fell, others unloaded too. A panic set in at one moment, to be ended the
-next by a rumour that Lancing was selling a bear. Up went the price; and
-Aylmer sold his last share on a soaring market, to find himself the
-richer by several million dollars.
-
-In time I tired of my Cassandra prophecies. Unlike his predecessors,
-Raymond Stornaway was face to face with a world in which every one would
-for many years be trying to pay for the war; and I fancy the annual
-income of the trust had been handsomely exceeded before each of us had
-explained the best method of spending it. While my sister Beryl, with
-her hospital training, launched vague projects for stamping out phthisis
-and cancer, Gervaise rebuilt the more unsightly parts of England.
-Hornbeck petitioned for an arctic expedition; and Barbara threw the
-stock-markets into confusion by paying off the national debt.
-
-“I don’t say it’s impossible,” I told them in conclusion, “but Lancing
-wasn’t the only multimillionaire in history. Other people have faced his
-problem, but none of them solved it.”
-
- 3
-
-In the two years that followed, O’Rane and I were to hark back many
-times to this first discussion; but we suspended it now before I learned
-what part he was assigning me in his moral revolution. The invitations
-which I had scattered so impulsively in Paris matured disconcertingly at
-the same moment; and we were dragged from our lazy reminiscences and
-lazier speculations to disagree fiercely about frontiers of which I had
-never heard and which I suspected Lucien de Grammont of inventing.
-
-As my mother’s villa was by now full, our guests overflowed to the
-Regina and came to us only for meals and for a preliminary peace
-conference at sundown. Daily, with noses sensitized to the lure of gin
-and vermouth, the dark and voluble spokesmen of the new states collected
-to redraw the map of Europe. Through indolence or defective imagination,
-the rest of us took little part in the earlier discussions: the peace,
-like the armistice, would be based on President Wilson’s fourteen
-points; and I for one was thankful that it was some one else’s business
-to unravel these unpronounceable Balkan combinations and to delimit
-these undiscoverable Baltic states.
-
-“The English are incurably insular!,” Lucien fumed at short intervals.
-“If you would look at politics from a _European_ point of view, George
-. . .”
-
-“It was our love for the European point of view,” Hornbeck retorted,
-“that made us shoulder a heavier burden than any other power. Our
-contribution in money, men, ships . . .”
-
-Though the claim was inoffensive enough to my “insular” hearing, he was
-not allowed to finish. The war, we were assured in spluttering rotation,
-had been won wholly and solely by the Belgians in their first defence of
-Liège and Namur; wholly and solely by Russian numbers; wholly and solely
-by French endurance and strategy. Italy and Rumania had won it by
-intervening to prevent a stalemate; the United States by pouring in
-money and men at a time when the allies were exhausted.
-
-For an hour the verandah was like a Tower of Babel attacked by a swarm
-of bees.
-
-“If those who did most to win the war are going to have most voice in
-making the peace,” Hornbeck prophesied as we went up to dress, “you’ll
-be able to hear their deliberations in London. This dago-parliament is
-your remedy against future wars?”
-
-If I left his gibe unanswered, it was because the tone—still more the
-unanimity—of these impassioned voices had disquieted me. I can hardly
-say too often that my mother’s villa was a political vacuum: we all
-assumed that, when we emerged from it, we should find the armistice
-taking permanent form in a peace drawn on similar lines. I had not
-dreamed until this night that a new war was to be declared at the
-conference-table. Yet the demands of my excited young friends were of a
-kind that no signatory of the armistice could accept. Paul Sanguszko, I
-think, outdistanced all competitors by demanding a united Poland which
-in fact included more Germans than Poles; but Lucien, in his rape of
-Alsace, and Boscarelli, in his butchery of the Tyrol, were but a short
-head behind him.
-
-“Aren’t you rather forgetting your old panegyrics on nationality?,” I
-asked Lucien.
-
-“Are you handing back the German colonies?,” he demanded in his turn.
-
-“That’s for our dominions to say. I don’t know.”
-
-“_And_ you don’t care!,” Lucien rejoined bitterly. “Now that the German
-navy is out of the way, nothing else matters!”
-
-“With luck, George, this ought to be a peace to end peace,” Hornbeck
-whispered.
-
-Next day, I asked Barbara whether she was feeling homesick for England.
-I have been so long indentured to politics that the hint of a new
-development sets me fidgeting to be back amid the whispers of the clubs
-and the rumours of Fleet Street. Unless I could wholly discount the wild
-words of Lucien and his friends, the peace negotiations would develop
-very differently from my expectations; and, whether I could discount him
-or not, I was realizing for the first time how far we had travelled
-since the day when we talked of fundamental understanding and a common
-effort for a common cause.
-
-“Do you mean you’re tired of this place?,” asked Barbara with a smile.
-
-“I was only feeling we were rather out of things,” I answered. Then, as
-the “dago-parliament” collected round the cocktail-table for a morning
-session, I caught Hornbeck’s eye. “Are people in England talking the
-same kind of criminal nonsense?”
-
-“Well, the House is not sitting,” he summed up judicially. “On the other
-hand, there’s a general election raging. What you lose on the swings,
-you make on the roundabouts.”
-
-“If you _want_ to go back . . .,” Barbara was beginning with a sigh,
-when my mother came on to the verandah with a cable in her hand.
-
-It was from my uncle Bertrand: if we had a bed to spare, might he occupy
-it? Otherwise, would we engage a room for him at the Regina? He must see
-me at once. A letter was following; but, if we did not know already, he
-had lost his seat.
-
-In so far as any one moment can be separated from all that goes before
-and linked with all that follows after, I suppose this moment should be
-called decisive. Two minutes before, my wife had shewn me that she
-wished to remain abroad; from this moment hung the chain that drew us
-back to London. Twenty-four hours earlier I had been bandying academic
-crusades with O’Rane; forty-eight hours later I forsook my own crusade
-and extricated myself from his in order to join my uncle’s.
-
-“Bertrand _beaten_?,” I cried. “That’s been a safe radical seat for
-fifty years!”
-
-“Where are the English papers?,” O’Rane asked.
-
-“It must have been an odd election if _he_ couldn’t get in,” said
-Hornbeck.
-
-Thanks to our isolation, I think we were all taken equally by surprise.
-As I read out the strength of the new parties, our tranquil garden
-became like a stricken field the day after battle. For a time we tried
-to count the dead; then we found it simpler to hunt for the living.
-
-“Runciman’s gone!,” I cried. “McKenna’s gone . . .” Then the tragedy
-changed to farce. “_Asquith’s_ gone!”
-
-Laurence caught the paper from my hand:
-
-“Coalition-liberal . . . Coalition-liberal . . . Coalition-unionist.”
-. . .
-
-“The old liberal party’s dead!,” I exclaimed. “There’s a handful of
-independents.” . . .
-
-“Ireland, except in the north, has gone solid for Sinn Fein,” Hornbeck
-read out over my shoulder.
-
-“Labour will be the biggest single party in the House,” said Laurence.
-
-“You were asking if people in England were talking the same kind of
-rot,” Hornbeck reminded me.
-
-Then we sat silent as he pieced together this amazing election and
-rehearsed the battle-cries on which it had been won. As he read, I saw
-O’Rane rising slowly and facing north with one hand outstretched for an
-instant towards the bleeding and exhausted world on the far side of our
-sheltering mountains: from Denmark to Italy, from Ireland to Siberia,
-two continents were still fighting for life because one man, nearly five
-years before, had flung bombs at another.
-
-“It’ll take years to undo this,” he muttered.
-
-Hornbeck read remorselessly on.
-
-“The Germans themselves couldn’t improve on it,” he commented at the
-end.
-
-“But _we_ can! We _must_!,” O’Rane cried. “In Heaven’s name . . . We
-went into this to secure the rights of small nations to a free
-existence; no one seems to care whether the big nations have a free
-existence or not! Could France and England follow out their destinies in
-the days when we lived under the shadow of this war? Can they do it now,
-when Europe is being sown with dragon’s teeth?”
-
-None answered him; but, as I waded later through the rhetoric of the
-election, I felt something of the helplessness that came over me four
-and a half years earlier, when one telegram after another shewed us that
-peace was slipping momentarily farther from our reach. The old
-dispensation could not avert war and could not make war; was this the
-third panel of my triptych and should we have to admit that the old
-dispensation could not make peace?
-
-We should all of us, I suppose, have been less thrown off our balance,
-if we had been given the least warning how the election was being
-conducted. Writing four years afterwards, I seem to be claiming an
-exceptional wisdom for our criticism at this time: section by section,
-the electorate that backed the 1918 coalition has withdrawn its support,
-though my old liberal colleagues made no sign of protest at the time.
-Little by little, the government itself swallowed its own rash words.
-The wildest fire-eater says now what Hornbeck and Laurence, O’Rane and
-I—a sufficiently heterogeneous group!—were saying in the last days of
-December four years ago. Our views were an accident of geography, for we
-were living in a political vacuum; an accident of history, too, for in
-our serious moments we based our expectations on the settlement of
-Vienna, believing that we in our generation were neither less
-magnanimous nor more insane than the contemporaries of Castlereagh.
-
-“If this is to be the atmosphere of the peace conference . . .” Hornbeck
-muttered.
-
-“These,” I reminded O’Rane, “are the people you’re going to educate up
-to a civic conscience.”
-
-“I must be getting back to London,” was all he would answer.
-
-I was reminded irresistibly of a similar party, similarly dispersing in
-the first days of August four and a half years earlier. We had all said
-then that we must get back to London; we could none of us have said what
-we expected to do there.
-
-“You’ll wait till Bertrand comes,” I begged.
-
-“Yes. I don’t suppose a day or two more or less will make much
-difference,” said O’Rane. “After all these years, too . . . It’s a
-curious thing, George; we’re both of us Irishmen, both of us men of
-peace; and, most of all, we’re reformers. All our working life we’ve
-seen the reforms nearest our hearts postponed and postponed by an
-eruption in Ireland or by a threat of European war. God forgive me, I
-had to stand as a tory and a militarist, because I saw this war coming!
-Overboard went all my dreams of making life tolerable for the sons of
-Ishmael! And now again!”
-
-I might have added that it was this feeling of futility which kept me
-from standing again for parliament when I lost my seat in 1910.
-
-“Until these same sons of Ishmael strike against war,” I answered, “it’s
-idle to think of improving their lot.”
-
-“And yet it’s so little I’m asking!,” he sighed. “I only want every man
-to have freedom to work . . . and save money . . . and marry . . . and
-have children . . . without interfering with his neighbours . . . and
-without interference from them. I want him to spend his old age in the
-comfort and peace of mind which he has earned. His children must be born
-healthy, to work, to save, to marry, to live and die as he has done. If
-civilized society can’t give him that . . . And it can’t so long as a
-country contains one single prison or workhouse or infirmary or brothel
-. . .”
-
-“I suspect there were brothels in the golden age,” I interposed.
-
-O’Rane leant forward and gripped my wrist till I winced with the pain.
-
-“In the golden age,” he answered between his teeth, “there were
-hopeless, uncaring cynics, who said that prostitution was the oldest
-profession in the world. Slavery was the oldest solution of all labour
-problems. Torture was the oldest safeguard of civil authority. The moral
-sense of the world must be roused till it sweeps away prostitution and
-disease, as it swept away torture and slavery. It was not to keep them
-flourishing that we went to war. And we _can’t_ sweep them away while
-another war threatens.” . . .
-
-He broke off, as my mother came into the garden with the day’s letters;
-and, as I struggled against the impact of my uncle’s fury, I recognized
-that I was being assailed by a stronger enthusiast even than O’Rane and
-being asked to save by propaganda a world that I thought had already
-been saved by war.
-
- 4
-
-Bertrand’s descent upon Cannes may be likened to the unheralded arrival
-of the headmaster in a form-room that has for some time been left to its
-own devices.
-
-“‘_The Theodosian code_’,” Laurence recited virtuously, “‘_was published
-in Constantinople on the 15th of February, 438 . . ._’ If Bertrand tries
-to find me a job, say I’m suited, thank you.”
-
-The rest of us, for all our feeling that we were drowsing in a
-back-water, looked regretfully at the blazing hibiscus-hedge and
-guiltily at one another.
-
-“We all ought to be going back,” said Barbara, who—six weeks
-before—had never wished to see Dover Cliffs again.
-
-I asked what good we could do; I nearly told her what harm we could not
-avoid doing, for Eric Lane had crossed from New York on O’Rane’s boat
-and was now in London. Bertrand’s outpouring, however, was beyond the
-range of argument.
-
-“_You will find_,” he predicted, “_that the world is entering on a new
-glacial age of materialism. We must fight it._”
-
-And his method of fighting it was to resurrect our old paper, to set me
-in the old editorial chair, to sweep the country with new propaganda and
-to create a new political party in the dining-room of Seymour Street.
-
-Those who have never edited a paper are inclined to compare themselves
-with Delane at his most legendary; and the comparison is seldom
-favourable to Delane or to _The Times_. Those who have never tried to
-influence opinion—as my uncle and I tried in six years’ devoted service
-to the Disarmament League—become in their daydreams a rival to Parnell
-or Gladstone and convert mass-meetings with a single speech. Hard-won
-experience had taught me better, yet this is what Bertrand proposed; and
-Barbara, I knew, was seeing herself already as the maker of cabinets and
-the adviser of kings.
-
-“_Read your Balzac_,” my uncle recommended in a disastrous postscript.
-“_London, for the next few years of your life, will be amazingly like
-Paris in the restoration-period . . ._”
-
-It was the postscript, I think, that fired Barbara’s imagination; and,
-as I watched her big eyes lighting up, I knew that it was empty to ask
-if she felt competent to stay a glacial age in its course. For a year or
-two before the war, she had occupied a position that, so far as I know,
-had never before been accorded in England to an unmarried woman,
-certainly to an unmarried woman of twenty. Raised above ordinary laws by
-her utter fearlessness, she had imposed a law of her own, in dress and
-manners, speech and thought, upon the greater part of her generation. As
-a child, Barbara has often told me, she saw that her personality would
-be bled white by her father’s. In Ottawa, in Simla and in London her
-wings beat unceasingly against the political, the religious and the
-social bars of the Crawleigh cage. Then she asserted herself; and, ten
-years later, she was known by sight wherever an illustrated paper
-penetrated; the first colonial contingents demanded to see Westminster
-Abbey and Lady Barbara Neave; and, had she ever paused, she might have
-seen herself becoming a legend in her own lifetime, as Bernhardt—on
-vastly more bizarre lines—became the heroine of the ‘Sarah myth’ in
-France.
-
-I had my answer to the question which I had asked myself on Armistice
-Day, when she gazed into the fire for a picture of what her own new life
-was to be. London, in the restoration-period, was marked out for her
-empire.
-
-When my uncle arrived, his mood was made apparent by the sombre opening
-statement that nations got the governments they deserved. He added, with
-fine public spirit, that the worst result of the election was the lack
-of an effective opposition. Then less impersonal feelings broke through:
-he charged ministers with treating the fourteen points as ‘a scrap of
-paper’ and recommended a strait-waistcoat for all who escaped the
-lamp-post. Sitting in a half-circle round his chair, with Lucien’s
-international parliament huddled on our fringe, we were castigated with
-a fury that would have been better deserved if we had in fact uttered
-the vain things with which we were charged: _we_ had promised that there
-should be no punitive damages and now _we_ were threatening to squeeze
-Germany like an orange; _we_ were pledged to try the kaiser, if not to
-execute him without trial; _we_ were to restore our trade by destroying
-our best customer.
-
-“If I’d asked for the kaiser’s head on a charger,” Bertrand thundered,
-“you’d have promised me _two_ heads on _two_ chargers.”
-
-When the first fury had abated, Lucien fanned it to life by a reference
-to the peace of Brest-Litovsk, demanding why Germany should be treated
-more tenderly in defeat than she had treated others in victory.
-
-“If England had been _invaded_ . . .” he went on with a kindling eye.
-“The mistake your prime minister made was that he didn’t say enough.”
-
-“You should have thought of all that before you agreed to the
-armistice,” Bertrand retorted.
-
-“Well, say, the terms of the armistice . . .” began Clifford van Oss.
-
-I have no doubt he was going to say that, if the French quoted one set
-of undertakings against us, then America, which had drawn the terms,
-would speedily quote another. My uncle, however, who detested what he
-called “the American habit of making speeches instead of conversing”,
-broke in with a speech of his own:
-
-“Not that it matters whether he said too little or too much! The
-speeches have served their turn. I tell you, Lloyd-George is a better
-journalist than Northcliffe in knowing what the public will want the day
-after to-morrow! _He_ knew that, when the troops came home to find no
-job waiting for them, people would forget they’d ever called him ‘the
-man who won the war’. Before they forgot him for high taxation, high
-prices, falling wages and a creeping paralysis of unemployment, he had
-to make himself snug. _And he has!_ Five years of autocratic power with
-the certainty that something _must_ turn up; five years’ support from
-the Curzons and Milners who’d never have seen the back-door of office
-without him; five years’ support from the Monds and Greenwoods of the
-liberal second-eleven; five years’ support from every man who’s lost a
-son, every woman who can’t make both ends meet. You need only promise to
-hang the kaiser and make Germany pay: England was worth a general
-election.”
-
-Bertrand’s outburst was followed by a long silence; and, as he chewed
-his moustache and gathered strength, I fancied that he might be
-reflecting how much he had aged since we incubated the Disarmament
-League in Princes Gardens and hatched _Peace_ out of a grimy office in
-Bouverie Street.
-
-“You give this lot five years, sir?,” asked O’Rane.
-
-“Unless they blunder into a new war before then,” Bertrand answered; “or
-unless we can make an opposition strong enough to break them.”
-
-As he swung round on me, I pointed out that he was forming an opposition
-before he had anything tangible to oppose.
-
-“We must _shape_ the peace!,” he cried. “I give you till to-night to
-make up your mind! If you desert me, George, I shall fight
-single-handed. And I’m getting too old for that. Where’s Barbara? I must
-explain what’s expected of her.”
-
-I capitulated without even taking my hours of grace. When Bertrand
-stumped indoors, I knew he was going to depict a shattered and mutinous
-army of liberals rallying to our exhortations and reconciled by
-Barbara’s diplomacy. I knew, further, that, outside the pages of a
-woman’s novel, politics never had been so theatrically arranged. Lord
-Crawleigh might dine with his daughter, but he would never vote with his
-son-in-law. Frank Jellaby and the independent liberals might, if we
-caught them unawares, maintain a civil front to the coalition-liberals,
-but they would never serve in the same administration as the men whom
-they charged with stabbing them in the back. None of this, however, was
-likely to influence Barbara in her present mood of exaltation.
-
-“Liberalism,” said my uncle in one of his fine, vague phrases, “is
-greater than the liberal party.”
-
-“In the present state of the liberal party,” I answered, “that would not
-be difficult. But you don’t _believe_ you’re going to make a new party
-of any kind.”
-
-Bertrand shook his head mournfully and sat with the far-away expression
-of an old and tired man who had sampled in his time the liberalism of
-Mazzini and Lincoln, Bright and Cobden, Bradlaugh and Chamberlain,
-Gladstone and Asquith.
-
-“If we can bring liberalism back to life,” he sighed, “a party will form
-without our help: all we need is a rallying-point. I mean something
-bigger than electoral reform and tariff squabbles, George: I mean a
-liberal spirit in politics. At the beginning, I should have called this
-a liberal war. When Wilson aimed at a peace that should leave nobody too
-strong, nobody too much broken, I called that a liberal spirit. I wrote
-to you about the glacial age of materialism, because a liberal spirit is
-the only thing that can melt it. Every individual, every country will
-fight for its own hand: it’s instinctive, like food-hoarding in 1914.
-Does Lucien care if Russia’s starving? Does van Oss care if England’s
-crippled with debt? Does any one care if the majority get less than the
-best out of life? Devil take the hindmost! That’s the spirit we have to
-fight.”
-
-“But can it be done with a sixpenny review?,” I asked.
-
- 5
-
-When our other guests had left us, Bertrand, Barbara and I set ourselves
-to collect our headquarters staff.
-
-“Old men,” boomed my uncle oracularly, “make wars; and young men fight
-them. We must be surrounded by the young men.”
-
-He then sat back, in the attitude which had become characteristic of him
-since his stroke, with his hairy, gnarled hands clasped over the ivory
-knob of his stick. I saw Barbara’s dark eyes shining as she hurried
-indoors and returned to the verandah with a pencil and paper. In her
-absence, Bertrand sought to seduce me by describing my room at the
-office and hinting at the furniture which he proposed to transfer from
-Princes Gardens. He resented my criticism that we were setting out to
-convert the world with six dubious Sheraton chairs and less than six
-more than dubious phrases; but, as we drafted our programme, I became
-ever more gloomily convinced that we were losing sight of the essentials
-in a wanton outburst of ornamentation. My excellent and unpractical
-colleagues agreed that we could have a delicious meal sent in from the
-Greyfriars Tavern for the editorial dinners; Barbara fought gamely for a
-weekly cartoon; Bertrand informed us, with an air of originality, that
-the youth of the nation were the trustees of posterity; and no one said
-a word about our gospel or our prophets.
-
-“All the conditions are new,” my uncle reminded me at short intervals.
-“We need new men, new methods. A new spirit . . .”
-
-And, while he coined phrases and Barbara designed our front page, I
-thought over the young men whom I had met when I was working at the
-Admiralty. Spence-Atkins and Jefferson Wright were still on Hornbeck’s
-“live register” of unemployed; and I invited them to take charge of our
-foreign policy and economics. That their names were unknown seemed a
-recommendation to Bertrand, who exclaimed in high glee:
-
-“New men! To catch the other new men!”
-
-On that, I presented him with a cynical jack-of-all-trades whom Hornbeck
-had engaged for his experience in the deeper waters of undetected
-roguery. I have no proof that Triskett’s hands were soiled, though a man
-whose friends included the scamps of every race and country must have
-lived under constant temptation to blackmail. I did not propose to give
-him free scope in what he wrote; but I thought that his curious
-information might sometimes illuminate an obscure motive.
-
-“A new man to catch the other new men,” Bertrand repeated.
-
-“A thief to catch a thief,” I answered; “but, if it’s youth you want,
-these men are all under thirty-five.”
-
-The average was reduced further when, at Barbara’s suggestion, I invited
-a novelist of thirty, a poet of twenty-five and a composer of nineteen
-to take our artistic pages under their protection. They were all, she
-told me, touched with genius. I was also becoming reckless.
-
-“And now,” said Bertrand, “can you set them to work in three months’
-time? You’ll want that to get in touch with new conditions. You must
-study life in the marketplace, George. Mass-feeling. The great movement
-of men. . . . We’ll have our first editorial dinner somewhere about the
-end of March.”
-
-“I should have it,” I suggested, “on the first of April.”
-
-When my uncle returned a few weeks later, we returned with him; and,
-while Barbara made our house ready for party-meetings and drawing-room
-conclaves, I carried the dubious Sheraton chairs to Fetter Lane and
-passed from the Eclectic Club to my uncle’s study in Princes Gardens, in
-leisurely pursuit of the great movement of men.
-
-I doubt if I have at any time felt more out of my element. I could
-understand O’Rane’s contention that, for all they won from civilization,
-the vast majority of mankind would be no worse off by taking to the
-hills and woods as bandits. I was prepared to work quite reasonably hard
-for my rooted faith that, if this vast majority was to be saved, it must
-be saved by its own efforts. I could sympathize with the proselytes to
-the League of Nations, though I placed no reliance in a league that did
-not make disarmament its first condition of membership. What I wholly
-failed to grasp was my uncle’s objective in taking an expensive office,
-exhuming our old manager from his retirement and entering the name of
-our paper once more at Stationer’s Hall.
-
-London had never, in all my experience, been so little interested in
-politics.
-
-“What’s been happening?,” Sam Dainton echoed when I took Barbara to dine
-with his parents. “Well, I’ve awarded myself the order of the
-bowler-hat; and I had the hell of a time in Paris after I left you; and
-now I’m thinking how I can make a bit of money.”
-
-“Same here,” added John Gaymer. “If you come across anything, George
-. . .”
-
-“Oh, the family first,” Laurence interrupted. “_Dear_ Cousin George
-. . .”
-
-The conversation at most dinner-parties in these weeks seemed to run on
-ways and means. Seizing on the jargon of the times at a moment when
-every one else was abandoning it, Lady Dainton described herself
-facetiously as “one of the new poor” and denounced every more fortunate
-neighbour as a “profiteer”, though I could not see that her novel
-poverty compelled her to retrenchment nor that her scorn for profiteers
-prevented Sir Roger’s trying to sell Crowley Court, at three times what
-he gave for it, to one of “the new rich”. In place of retrenchment I
-found a bewildering blend of ingenuity, industry and blackmail on the
-part of those who insisted on a life of pleasure and could find no one
-to finance it for them. Day after day, Barbara was dragged to new shops,
-where her friends sold her hats at exorbitant prices. Other friends
-offered to decorate our house. Others, again, begged me to open a
-“social” column in _Peace_ and to put them in charge of it.
-
-“You can’t expect people to take much interest in public affairs,” Lady
-Dainton said to me at this first dinner. “There are _so_ many other
-things! These children”—she looked benevolently round the table at the
-girls she had collected for the approval of her necessitous son—“they
-don’t know what society _was_ before the war. They’ve none of them even
-been presented, so you can imagine the flutter they’re in. Their first
-season!”
-
-“I shouldn’t have thought any one had the money to make much of a
-season,” I objected, with a cast back to her late confession of
-universal ruin.
-
-“The war has only transferred it from one pocket to another,” she
-assured me.
-
-This dark saying was made plain in these first unsettled days before the
-rebirth of our paper, when I drifted about London, analysing the
-atmosphere of the armistice. Less diplomatically, Lady Dainton might
-have said that, if the natives had too little money, the foreigners had
-too much; and, without a trace of diplomacy, a number of my
-acquaintances seemed to be coaxing it back from the new pockets to the
-old. With my own ears I heard the Duchess of Ross demanding a list of
-the Americans she could advantageously invite to her house. I listened
-with amusement as Clifford van Oss tried to explain politely that the
-people on whom she fawned were not received in New York. And I watched
-Sir Adolf Erckmann being made a test case for the date at which a
-wealthy man with a German name could be received by his less wealthy
-friends.
-
-“The great movement of men isn’t carrying me anywhere in particular,” I
-confessed to Bertrand as the day of our first issue drew near. “I’ve met
-a number of spongers, lately, and a greater number of snobs. Which are
-the more to be pitied . . .”
-
-“That’s only a phase,” my uncle answered. “London’s only a part of
-England; these people are only a part of London. While you were a boy,
-you must have seen the Rand Jews agonizing to fill their houses; and you
-saw the ‘new poor’ of the Harcourt death duties taking all they could
-get.”
-
-“And we saw the result in the last years before the war,” I said, as Sir
-Adolf Erckmann shambled out of earshot. Could we give rein to our racial
-prejudices, I never knew whether I would sooner lynch him or the girls,
-like Sonia Dainton, who in those days had endured his odious
-familiarities for the sake of a string-quartet, a champagne supper and a
-free drive home in an Erckmann car. “A whole generation grew up in the
-belief that man had a natural right to be amused at some one else’s
-expense.”
-
-“You’d have found the same thing in Rome and Nineveh,” said Bertrand.
-“Whenever a conspicuous social position is divorced from the means to
-keep it up . . . _That’s_ not a thing to notice. I told you to study the
-movement of men because one class is being squeezed out of existence. It
-may last my time, but it won’t last yours. It was never a big class, but
-in some ways it was the best. Now the sons have been killed; and the
-parents are crippled with taxation. Who’s coming to take their place,
-George? That’s the riddle for boys like you; and it’s to the newcomers
-we must appeal. . . . Is everything ready for our first number?”
-
-“As ready as it can be,” I answered, “without a principle, a policy or
-even a catchword.”
-
-When I went to Fetter Lane for the ceremony of ordering the machinists
-to print off, I was glad to see that my colleagues shewed no lack of
-enthusiasm. Headed by Bertrand, we marched to the Clock Tower Press and
-stood in a half-circle till he should give the sign. Martin Luther,
-printing his own bibles, could hardly have been more impressive; and, as
-we marched back to toast Bertrand in tepid champagne, the day seemed
-pregnant with fate.
-
-“All the same,” I said, as we dispersed, “you’ve none of you suggested a
-single reason why any one should want to buy this paper. People are
-simply not thinking of politics.”
-
-“They will, when they come out of their fool’s paradise,” answered
-Bertrand.
-
-With a prediction so vague I could not contend. Reconstruction, of which
-I had heard so much in the last years of the war, appeared to stop short
-when private lives and fortunes had been reconstructed. Employment was
-good; money was plentiful; trade was booming; and, after we had spent
-five million pounds a day without suffering for it, after we had found
-work for every one at his own price, it was not wonderful if the laws of
-political economy seemed to have been suspended. My brother-in-law
-Gervaise was but one of many whom I settled on the permanent wage-sheet
-of the country; during the next few days I was to help Sam Dainton into
-an engineering firm at Hartlepool and to be told that the directors
-could accommodate as many more of the same kind as I chose to send.
-
-It was too good to be true; it was too good to last; but, while it
-lasted, I felt we could expect little support for gloomy vaticinations
-that were being falsified under our eyes.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOUR
-
-
- AFTER THE DELUGE
-
-
- Death is the end of life; ah, why
- Should life all labour be?
- Let us alone. Time driveth onward fast,
- And in a little while our lips are dumb.
- Let us alone. What is it that will last?
- All things are taken from us, and become
- Portions and parcels of the dreadful Past.
- Let us alone. What pleasure can we have
- To war with evil? Is there any peace
- In ever climbing up the climbing wave?
-
- TENNYSON: _The Lotus-Eaters_.
-
- 1
-
-At the end of March, as Bertrand had ordained, our first editorial
-dinner took place. It was followed by a reception; and the two events
-might have been read, by the optimistic, as an announcement that a new
-force was at work in political and social London. Throughout the long
-preparations, Barbara told us repeatedly that she had no personal
-interest in our organization; but she could not have worked harder if
-this had been a battle which she had to win or a lost battle which she
-had to retrieve. For the first time since our marriage, she seemed fully
-alive; the old love of ascendancy had returned; and I forgot the
-futility of my uncle’s crusade in the happiness which it brought to my
-wife.
-
-“Well, I wasn’t going to spoil _your_ life, if I could help it,” she
-laughed, when I complimented her on her new radiance. “Whatever kind of
-mess I’ve made of my own . . .”
-
-“It’s early days to be saying you’ve made a mess of your life,” I told
-her.
-
-These first weeks had been less formidable than I had expected. Every
-one was too busy with his own concerns to recall the furious
-tongue-wagging of the war; and the players in what Barbara counted her
-tragedies had obligingly withdrawn from the stage. Jack Waring, the
-first of her victims, crossed my path but once in three years: I met him
-hurrying out of his tailor’s, and he stopped only long enough to say
-that he was breeding blood-stock in the midlands and hardly ever came to
-London. Eric Lane, a greater sufferer in a longer tragedy, had
-disappeared; I was told that he was in London and I assumed that he must
-be at work on a new play. Certainly we did not see him for several
-months; and it was only in rare, startling moods of depression that
-Barbara seemed to remember him.
-
-“How much you feel depends on how much you put into life,” she
-suggested, a little wistfully. “You can make a mess of your life when
-you’re a child, if you go the right way about it. _You_ wouldn’t,
-because you let other people live your life for you; but I always had to
-make mine a great spiritual adventure, a thing to be squeezed dry, not
-tasted! At the end I must feel that I’ve taken a wonderful journey and
-that every moment of it has been marked by poignant emotions, vivid
-experiences. The whole of myself must go into everything.”
-
-“When you see a WET PAINT sign, you must make sure that the paint is
-really wet?,” I asked.
-
-“With both hands! Unlike my dear George, who avoids all paint because
-some of it is sometimes not quite dry. We’re a strange and wonderful
-combination, darling.”
-
-“The actor and the audience.”
-
-“You’re content just to look on?”
-
-“Life is varied enough!,” I said. “And, though I don’t suppose any
-period is dull when you know it, I believe our own period is the most
-interesting in all history. I believe, too, that we’re in the most
-interesting part of the most interesting period. Bertrand will tell you
-that our day is over and that the future lies with the new men. I’m
-watching.”
-
- 2
-
-My uncle’s opinion was endorsed, perhaps naturally, by one who was a new
-man himself and who introduced me at this time to some at least of the
-other new men. Nearly four years have passed since I began to watch this
-battle of old and new; I am watching still, and the battle is undecided.
-It was on the day when our paper was reborn that our old
-advertisement-manager called in Fetter Lane to prove that we were
-working on wrong lines; and, as he knew enough of mob-psychology to make
-a fortune out of it, I listened respectfully to the criticism and
-studied the critic. Sir Philip Saltash had travelled far since the
-August day when Bertrand paid off the staff—Mr. Saltash included—and
-brought _Peace_ to an end by shivering the electros of the headings with
-a mallet; he was to travel farther before he entered the House of Lords
-as Lord Saltash of Bonde, publicity-expert and political wire-puller.
-How much farther he will travel is another of the things I am watching.
-
-“If _you_ think people will listen to the _stuff_ your old man’s put in
-his _prospectus_,” he began with a force and directness that made me
-feel the new men were bringing new manners with them, “you’re making the
-mistake of your life. You may be right; every one else may be wrong
-. . .”
-
-As he paused with a shrug of contemptuous challenge, I reminded myself
-that he was come to offer me publicity for _Peace_ and must therefore
-prove that, without publicity, _Peace_ would wilt and die.
-
-“My uncle feels,” I said, “that it’s bad policy to cure one
-Alsace-Lorraine by setting up half-a-dozen others. It’s time _some_ one
-made a protest against the last election.”
-
-“Even if no one pays any attention to it? Mark you, I can _make_ people
-listen,” he added, as he rolled an unlighted cigar from side to side of
-his loose mouth; and I tried to recall how many million pounds Saltash
-had advertised into war-loans and how many thousand men he had ordered,
-from his ubiquitous hoardings, into the army. “That’s my job. _Has_
-been, ever since I left you.”
-
-“How would you make people listen to _us_?,” I asked.
-
-Saltash caught up a copy of our first number and turned the pages with
-loud slaps of an annihilating hand. I have forgotten his technical
-proposals, though I remember that he kindled me with his cleverness the
-while he was outraging me with his vulgarity. I have not, however,
-forgotten his lyrical flights in describing the place of publicity in
-public life. I had met “press-secretaries” and heard of “propaganda
-sections” in government departments; I had suspected that certain
-ministers were raised or disgraced at the bidding of certain
-newspaper-proprietors; but I had not imagined that newspaper-proprietors
-themselves struck or spared at the behest of men like Saltash, who in
-their turn controlled the flow of information from Whitehall to Fleet
-Street.
-
-“It’s a question of spot-light,” Saltash explained; and I learned that,
-when Dormer came to grief over food-rationing, it was Saltash’s artful
-manipulation of the switches that saved him from public vengeance and
-secured him his seat in the cabinet.
-
-“I never _did_ think Dormer was to blame,” I happened to interpose.
-
-“I never let you!,” cried Saltash. “Remember the Flying Corps scandal?
-_I_ did that. And you soon forgot about Dormer. I told him from the
-first he had only to lie quiet. . . . Later on . . .”
-
-Later on, without prompting, I remembered Dormer’s reappearance.
-Discovered by the caricaturists and taken to the heart of the public,
-Dormer—with his vast chin and grotesque hat—became a music-hall hero.
-“Our Willie” was acclaimed by the gallery with the loyal fervour
-accorded in other days to “good old Joe”. The _Snap-Shot_ shewed him
-pruning roses with his smiling wife in an “old-world garden” and playing
-bumble-puppy with his apple-cheeked children. Finally, in the last days
-of a united front against a common foe, his portrait was thrown on the
-screen—after those of King Albert and General Joffre, Lord Kitchener
-and Mr. Lloyd-George—as the man who had saved England from starvation.
-
-The cost of Dormer’s apotheosis was one baronetcy and the promise of a
-peerage when the more squeamish section of the government was better
-used to the Saltash idea.
-
-“Spot-light,” repeated the wizard. “People can’t look at more than one
-thing at a time. Has it ever occurred to you why the old coalition went
-and the new one came? The ginger-group were working that way from the
-day Asquith carried conscription for them; they didn’t need him after
-that, but the public wasn’t ready for a change. Well, it was my job to
-_make_ the public ready. I concentrated opinion against certain men and
-never left ’em alone; I concentrated in favour of others. The
-Dardanelles. Mesopotamia. Shells. Food. You and I know that the new lot
-were tarred with the same brush as the old; but we made the public think
-they’d been on another planet when all these messes were made. The old
-lot were too quiet; they never hit back.”
-
-“There was a war on,” I reminded him.
-
-“They would never have fallen if they’d shewn fight,” Saltash retorted.
-“A man’s power in politics is what he makes others believe it to be.
-‘This war is too big for ordinary folk,’ people were saying: ‘we want
-supermen.’ Well, we said the new lot _were_ supermen. When there weren’t
-enough to go round, we made so much din that office-sweepers seemed like
-supermen. We restored confidence; and we frightened the Germans. Now,
-you say you’re reviving the old rag and your slogan is to be ‘a
-_lasting_ peace’. You’ll be called pro-Boche. You’ll be told you’re
-letting the Hun off. I don’t despair, though. The first thing is to out
-the present lot; and I can do that on departmental scandals alone. ’Got
-all the papers. Then we must prepare a big peace-boost. . . . Lunch with
-me and talk it over.”
-
-Though I had nothing to discuss, I went with Saltash because Saltash
-hypnotized me to come. All the vitality of young America radiated from
-him, though he styled himself a Canadian; his features recalled semitic
-South Russia, though he dissembled his love for the Jews; in the ten or
-twelve years that I had known him I never detected a trace of breeding,
-education or principle; and in the next two years I was never to see him
-entirely sober. Until he has his first stroke, however, I count him one
-of the six most dangerous men in Europe, for the “yellow” press of every
-country is an instrument on which he has played himself into wealth and
-power. As a purveyor of publicity, he is the logical conclusion from the
-cheap press that came into existence when England was taught,
-willy-nilly, to read; and England is imperilled by him, as she is
-imperilled by every man who, in his daily work and life, has everything
-to gain and nothing to risk.
-
-“_I_ trouble waters,” he explained thickly. “_Other_ fellers do fishing.
-No personal axe t’ grind.”
-
-After a champagne luncheon he talked to me of these others. If the war
-unified the British Empire, it also brought to England a number of
-adventurous spirits who had made existence unsafe for themselves in
-their native dominions and whose claim to a hearing depended less on
-their political wisdom than on the number of miles they had travelled to
-reach Downing Street. The blatant harangues of Mr. Giles to indulgent
-imperial conferences were received with so much respect that hysterical
-women petitioned to have him included in the war-cabinet; a country with
-population and wealth equal to the city of Glasgow ranked in our
-councils as a great power.
-
-“_I_ did that,” Saltash confided. “Overseas dominions. Young wolves
-claiming place council-rock. People here _crawled_ to him. And the
-government didn’t dare snub him.”
-
-“So long,” I said, “as the prophet comes from another country, he has
-full honour in ours.”
-
-“He was a cut above some of them,” said Saltash defensively; and I was
-told of one great public man who had dodged the dock in Australia to buy
-papers in England, of another who operated in London because he was
-threatened with a bullet in his brain if he ventured back to Winnipeg.
-Though Saltash did not say so, I think they may have fished in the
-waters which he troubled.
-
-“The revenges of time!,” I said, as I stood up to go. “This is the
-remittance-man come home to roost.”
-
-“A party can’t exist without funds,” said Saltash, beckoning to our
-waiter for a third liqueur. “Or without publicity.”
-
-That I was not prepared to contest; and, as a new-born party had to
-collect its funds and build up its organization at short notice, I was
-not surprised that the rich men surrounding the coalition were more
-numerous and less savoury than the sufficiently dubious candidates for
-honours whom I had seen haunting the whips’ office during my active
-political career. If I was to believe Saltash, however, London had
-suddenly become a hunting-ground for the desperadoes of the empire.
-These “new men” were unknown names when the war began; soon I heard of
-them whenever a political crisis was being engineered. Their ability was
-undoubted; their experience had been gained in rough schools; and their
-resourcefulness admitted no limit. Supplying the impecunious with money
-and the affluent with advice, they acquired knowledge and influence
-which they used to acquire more money; and this in turn purchased them a
-further power of unseen interference in the direction of our government.
-
-That night, as I sat down to our inaugural dinner, I told Bertrand of my
-host at luncheon and of his conversation.
-
-“It’s no new thing,” said my uncle, who in these nights of doubt and
-sorrow unmasked an almost irritating resolution to be jolly at all
-costs. “The great international financiers have influenced governments
-and been influenced by them since banks and governments began.”
-
-Historically, that may have been true. The new thing, as Bertrand
-himself might have said, was the character of the new men and the new
-methods which they employed.
-
- 3
-
-This dinner was to be my last frolic as an irresponsible spectator.
-
-When, as editor and managing-director, I proposed the toast of
-“_Peace_”, a vibration from my colleagues’ eagerness troubled my rigid
-negations and stirred doubt in my bland assurance. _Was_ Bertrand’s
-project so hare-brained as I had thought? I questioned myself in honest
-uncertainty as I settled my tie and looked down on the double row of
-expectant faces. The old man’s predictions at Cannes were fulfilled as
-soon as the conference met and a vague parliament of man reformed as a
-quarrelsome committee of ten; the clash between President Wilson’s
-fourteen points and Mr. Lloyd-George’s election speeches rang out when
-the committee of ten shrank to a camarilla of four; and, if we had ever
-doubted the apathy of the British public, our doubt must have evaporated
-day by day as the first House of Commons in the new glacial age sat with
-hands folded and eyes set jealously on the position each member had
-wrested from the war. Twice or thrice in these months a
-vigilance-committee of sterner and more unbending new members sent
-hectoring telegrams to keep their representatives up to the mark;
-President Wilson once ordered his ship to get up steam; and the Duchess
-of Ross dined out intermittently on M. Clemenceau’s latest epigram; but
-it is substantially true to say that no one in England thought of the
-peace-treaty until it was submitted for the approval of parliament.
-
-In my speech I confined myself to congratulating Bertrand on his staff.
-At the end, he hoisted himself slowly to his feet and indicated his own
-part in our endeavour:
-
-“You young men will have to do the work; but perhaps, from a long
-experience, I may be able to advise you. No lasting peace can be founded
-on a sense of grievance; and, though the heathen are raging furiously
-now, they’ll outgrow that phase. Maybe it’s because I had to keep my
-mouth shut during the war, maybe old age is making me more radical. This
-is not a party organ, it never was; it was an expression of liberal
-spirit, and that’s what it has to be again. We were called hard names
-when war broke out; but we had the right vision. Labour still thinks
-parochially; toryism still thinks imperially, which is the same thing;
-radicalism must think internationally. These fierce local patriotisms
-are an unconscionable time a-dying; but England is a bigger conception
-than the heptarchy, Europe is a bigger conception than England, the
-world is a bigger conception than Europe. We depend too much on our
-neighbours to blow them out of existence every few years. That truth has
-been vouchsafed to those of us who are at this table; we have to get it
-accepted.”
-
-I rang a bell; and we were handed early copies of our first number.
-Every man turned avidly to his own contribution. Then Barbara sent for
-me to help her receive our guests.
-
-This first of many receptions might have been arranged, I thought, as a
-review of all that the war had left us. Barbara stood at the stair-head
-in a white shawl of Chinese silk, with flamingoes in flight and a deep
-fringe sweeping to the scarlet heels of her white shoes. One shoulder,
-miraculously whiter than the shawl, was bare; a high comb of dark
-tortoise-shell proclaimed the astonishing fairness of her skin; and in
-the soft light of the chandelier her deep-set eyes shone like huge
-sapphires. I stopped in stupefaction to realize that this was my wife;
-and Barbara, reading my thoughts, coloured softly and pressed my hand.
-As our guests came self-consciously up the stairs, I saw one after
-another checking in the same bewilderment; and Raymond Stornaway
-supplied the image that was eluding me when he exclaimed:
-
-“A wand! A wand! You sweet child, with a wand in your hand you’d be the
-fairy queen I fell in love with at my first pantomime, fifty years
-before you were born.”
-
-As I had taken little part in sending out the invitations, I have only
-an indistinct memory of all who came. A phalanx of perpetually
-disapproving relations gave place to a battalion of my old Admiralty
-colleagues, headed by Hornbeck; new young diplomats, representing yet
-younger, newer states, raised Barbara’s hand ceremoniously to their
-lips; _débutantes_ of a generation after mine pressed under the elbows
-of old family friends, who blocked the traffic while they retailed
-trivial anecdotes of my wife’s or my infancy. Here and there I saw an
-actress, whose name in private life always eluded me; time and again I
-uttered or received a warning against ‘the world’s worst bore’. I
-remember being introduced, after frantic, whispered explanations, to
-innumerable authors in tortoise-shell-rimmed spectacles. In my turn, I
-remember introducing to Barbara the lost political sheep whom she was to
-charm back into their fold.
-
-“I didn’t know there were so many people in the _world_!,” she exclaimed
-in one of the few brief lulls.
-
-Raymond Stornaway overheard her and sighed:
-
-“It’s the summer and autumn without the spring.”
-
-As the brief lull ended, my thoughts went back to the morning of
-Armistice Day when I paused on my way home from the Admiralty to reckon
-how many of my own generation had survived the war. As Robson bent,
-straightened himself and turned at the stair-head, I expected at every
-moment to hear him calling out “Captain Dainton” or “Lord Loring” or
-“Mr. Arden”; had I shut my eyes to their absence, I could have fancied
-that we were living in 1914. Now, as then, Crawleigh was so much
-engrossed in a political altercation with Bertrand that he walked
-stormily into the drawing-room without noticing us; Sam Dainton trotted
-up grinning—as usual—and whispering scandal into Violet Loring’s
-reluctant ear; Sir Roger, waiting uneasily for his wife, was
-mistaken—as usual—for a hired waiter and urged to tell John Gaymer
-where he could get his usual drink.
-
-“The last time I did this sort of thing was at my coming-of-age ball,”
-Barbara murmured.
-
-“Which you gave for yourself because no one would give it for you?”
-
-“Well, I hated father’s friends; and he hated mine,” she laughed.
-“Besides, I’d been in so many scrapes that I _had_ to see whether people
-would continue to know me.”
-
-“They all came,” I said.
-
-“Except one. That was the time when Jack Waring proposed to me one day
-and quarrelled with me the next,” she explained lightly. “Why he wanted
-to marry me when he disapproved of everything I did . . . I invited him
-specially.” . . .
-
-“And he wouldn’t come?”
-
-“No. Apparently . . . Eric isn’t coming . . . to-night.”
-
-The announcement fell so tranquilly, it was so long since we had
-mentioned Eric Lane’s name that I doubted for a moment if I had heard
-her aright.
-
-“You . . . invited him?,” I asked.
-
-“Yes. Sonia and David were dining with him; and I told David to bring
-him. You don’t mind? I wanted to be friends. Ah . . .!” The sound was
-painfully like a sob; but, when I turned, I saw Barbara smiling eagerly
-as the O’Ranes came—unaccompanied—up the stairs. “Take David where he
-won’t be trampled on,” she whispered.
-
-I was glad of a moment’s respite after the unintended shock which
-Barbara had given me. Eric had left too deep a mark on her spirit to be
-quickly forgotten; but I fancied, when her old exuberant joy in life
-returned, that she was no longer missing him. An hour before, I had been
-stupefied to realize that Barbara was my wife; now I wondered how much
-she was my wife. Not all her thoughts were mine; was all her affection?
-I was checked, by some question from O’Rane, on the verge of a shameful
-jealousy.
-
-“You want to know who’s here?” I looked down on a seething mass of
-heads. “It would be easier to say who’s not. Generally speaking, any one
-who was too old or too young for the war; and a sprinkling of people
-with charmed lives. The summer and winter without the spring, Raymond
-calls it.”
-
-“It was a slaughter and a half!,” O’Rane muttered. “If you calculate,
-among your own friends, the families who’ve been left without a direct
-heir . . .”
-
-“Oh, Bertrand will tell you the old aristocracy is done for. I don’t
-know. It weathered the industrial revolution and the Napoleonic wars.”
-
-“The shock was more gradual; there was a greater power of resistance.
-Now the big estates are breaking up; and the great masses are becoming
-conscious of their strength.”
-
-As I looked down the stairs, Crawleigh and Bertrand were finishing their
-altercation. I heard Raymond telling them that it was time for old men
-to be in bed; and the phrase reminded me of my meeting with Saltash. In
-every sense of the term, they were old men, no longer able to hold their
-own against the young vigour of Saltash’s recruits; in any struggle of
-class with class, the material ammunition had passed from their hands.
-Their prestige was weakening before the pressure of those who excelled
-them in everything but length of tradition; and that tradition was now
-being cut short.
-
-“I suppose you can call yourself a radical and still believe in the
-value of a good strain in breeding,” I said. “That hard-worked creature
-‘the historian of the future’ will _have_ to say, I suppose, that the
-people of this country carried a heavier burden than any other in the
-war? I _think_ he’ll say that, of all our people, those who carried the
-heaviest burden were the leaders. In fighting, in directing, in paying
-. . . And in being killed: that’s why there are so few of them here
-to-night. We shall be the poorer if we lose that strain.”
-
-“We’ll hope there are still enough of them left to carry it on,” said
-O’Rane.
-
-“The next few years will be a race; there’ll be a fight against time, to
-spread the tradition before the people who maintain it are swallowed
-up.”
-
-We talked at random until Sonia came to collect him for another party.
-
-“I’m sorry we couldn’t bring Eric,” I heard him say to Barbara on
-leaving. “Some friend of his had a first night; and he’d promised to
-look in.”
-
-“Did he say if he was coming on?,” asked Barbara.
-
-“I should think it depends on the time. There was some talk about a
-supper-party afterwards.”
-
-“Then I don’t suppose he will,” she answered with the composure of
-complete indifference. “Good-night, David. Good-night, Sonia.”
-
-When we were by ourselves, I sent the servants to bed; and we sat for
-half-an-hour discussing the party.
-
-“Half-past one,” she sighed at last. “Nobody _can_ be coming now.”
-
-“If any one does,” I said, “he’ll find an excellent doorstep to sit on.
-Come to bed, Babs.”
-
-“I must write one letter first. You go on and turn out the lights. If
-you see my torch, you might put it on the hall-table.”
-
-I chose a book and went to my room. Only when I was in bed did I
-discover that I had brought the wrong book; and, on going downstairs
-again, I saw the lights in the hall blazing. Then, as I reached the
-drawing-room, I caught sight of Barbara, seated in a high-backed chair
-at the stair-head. At first I thought she was asleep; then I saw that
-she was staring through the hall to the front door.
-
-“Is anything the matter?” I asked.
-
-“He _can’t_ be coming now,” she answered.
-
-“Who? Eric?”
-
-My earlier whisperings of jealousy were silenced by her utter
-forlornness. I did not care whether her thoughts and affection and heart
-and soul were his, so long as I could take the look of pain out of her
-eyes. I wanted to tell her that I understood and was sorry for her; but
-the name had roused her, and she stood up with languid dignity:
-
-“Yes.” . . . She was once again the alert and vigilant hostess of an
-hour before. “I thought it would look so terribly rude if he came here
-and found no one to receive him. After I’d specially asked him, too,”
-she added on a higher note. Then her self-possession returned to her.
-“It’s two o’clock. As he hasn’t come now, I suppose . . . he’s not
-coming . . . at all.” . . .
-
- 4
-
-If “the historian of the future”, whom I have already invoked, have the
-microscopic vision and the titanic industry with which his predecessors
-credit him, I believe he must find space for a footnote, in brilliant,
-to describe our share in forming a critical opposition during the last
-four months of the armistice. In the days immediately following the 1918
-election, the government had hardly an enemy; in the months after the
-peace-treaty was signed, it had hardly a friend. Even before the
-_Economic Consequences of the Peace_, even before the mutual
-vituperation of the allies, an independent mood of questioning and doubt
-succeeded to the hysterical assertions and demands of the mad election.
-How far we fostered that mood by means of open propaganda and private
-suggestion, how far we made articulate a frame of mind that was already
-struggling to express itself, I cannot say; but that the mood became
-contagious cannot be challenged. In these first spring days, Barbara’s
-circumspect cousin, Lord John Carstairs, avoided our house for fear of
-finding himself described as a ‘defeatist’, a friend of the enemy, a
-creature of Caillaux or a hireling of Stinnes. By the end of the summer,
-an alert opportunist such as Sir Rupert Foreditch sought publicity in
-the columns of _Peace_ or opened his campaign by an attack on Seymour
-Street because our paper was frank and fearless and because “the
-Oakleigh gang”, as we were unflatteringly called, was too important and,
-in time, too numerous to be ignored.
-
-On the morrow of the inaugural dinner, Bertrand hunted me out of doors
-to study “the great movement of men”, while he plotted with Barbara new
-days of keeping me on the run. No reference was made to our pitiful
-encounter at the stair-head; but I left a note to say that she was not
-to be called, and, when I carried in her breakfast, she looked up—with
-the eloquent silence of a dog—to thank me for understanding and to shew
-that she too understood. At once, after that, she began to discuss the
-party of the night before.
-
-I am not going to pretend that my work for the next three years, though
-it left me without an hour, a house or a wife to call my own, was void
-of interest: duty compelled me to meet every one, from labour-leaders to
-cabinet ministers and from editors to bishops, who might be thought to
-influence action or opinion by a hair’s breadth; I had to read the new
-books and absorb a mass of papers; I explored different parts of the
-country to find what different classes were saying or thinking; and a
-New York reporter could not have been quicker to lay hands on the
-foreign bankers and diplomats who passed through London. Two or three
-dinner-parties were given in each week to these unofficial missionaries;
-I met my uncle daily at the Eclectic Club to pool our discoveries in
-collective psychology; and on Wednesday nights the staff of _Peace_
-assembled on their spurious Sheraton chairs and helped to hammer out a
-new message to mankind.
-
-If from time to time I harboured unworthy projects for desertion, my
-weakness of purpose must be attributed to natural indolence and perhaps
-justifiable impatience. Our progress seemed so lamentably slow; our aims
-were so exasperatingly vague! Much as I valued Bertrand’s long
-experience, greatly as I admired his flashes of intuition, I dreaded his
-descents on Fetter Lane in these first discouraging months. From Sir
-Philip Saltash or from the spirit of the age he had caught an itch for
-supermen; and I went about my work with a shame-faced consciousness of
-inadequacy while my uncle clasped his hands over his stick and boomed
-oracularly of novel tendencies and strange expedients.
-
-“We’re becoming precious,” he grunted unamiably at our second number.
-“Average opinion; the common touch: you mustn’t neglect that, George. If
-you take your friend Dainton as a barometer . . .”
-
-And I was incontinently pricked into the least comfortable of my clubs,
-where I tested average feelings as they were represented in the changing
-utterances of one well-meaning and uniquely stupid legislator. The first
-experiment was made at a time when the successful candidates of the
-December election were uneasily hoping to be saved by the firmness and
-idealism of President Wilson from the consequences of their less
-temperate speeches.
-
-“‘Wilson _le bienvenu_’,” Dainton murmured approvingly, as he laid down
-a welcoming number of _Punch_.
-
-A few weeks later, I found the French press excitedly proclaiming that
-Germany was being let off too easily. Sir John Woburn demanded with all
-the polyphonic energy of the Press Combine why America should be allowed
-to deprive the allies of their just reparations; and Dainton assured me
-profoundly that the task of winning the war was child’s play compared
-with that of winning the peace.
-
-“Damned obstinate fellow, Wilson,” he grumbled. “If he thinks we’re
-going to let him throw away all that our gallant boys fought for, he’ll
-have a rude awakening.”
-
-Later still, he ceased to speak of the president altogether. Remembering
-Limehouse, he could not give implicit trust to the prime minister; but
-the gossip that floated from Paris to London convinced him that M.
-Clemenceau was the only statesman in Europe and he was content to leave
-himself in the hands of a man whose rare, sardonic utterances embodied
-the ferocity which Dainton had expressed so much less concisely in his
-election speeches. Members of parliament, he told me, had duties nearer
-home. Labour menaces were more important than quibbles about frontiers:
-coal strikes and railway strikes, both leading through nationalization
-and civil war to ruin and the disruption of the empire, were the proper
-study of political mankind. Sir Roger no longer spoke of the British
-working-man as one of “our gallant boys”; and I was invited to penetrate
-the disguise that sheltered a Russian communist. Before I could do
-justice to this conception, he had found new duties even nearer to the
-hand of a patriot. “Bolshevism” was bad, but it soon ceased, in
-Dainton’s eyes, to be quite so bad as “profiteering”; and neither, by
-the middle of the summer, was so exasperating nor so tenacious of life
-as Irish irreconcilability.
-
-“If I could hold the wretched country under the sea for five minutes!,”
-he exploded.
-
-Fed on political catch-words and instructed by safe cartoons, Sir Roger
-Dainton, coalition-unionist member for the Crowley Division of
-Hampshire, would explain Ireland on alternate days by reference to the
-incurable dourness of the north and the ineradicable savagery of the
-south. He was the ‘pendulum voter’, the representative of all that is
-unstable, ill-informed and irresponsible in public life. For that I was
-prepared; for that Bertrand had sent me to study him. I was not
-prepared, however, to be accepted as a disciple and an ally. Dining
-weekly in Rutland Gate, I wondered whether the little man had ever
-before found any one who would listen to him: obviously, pathetically,
-he looked forward to our “good pow-wows”; and, when he saw me to the
-door and gave me a fresh cigar, still more when he said, “Then, next
-Tuesday as usual?”, I felt that I was being sent back to school with a
-sovereign in my hand and being invited to Crowley for my next leave-out
-day. My embarrassment was increased by a sense of black ingratitude. Sir
-Roger always made these meetings “an occasion within the meaning of the
-act”, as he called it, and opened his best champagne for me. When
-Barbara deserted me on the plea that we wanted to talk business and she
-would be in the way, Dainton redoubled his hospitality and became
-increasingly confused in speech. As I watched the clock, I would ask
-myself how such a man was admitted to the board of a company or
-tolerated in parliament; then, in a flash of revelation, I saw him as
-the type of all the class on which Sir Philip Saltash exercised the
-wiles of his publicity. Saltash was a logical inference from Dainton.
-
-“Now you see why I told you to study him,” Bertrand chuckled, when I
-announced that I would resign my editorship before I submitted to
-another spell of Dainton’s political conversation.
-
-In despair, I asked how our little office in Fetter Lane was to overtake
-and undo the work of Saltash and his forebears of the popular press. To
-this, however, my uncle had no answer.
-
-Though he continued to speak of us as a chosen people, our mission of
-enlightenment was established on a paying basis by the success of our
-literary editors, who made of _Peace_ the most feared and least loved
-review in London. As Hancock confined his criticism to novels and
-Mattrick to poetry, they could not be charged with rolling their own
-logs or obstructing a rival, though I noticed that Mattrick’s sweeping
-condemnations stopped short of “Mr. Hancock’s true lyrical genius” and
-Hancock’s devastating onslaughts on modern fiction made an exception in
-favour of Mr. Mattrick. My conscience became unquiet when books were
-sent out for review and I heard Hancock choosing critics who could be
-trusted to “sit on this sort of rot”; but, as the “rot” was usually
-written by men who seemed to be making a substantial income, I hoped
-that they could afford an occasional attack and console themselves with
-the knowledge that, in the Penmen’s Club, fifty yards away, a league of
-disgruntled novelists and poets was plotting the destruction of “the
-Hancock-Mattrick gang”.
-
-“All the same,” Bertrand expostulated after a month or two, “we’re not
-running this paper so that one ill-tempered young gentleman can read
-what another ill-tempered young gentleman has said about a book he
-hasn’t troubled to finish. We’re not in touch yet with opinion. You
-don’t mix with enough people, George: it’s all the office, or the club,
-or Barbara’s parties.”
-
-“But where am I to find your new men?,” I asked. “You say politics are
-no longer manufactured over a week-end party at Woburn. The political
-clubs only harbour your Tapers and Tadpoles. Where do men like Saltash
-and Wister and Foreditch do their work?”
-
-“They take their pleasure at the Turf and Stage,” Bertrand answered
-sourly.
-
-“I’m dining there with the O’Ranes to-night,” I said, as we began to
-walk home.
-
-“Then you’ll probably meet them. New men, new meeting-places.” My uncle
-laughed mirthlessly. “If Pam or Johnnie Russell . . . It’s the rising
-tide of democracy. Agricultural depression and death duties have slowly
-strangled the landed classes; their social influence is tottering.
-Before the war, Asquith was almost the only prime minister, bar Dizzy,
-who wasn’t drawn from them; but the prime ministers of the future will
-come from the middle class . . . till they come from labour. And the
-stage changes with the actors,” he continued in a deep rumble that
-carried from the one side of Fleet Street to the other. “_Circumspice!_
-When the masses had been taught to read, Newnes gave them _Tit-Bits_;
-Pearson and Harmsworth followed with the cheap daily press; headlines
-took the place of news and arguments. The focus shifts to the newspaper
-office.”
-
-We were passing a flamboyant, white-and-gold building described as a
-“Super Electric Palace de Luxe”; and I asked Bertrand if he thought
-pictures were coming to take the place of headlines.
-
-“It’s not the instrument that matters, but the man who handles it,” he
-answered. “Does Saltash play on Ll-G. or does Ll-G. play on Saltash?
-You’ll know better to-night when you’ve seen the new stage with the new
-men on it. Your modern prime minister doesn’t waste his time with
-duchesses at Ross House or with dukes at the Carlton. He has suave young
-secretaries to feed the press; he has rich friends to provide him
-personally with the sinews of war. He has his publicity agent. And, if
-he’s wise, he has a chain of intermediaries running through the country,
-somebody always knowing somebody who knows somebody else, so that he can
-draw any one into his net at a moment’s notice.” As we crossed Waterloo
-Place, Bertrand glanced contemptuously at Mr. Gladstone’s old house in
-Carlton House Terrace. “There’d be no end to the buzzing if Ll-G. spent
-a week-end with Sir John Woburn: he _must_ be trying to collar the Press
-combine! But if my Lord Lingfield entertains a few actresses and a
-jockey or two and a prize-fighter and if Woburn happens to come along
-. . .? That’s how politics are manufactured nowadays; and the Turf and
-Stage is the sort of place to see them manufacturing.”
-
- 5
-
-Such a preparation was almost inevitably a preparation for
-disappointment; but the unexpected end of my first evening at the Turf
-and Stage left me no time to define my expectations nor judge whether
-they had been fulfilled. As Barbara had a headache, I entered the
-resplendent club-room off Hanover Square under Sonia’s protection; and,
-for all the scars that the last five years had left, I could have
-fancied for a moment that we were back in 1914 when the “Cottage
-Cabaret” and “Blue Moon” were tentatively opening their doors. I
-observed the same mirrored walls and plush sofas, the same small tables
-surrounding the same polished floor, the same high gallery and beaming,
-southern band. From the atmosphere I inhaled the same desolating
-quality, only to be rendered by the desolating name of “smartness”.
-
-I found no hint, however, that my rigidly standardized neighbours were
-powers behind thrones. Apart from a passion for dancing that grew ever
-more feverish as youth receded, they were severely domesticated. Men
-brought their wives to supper, I was told, their sisters to dinner and
-their mothers to luncheon; I should not have been surprised to hear of a
-nursery upstairs or to see Gaspard, the incomparable manager, devising
-quiet games with the children in their parents’ absence. Most of the men
-that night were young and exceedingly prosperous financiers; the rest,
-exemplified by Laurence Hunter-Oakleigh and Johnnie Gaymer, had at least
-the appearance of prosperity. Born to rule, they had all done well in
-the war; they were doing well in the peace; and their women dominated
-the situation as shrewdly, as calmly and as confidently as the men. Some
-trick of memory sent my thoughts back to the “Duchess of Richmond” ball
-at Loring Castle on the eve of the war. I remembered standing in the
-hall with Puggy Mayhew, watching the lithe girls and hard-trained men
-mounting the stairs with their magnificently English self-possession;
-and, though Mayhew filled a grave in Mesopotamia, I could hear again his
-tone of startled discovery as he murmured: “There’s nothing to touch
-them in any country _I_ know.” . . .
-
-I had been invited to meet a girl who aspired to that career of
-mendicancy and private blackmail which is known to women with a friend
-in Fleet Street as “freelance journalism”; and, while O’Rane waited in
-the hall for the rest of his party, Sonia led me downstairs for a
-cocktail.
-
-“I have a standing invitation from Gaspard to come here at his expense,”
-she confided. “He considers me rather a draw. And, as Lorrimer is always
-good for a dress if I’ll wear it in public, I can usually kill two
-guests with one free dinner. If Johnnie Gaymer would only give me one of
-his firm’s cars to be seen driving about in, David would get a perfectly
-good wife below cost.”
-
-As we descended to a more intimate room, with smaller tables half hidden
-by plates of oysters, I suggested that the assistant-almoner of the
-Lancing millions could afford to buy his wife a car.
-
-“Then you don’t know David,” she rejoined with a touch of petulance.
-“He’s working himself to death; but, if any one tries to pay him for
-what he does, he thinks it’s charity. Let’s talk of something else.
-You’ve not met this Maitland child? She’s very pretty and very silly, I
-should think. Just what I was at her age . . . or at my own, I suppose
-you’d say if I gave you a chance. Finished? Then let’s go up,” she
-continued with the restlessness that characterized the age or at least
-the women of it whom I met that night.
-
-One and all, they sat down and jumped up again like marionettes that
-would collapse if their wires slackened; they looked at one page of a
-paper and then tossed it away; they clamoured for cigarettes and laid
-them aside. Finding that her other guests were not yet arrived, Sonia
-hurried into the dining-room, snatched a youth unknown to me from his
-protesting party and danced with him till a voice, peevish with hunger,
-cried: “Bertie, you little beast, come back and order dinner.” She then
-attached herself precariously to another party, stole some one else’s
-portion of caviare and rejoined us in the hall with her booty.
-
-O’Rane, I thought, was looking ill and overworked.
-
-“Stornaway’s gone down with pneumonia,” he explained; “so I’ve had all
-his work to do. It’s a bigger thing than I contemplated. I wonder . . .
-I wonder very much . . .”
-
-“Whether you can carry out the schemes we discussed at Cannes?,” I
-asked.
-
-“No! Whether we’ve any place in our present civilization for these
-colossal fortunes . . . Ah, that’s Ivy’s voice. Come and be introduced.”
-
-I have never known for certain who constituted our party that night.
-Four of us met in the hall; but we mislaid Sonia as we went to our
-table; and John Gaymer invited himself to join us until his own friends
-arrived. Between the dances, some twenty to forty people surged into our
-corner; during them, I was usually left with one compassionate
-neighbour. As in a dream, I talked to O’Rane with grave absorption about
-shell-shock treatment; then I listened as Sam Dainton was convinced
-against his will that he had spent the previous night in the hall of his
-hotel, because he could not remember his bedroom number nor his name;
-then Sonia plunged me in a morass of domestic finance, demanding how any
-one could keep herself, her husband and child on the pittance which
-David allowed her.
-
-“And now I’m going to have another,” she added, as the saxophone uttered
-a warning bleat.
-
-“Dance?,” I asked.
-
-“No, baby, of course. . . . Do knock some sense into David’s head. . . .
-Good-bye-ee.”
-
-As she slipped away, I found myself alone with a pretty little dark-eyed
-girl, precocious and unbalanced, whom I remembered with difficulty as
-Ivy Maitland; and for another five minutes we talked gravely of work and
-life and careers for women. Ivy must have been younger by several years
-than any other woman in the club; and in that setting she seemed a human
-note of interrogation, scored by the present on the threshold of the
-future. She also seemed sadly out of place. Her friends were too old for
-her, most of them were married, some were living apart from their wives
-and others were not living far enough apart from the wives of other men.
-
-At the end of five minutes, forgetting her concern for a career, she
-darted off to dance with John Gaymer; and her place was taken by Sam
-Dainton, lately returned from Paris and full of gossip about the
-conference. The unruffled Gaspard conjured one more chair to our
-ever-lengthening table; and a basket of plover’s eggs for Sam appeared
-simultaneously with O’Rane’s chicken and my savoury, while heated
-revellers lolled over chair-backs with coffee and cigarettes. A warning
-of indigestion assailed me as I changed my place for the fourth time;
-intellectual dyspepsia had prostrated me from the moment when these
-five-minute conversational turns began.
-
-“You look a bit out of the picture, old son,” Sam told me candidly.
-
-“I’m a spectator,” I said. “My uncle feels that I should study the great
-movement of men.” . . .
-
-“Paris is the spot for that,” he chuckled, with his mouth full. “They
-call it a peace conference, but I should say it was a full-dress parade
-for the next war.” . . .
-
-He broke off as Sonia danced up with shining eyes to whisper her
-discovery that one of our neighbours had married a second husband in the
-premature belief that the first had been killed. By the time she had
-done, Sam had finished his plover’s eggs and was in the thick of a
-discussion with my cousin Laurie, which was to enrich them both if they
-could only find an out-of-work capitalist to launch them. Ivy concluded
-an audible disagreement with Gaymer, who I thought was more sodden than
-his wont, and dragged me headlong into a conversation that seemed to
-begin as startling indecency and cooled to the temperate obscurity of
-psychoanalysis.
-
-“You should read Freud,” she told me. “Psychoanalysis explains
-everything. You _are_ behind the times.”
-
-From the little knowledge which I had been compelled to acquire in the
-hope of understanding the novels and plays of the period, I should have
-said that psychoanalysis defiled more than it explained; but I was
-chiefly interested to distinguish this night as the first on which the
-old reticences between men and women were torn away.
-
-“Not bored, I hope?,” murmured a voice at my elbow, as Ivy flitted away
-for the second time.
-
-I turned to see O’Rane sitting huddled with fatigue.
-
-“Bewildered, rather. This . . . this is the generation you’re
-undertaking to educate,” I said.
-
-“You must expect some kind of reaction.”
-
-“It’s been going on for six months now. . . . However, I’m more
-concerned with the shepherds than with the sheep.”
-
-It was only as the theatres emptied that I appreciated my uncle’s
-sardonic wisdom in sending me to study “the great movement of men” in
-the Turf and Stage. The government was then represented by Lord
-Lingfield, who danced—for exercise rather than pleasure—with Miss Maud
-Valance, of the Pall Mall Theatre, and by the Right Honourable Wilmot
-Dean, who refrained from dancing on the principle that a man must learn
-to walk before he can run and must be in a condition to stand before he
-can dance. What weight Mr. Dean and Lord Lingfield contributed to
-cabinet councils I am too ignorant to guess; at the Turf and Stage they
-demonstrated that ministers, in spite of a nonconformist head, were not
-killjoys; and those who did not get many chances of hailing convivial
-privy councillors by their Christian names took the opportunity when it
-came.
-
-“It’s about twenty-one years since Gladstone died,” I murmured to
-O’Rane. “It’s ‘new men, new manners’, with a vengeance.”
-
-In strident conversation with Wilmot Dean, I could hear ‘Blob’ Wister
-roaring the latest of his political creeds. For three months he had won
-consequence by purchasing in succession the _People’s Tribune_, the _St.
-Stephen’s Times_ and the _Daily Echo_. No one knew whence the money had
-been collected; no one that I ever met could tell me whence Wister
-himself sprang. He burst upon London like Sir Philip Saltash, like
-Wilmot Dean, like a third of the new men inside the government and on
-its outskirts, in response to the prime minister’s known desire for
-business talent. I was still watching the unsteady antics of Lingfield,
-when Sir Philip Saltash himself rose with a well-remembered lurch and
-bore down on us with the customary unlighted cigar swinging like a
-semaphore from the one side of his mouth to the other.
-
-“Come to inspect my bunch?,” he enquired, with a careless nod and a less
-careless scrutiny of our liqueurs. Then, as I hesitated for an answer:
-“You’re too dam’ superior for these times. When you’ve been in the game
-as long as I have . . . Funny thing! The first slogan I ever heard in
-the States was that politics was not a job for a gentleman; ten years
-later I heard it in Canada; I’ve heard it in Australia; and, from what
-I’ve seen of your rag, you’re sighing for the great days of Salisbury
-and Pitt and all that lot.”
-
-“I should hardly expect to find them here,” I said.
-
-“They wouldn’t be in a state to come here! Old Pitt was a rare one for
-the booze. People don’t change much. You remember the old Limehouse
-days? Lloyd-George said that an aristocracy was like old cheese; and the
-aristocracy answered that Lloyd-George was a dirty little Welsh
-attorney: ‘Oh, how _vulgar_!,’ you cried. Was that worse than your old
-Salisbury’s nicknaming Joey Chamberlain ‘Jack Cade’?” He looked round
-with a fuddled but tolerant smile, as a miller might look when his wheel
-stopped suddenly, at the corner where startling silence had fallen on
-the conspiratorial, closely grouped heads of Dean, Wister and Lingfield.
-“The war opened up a place in the sun for people who hadn’t been brought
-up to your kid-glove ideas of public life.”
-
-The whispering group was joined by Sir Rupert Foreditch, whose chief
-claim on his country’s gratitude is that he sacrificed the dilatory
-chance of promotion on the staff in order to race home after Neuve
-Chapelle and offer himself for a place in the first coalition. It was by
-an accident of geography rather than through any lack of zeal that
-others were before him; but he and the group that broke the first
-war-administration have the comfort of knowing that all decisions at the
-Dardanelles were postponed till an embarrassed government could decide
-which of their willing swords must be declined.
-
-“Would you say,” I asked, “that there was a touch of the adventurer
-about some of them?”
-
-“A man,” enunciated Saltash, “is only an adventurer till he arrives;
-then he’s a pioneer. Nobody minds new men when they’re like Asquith.
-Nobody minds rich men when they’re like Derby.” . . .
-
-“For one reason, because the Stanleys don’t drift from one country to
-another, seeing which they can turn to their own greatest profit.”
-
-Saltash shook his head incredulously:
-
-“Don’t try to pull any stake-in-the-country stuff on me. That’s well
-enough for your father-in-law. I sat next to old Crawleigh at a city
-dinner last week; and he didn’t know what to make of things. I did. And
-I told him. ‘The aristocracy,’ I said, ‘has been swamped by the
-middle-classes. Well, if the aristocracy couldn’t keep its end up
-against men like Chamberlain and Asquith and Lloyd-George, it was best
-out of the way.’ D’you mind if I bring Foreditch over here? He’s just
-back from Germany; and I want to know how the land lies there.”
-
-I could not repel such a man at a time when my sole function in the Turf
-and Stage was to study the new leaders in our political life. When I
-first met Sir Rupert at Oxford, he was an unbending radical; but the
-1906 election brought into the world more radical mouths than there was
-bread to feed, and, when I took my seat, Foreditch was spaciously
-enthroned in the wastes of opposition. As a hired assassin, his tale of
-Budget Leaguers’ scalps won him the deputy-leadership of the Die-Hards
-when the Parliament Bill came to be fought; and, in the Home Rule
-controversy, he preached rebellion in Ulster with a gusto not exceeded
-by Mr. Bonar Law, Sir Edward Carson and Mr. F. E. Smith. An incautious
-declaration that the kaiser could be trusted to save Ulster from a false
-Hanoverian, as William of Orange had saved her from a perfidious Stuart,
-kept Foreditch from reaping the reward of his shell-intrigue in 1916;
-but, if he missed cabinet rank, he achieved a greater position as the
-unofficial plenipotentiary who was always being sent, with the easy
-informality introduced by a ‘business’ government, to make overtures and
-arrange deals. His ambition, I think, was to play the part of Colonel
-House to Mr. Lloyd-George’s President Wilson: in the last years of the
-war he was always vanishing mysteriously to Stockholm or Berne; and, two
-years after this date, I heard that he was visiting, in disguise, the
-leaders of all the parties in Ireland.
-
-“The present condition of Germany . . .,” he began; but, before I could
-hear what it was, an unknown woman bustled up to our table and began to
-make notes for an article which informed the world two days later (1)
-that anybody who was anybody would be found dining at the Turf and
-Stage, (2) that “Lucile”—as she confided to her “darling Betty”—had
-seen good-looking Bobbie Pentyre dancing with Lady Clackmannan’s girl,
-(3) that Lady Barbara Oakleigh—“Babs Neave, as we must still think of
-her”—had been at the table next to “Lucile’s” and (4) that her husband
-would certainly stand again for parliament when opportunity offered. In
-its slangy pertness and familiarity, the style was the woman; and, as
-accuracy was less important to the _Daily Picture_ than snappy diction
-or a knowing air of intimacy, it would have been idle to correct her
-statements or to reprove her manners. No doubt she had a livelihood to
-earn; and those who create a demand have to bear as heavy a
-responsibility as those who furnish the supply. When I had recovered
-from my first exasperation, I felt that the loud-voiced lady was less to
-blame than “Blob” Wister, who owned the paper for which she wrote, and
-the two million readers (the circulation of the _Daily Picture_ was
-certified by an impeccable firm of chartered accountants) who liked to
-think of Miss Murchison as “Lady Clackmannan’s girl” and of Lord Pentyre
-as “Bobbie”. Those who had no chance of seeing for themselves whether he
-was good-looking must have been grateful to “Lucile” for lifting a
-corner of the curtain from the world of beauty, rank and fashion.
-
-“Another section of the public you propose to educate,” I told O’Rane.
-
-“And you,” he retorted. “You heard what Sam Dainton said about the state
-of Paris. Everybody hating everybody else.” . . .
-
-I looked round to make sure that we were not being overheard. Lucien de
-Grammont, I knew, was somewhere in the room; but I fancied that he was
-avoiding me.
-
-“That’s only these damned French,” I said. “Instead of thanking us for
-pulling them out of the mire, they think _they_ won the war
-single-handed and our job is just to foot the bill. Hang it all, Raney,
-we spent more money and provided more ammunition than any one else; we
-raised about five million men; we stayed on to clear the Germans out of
-France when it was all we could do to keep the French in the war at all;
-and, when our papers were gushing about the splendid unity, the French
-government was making us pay rent for the trenches our men occupied to
-defend their miserable country. They’re the meanest hounds on earth.
-During the war, one couldn’t say these things . . .”
-
-“Does one do much good by saying them now? The Americans bring pretty
-much the same charge against us. You’ve an organization, George, and you
-should make it your business to fight the hatred-epidemic.” . . .
-
-He broke off, as the bland Gaspard presented himself at our table with
-the announcement that a lady was waiting outside. When I read Yolande
-Manisty’s name, I guessed that Raymond Stornaway was worse; when I met
-her, I knew—without being told—that he was dead. As I came back to the
-blaze and blare of the dining-room, I felt that this was my first
-contact with reality that night. The financiers and wire-pullers and
-propagandists, the glittering _corps de ballet_, the punctual scribe who
-chronicled their movements, all belonged to a world of masquerade. I
-cannot say what lesson Bertrand had sent me there to learn; the lesson
-which I carried away was a doubt—the first since 1914—of victory.
-
-I drove O’Rane to his house in Westminster and left him to think over
-Yolande Manisty’s message. By the terms of her uncle’s will, he had—for
-better or for worse—inherited unconditionally an estate of more than
-twenty million pounds.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIVE
-
-
- THE RED ACCOUNT
-
-
- _Countess of Montesquiou_:
-
- So much for the Congress!
- Only a few blank nobodies remain,
- And they seem terror-stricken. . . . Blackly end
- Such fair festivities. The red god War
- Stalks Europe’s plains anew!
-
- THOMAS HARDY: _The Dynasts._
-
- 1
-
-Those who had never before heard of Sir Aylmer Lancing or of Deryk are
-no more likely than I am to forget the excitement of the week that
-followed Raymond Stornaway’s death. That it lasted no more than a week
-was due to the number of competing claims on the public attention; but,
-between the Bloomsbury cocaine-prosecution and the Dawlish murder, half
-the papers were calling O’Rane’s heritage “romantic” and the other half
-“sensational”, while the conversation at every dinner-party that I
-attended came by divers ways to the unanimous conclusion that Sonia
-would now spend twelve hundred thousand pounds a year on feeding her
-friends. Before she had recovered from her first shock, I observed that
-she was considering bigger houses in other parts of London; on the
-morrow, when I dined—for the last time, as I vowed to myself—in
-Rutland Gate, Lady Dainton told me that she had never entertained any
-idea of selling Crowley Court; and, when I visited O’Rane to enquire if
-he needed help, he shewed me a pile, waist-high, of begging letters.
-
- 2
-
-It was my first visit to the offices of the Lancing Trust; and I retain
-the memory of a vast, wind-swept barn on the edge of Hampstead Heath,
-with an old red-brick cottage and pent-houses of tarred wood attached.
-There were a great many box-files, a gigantic set of loose-leaf ledgers,
-a fair-sized reference library and a large number of typewriters. On one
-wall I recognized the map which Aylmer Lancing used to keep in his study
-to remind him of the stages by which his grip had spread over the
-earth’s surface. In all other respects, the building might have belonged
-to a poor-law relieving-officer; and Sonia, who obviously expected to
-find a double row of bankers smoking long cigars at a gleaming mahogany
-table, was no less obviously disappointed.
-
-“I came to see if I could help you in any way,” I told O’Rane, who had
-rather frightened me the night before by his air of physical exhaustion.
-
-We found him now with one of his secretaries in Raymond Stornaway’s
-private office, fidgeting with the will. I learned that the money was to
-be spent “for the good of humanity”; and in the construction of that
-clause he had already received so much contradictory advice that he had
-closed his office to chance callers.
-
-“I didn’t expect Stornaway to die so soon,” was all he would say when I
-asked him his plans.
-
-“I doubt if time will make your problem any easier,” I answered, as I
-joined Sonia in front of the tattered wall-map.
-
-There, from the centre of what Lancing had bought as a burnt-out
-town-site, the Lancing influence spread in extending circles. A name and
-date in faded ink marked the advance of his railroads, the acquisition
-of his forests and mines, the linking of lake to ocean for the
-transportation of his grain. Dotted lines, leading to vague infinity,
-shewed where Lancing had splashed out of the union into the Atlantic,
-the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico.
-
-“You must move to a decent office,” Sonia put in. “And we can’t go on at
-The Sanctuary if you want to entertain properly. People will expect us
-to live up to our position, you know.”
-
-O’Rane smiled grimly as he ushered us compellingly to the door.
-
-“Whether that’s for the good of humanity . . .,” he murmured.
-
-After this single meeting I resolved not to break in on his
-contemplation until I was invited. Very soon my attention was to be
-claimed by troubles of my own, for I was not satisfied with the state of
-Barbara’s mind or body; I, too, wanted to think; and, though I treated
-O’Rane to an unsolicited misgiving whenever I remembered his new estate,
-I will not pretend that I thought of him much after the feverish seven
-days in which every one I met said: “You’ve heard about it, of course?
-That’s the sort of thing that _would_ happen to Sonia. What d’you
-suppose they’ll do with it?” . . .
-
-It was in these days that the last touches were being given to the great
-peace-treaty which was to make an end of war; and, but for that, I
-should have handed Bertrand my resignation and taken Barbara abroad.
-Until we saw the terms, however, we could not tell how far his gloomy
-predictions at Cannes would be fulfilled nor how far any one could undo
-the mischief that was reported from Paris. If we could believe a quarter
-of all we heard, the butchery for which Sanguszko and Boscarelli
-clamoured in Lucien’s verandah-parliament was taking place in one
-country after another; as I warned Saltash, three discontented
-Alsace-Lorraines were being created for one that was pacified; and the
-mood of the December election seemed to return as the public realized
-the helplessness of the defeated enemy. Outside the now notorious
-“Oakleigh gang” I found few to admit that any country but Germany had
-been responsible for the war; and on that foundation each man erected
-his own standard of retribution. My father-in-law went the length of
-collecting a party at the Eclectic Club to reason with me and to check
-the wrong-headed doctrines that poured forth, week after week, from
-Fetter Lane.
-
-“You really seem to live in a world of your own,” he explained wearily.
-“_I_ don’t hope to convince you; but, if you take a poll of your
-friends, on a question like indemnities . . .”
-
-Before he had time to finish or I to answer, John Carstairs put his own
-case with alluring brevity:
-
-“The Boche made the war. The Boche must pay for it.”
-
-“What would have happened to our colonies if we’d lost?,” pursued
-Crawleigh, who seemed to regard the empire as a dumping-ground for the
-viceregally-inclined members of his family. German West Africa was below
-his dignity, but he had three sons. “These people mustn’t complain if
-they’re served in the same way.”
-
-I recalled and quoted Bertrand’s dictum that no lasting peace could be
-established on a sense of grievance.
-
-“I feel no tenderness towards Germany,” I said, “but aren’t we making
-another war inevitable?”
-
-“You will make it inevitable,” said Mr. Justice Maitland, “if you let
-the last war go unpunished. No one will deny that the Germans broke a
-treaty, that they robbed, tortured, violated and murdered, not in the
-heat of fighting but as part of a terrorizing campaign ordered from
-headquarters. If acts like these go unpunished, every nation will know
-that it can take ‘frightfulness’ as its starting-point. Rape and
-mutilation will become sanctified usages of war. There will be a
-precedent.”
-
-“That’s unanswerable,” I told the judge. “But, if this war proves
-anything, it proves that war doesn’t pay. I want to make that the great
-contribution of this war to history. If we impose a peace so unendurable
-that even war is no worse . . .”
-
-Maitland interrupted me with a smiling head-shake:
-
-“I have to try murderers in the course of my duties. Their state would
-be no better than that of their victims, if vendettas were permitted.
-You might say truly enough that murder doesn’t pay. I should be sorry to
-see the death-penalty abolished on that reasoning.”
-
-“If you could hang every German,” I said, as I left to dress for the
-opera, “I might accept your argument. As it is, a punitive peace will
-set them thinking of revenge; and, the moment they’re strong enough,
-they’ll take it.”
-
-“A good reason for keeping them weak,” said Carstairs, “which—quite
-rightly—is all Clemenceau cares about.”
-
-I might have multiplied, almost to infinity, the number of similar
-opinions, held by the most dissimilar people. I heard them at the club,
-I was inundated by them at my office and I wrestled with them at
-Barbara’s parties.
-
-“I wonder whether Bertrand thinks we’re making any headway?,” I asked
-that night at dinner, after venting my despondency on my wife.
-
-I am not sure whether she heard me; her only answer was to look at her
-watch and to ask which opera was being played.
-
-“_Louise?_” she repeated. “Then we can miss the first two acts. I
-suppose you wouldn’t care to go alone?”
-
-“Aren’t you feeling up to it?,” I asked.
-
-Barbara turned her back on me and busied herself with the wad of her
-cigarette-holder:
-
-“Oh, I don’t know! Yes, I’m all right! And, anyway, I shan’t do any good
-. . . I don’t know what I’m talking about!,” she cried with sudden loss
-of control. “I’m going to lie down till we start.”
-
-“I’ll take you up,” I said.
-
-“No!,” she answered, with what I can only call a suppressed scream.
-
-Her look and tone took me aback as though she had struck me in the face.
-For some weeks I had fancied that her nerves were disordered; but, as I
-finished my cigar in solitude, I felt that this night marked a subtle
-change in my relations with her. To this day I cannot tell when it
-began. We had been married little more than a year; before that, for ten
-years, we had been excellent friends. At first I believe she told me
-every thought in her heart; and there were times when I wished for both
-our sakes that she would think less and say less about what could not be
-mended. As though I had put my wish into words, her manner changed at
-the armistice: we were to make a new start, she was to forget her love
-for Eric Lane; and, after that, an onlooker would have said that she
-belonged to me, soul and body. She and I alone knew that, in some way,
-we were becoming strangers. Though she was bored with Cannes after the
-first week, she never told me; she might be bored with the life of a
-political hostess, but loyalty or lack of confidence kept her silent.
-She would not admit that she was ill or unhappy; but something now
-tortured her beyond bearing.
-
-And I was afraid to ask her. In all that touched her soul, I was a
-stranger, an amateur and a bungler. Something of this must have revealed
-itself in my expression, for on her return to the dining-room she put
-her arms round my neck and told me not to look so worried.
-
-“I’m worried about you,” I said.
-
-“But I swear to you I’ve never felt better in my life! Come on; or we
-shall miss the only act worth hearing!”
-
-I followed her, more worried than ever. If I said nothing, I should seem
-callous; if I said anything, I might inflame her misery. I knew her too
-little for any idea what she wanted of me; and she trusted me too little
-to help by a hint. At this rate, she would become every day more
-uncommunicative; and each unanswered appeal for understanding would
-separate her farther from me.
-
-“If _ever_ there’s anything the matter,” I said, as we got into the car,
-“I hope you’ll tell me, Babs.”
-
-“Everything’s _perfect_,” she answered. “A darling house, a darling
-husband.” . . . Her voice suddenly lost its false ring of assurance.
-“No, the fault’s in _me_ somewhere. There’s something missing. Don’t
-let’s talk about it.”
-
-At the unexpected quaver, I caught her fingers in mine; and she brushed
-away a tear with the back of my hand. Though no more was said, I felt
-that something more ought to have been said and that I was a moral
-coward for not saying it. In the silence and darkness of the car, I
-wondered whether Barbara was unhappy because she had been given no sign
-that she was to bear children. For all I knew, she did not want them or
-was afraid; for all I knew, she wanted them and could not bear them and
-was afraid to tell me. And we were both afraid to confess our fear.
-
- 3
-
-When we reached the opera-house, the second act was over; and, on the
-way to our box, we ran the gauntlet of a dozen friends, who invited us
-to meals, and of a hundred staring strangers, who turned to their
-neighbours and whispered: “There’s Lady Barbara!” with the mingled
-triumph and awe which the English display when they recognize any idol
-of the illustrated papers.
-
-“One gets used to anything, even the manners of the well-bred,” I
-murmured, as we struggled towards the stairs.
-
-“If any one else asks us to lunch, I shall say we’ve given up
-eating. . . . Oh, I _must_ speak to Marion! You go on.”
-
-I ploughed slowly into an open space by the entrance to the pit-tier
-boxes, then came to an involuntary standstill. Face to face, too near
-for either of us to escape, I found Eric Lane smoking a cigarette and
-looking over my shoulder to the place where Barbara was talking to Mrs.
-Shelley. Unless she had already seen him and was lingering behind till I
-had made myself a screen, they must meet in another moment. Eric never
-had much colour to lose, but even his lips now seemed bloodless. When
-our eyes met, I could not have said which was the more uncomfortable. I
-enquired after his father, I believe; and he asked me, as he had been in
-Japan at the time of our wedding, to accept his belated good wishes now.
-
-“When are we to have another play?,” I asked.
-
-“This autumn, I hope,” he answered.
-
-“Good for that. Well, Eric, I little thought in the old Phoenix Club
-days that we were entertaining a genius unawares.”
-
-“They were g-good days,” he sighed.
-
-Then there was a pause; and the cordiality which old habit had brought
-to life wilted. As he glanced in Barbara’s direction, I fancy he was
-charging her with making our friendship impossible; this second sight of
-her seemed to incapacitate him; and we stood stockishly silent. When she
-joined us, there was, indeed, a smile on either side, a high and rather
-breathless “Oh, how do you do?” Then we hurried to our box; and Eric
-strolled across the hall. His hand was shaking as he tried to relight
-his cigarette; and the hollow eyes and cadaverous cheeks seemed ten
-years older for the ten seconds’ encounter.
-
-Was it a presentiment of this meeting that had unnerved Barbara? I had
-no time to speak before we were surrounded by a new throng. It was her
-first appearance at Covent Garden; and from the boxes and stalls we had
-opera-glasses trained upon us until I seemed to be looking at a tank of
-lobsters; a queue formed outside our door and we were flattened against
-the side of the box. The acclamation was not confined within a ring of
-our friends: I felt the atmosphere of the whole house warming in the
-greatest tribute to personality that I have ever seen.
-
-“I watched you coming in to-night,” Dr. Gaisford told her at the end.
-“It was like the sun breaking through. . . . How are you, my dear child?
-As you don’t come to see me professionally, I hope that means you’re
-well and happy?”
-
-“Everything’s _perfect_,” Barbara cried, with a conviction that had been
-lacking when she used the same words earlier. As we settled ourselves in
-the car, she added joyously: “How sweet every one is! Marion wants us to
-choose a night for dining with her next week. And I’ve committed you to
-the Pinto de Vasconcellos the week after. And Bobbie Pentyre wants us to
-go to Croxton one week-end. Can you remember all that? And will you
-come?”
-
-“Anywhere you like,” I promised. “You seem to have had rather a success
-to-night, Babs.”
-
-“It’s a good world! I’ve got back my grip on life. . . . I feel _free_,”
-she went on with a note of wonder; and her hand stole shyly into mine as
-though we were composing a quarrel: “George dear, I’m sorry to have been
-unsatisfactory, sorry to have worried you. I promised on Armistice Day
-that I wouldn’t speak of certain people. You can’t help thinking of
-them, but since to-night I’m not . . . haunted. _Seeing_ Eric has broken
-the spell. . . . I can meet him now. I’m going to. Madame Pinto said he
-was coming to her party.”
-
-Remembering Eric’s look of anguish when he caught sight of Barbara, I
-felt that the greatest kindness she could shew him would be to prevent
-further meetings. It was folly, I thought, for her to invite him to our
-first reception, it was madness to expect that he would come; and, if I
-said nothing at the time, it was for fear she would imagine that I was
-jealous.
-
-“Make things as easy as you can for him,” I recommended.
-
-“We can give him the opportunity of being friends again.”
-
-“And don’t be hurt if he doesn’t take it. Men of that kind, imaginative
-and highly-strung . . . In his way, he is a bit of a genius.” . . .
-
-“I gave him that,” she murmured with a pride which I thought ill-timed.
-“He had only talent before.”
-
-To judge by appearances, Eric had paid dearly for his goddess’ kiss.
-
-“They feel things more intensely,” I continued, “than dull,
-matter-of-fact people like me.”
-
-Barbara made no answer for several minutes; then she looked straight
-ahead and asked:
-
-“Wouldn’t you feel it as much if you lost me?”
-
-“I should feel it more than anything in the world.”
-
-“It’s broken Eric. He’ll never be mended. But it wouldn’t break you?”
-
-Faint though the challenge was, I fancied, for the first time in my
-life, that Barbara was trying to drag me into a ‘scene’.
-
-“We won’t talk about it,” I said.
-
-“I don’t think anything would break you. And you may take that how you
-like.”
-
-The words may have been her tribute to flint-like resolution or her
-criticism of wooden insensibility. The way that I decided to take them
-was in silence. Barbara hid her face in the great nosegay of carnations
-which she always carried, then held them out, like an impulsive child,
-for me to smell. As she walked, slender, tall and radiant, into the
-house, I felt that this was the day which I had waited fourteen months
-to see dawning.
-
-“Yes, I had quite a success,” she murmured to her reflection, when we
-paused in front of a mirror halfway up the stairs. “You seem surprised,
-George.”
-
-“I don’t know how any one could hope to resist you,” I said. “_I_ never
-can.”
-
-The South American dinner to which Barbara had committed me marked our
-grudging surrender to a lady whose hospitality was rapidly breaking the
-_morale_ of London. Madame Pinto de Vasconcellos, if her ambitions had
-been examined before the judgement-seat, must have confessed a
-resolution to force free wine, food and tobacco on a larger number of
-victims than had fallen to any other Brazilian. Setting out with an
-introduction to the Duchess of Ross and a system of snowball
-terrorization for every one else, she secured B for her parties by
-playing on his fear of hurting A’s feelings.
-
-“She is a stranger to London,” the duchess explained to Lady Crawleigh
-in a tone that hid natural exultation under less natural pity. “I should
-like to shew her a little hospitality.”
-
-Lady Crawleigh had been caught too often in similar traps to forget
-that, while Herrig Castle and Ross House remained unlet, no one was
-secure; but, like every one else, she tried to shelter herself behind a
-substitute. Madame Pinto, she told Barbara, had heard so much of her
-“beautiful daughter”; it would be only a kindness to accept one of her
-many invitations.
-
-When I pointed out that the whole English-speaking world had heard so
-much of Barbara, my mother-in-law rejoined wistfully that it was a small
-thing to ask, that she did not ask much and that she would not have
-asked now if she had imagined we should make difficulties. Remembering
-the unsteady concordat which was the best that a heretic and a radical
-could ever hope to establish with the Crawleighs, I urged Barbara to
-capitulate before I knew that Eric Lane was to be our fellow-guest. Had
-I now urged her to refuse, Lady Crawleigh would have had a grievance;
-and Barbara might have thought that I had a personal interest in
-preventing another encounter.
-
-Though the dinner passed off pleasantly enough, it had one wholly
-unexpected result which changed the course of history for two or three
-of Madame Pinto’s guests. Had we refused this invitation, I might not
-have seen John Carstairs for another month; had I not seen him, I should
-not have asked him to tell me about his recent tour of the Ross estates
-in Connemara; had he not told me, I might have contentedly played my
-part of absentee landlord for years to come. Carstairs, however,
-succeeded in frightening me with his stories of impending Irish trouble.
-The precarious peace, he said, might break down at any moment. As
-trustee for his half-witted brother, he was anxious to sell at any
-sacrifice and advised me to do the same. Whether I sold or not, I should
-be a fool if I did not at least visit an estate which I had neglected
-since the Easter rising of 1916.
-
-Our chance conversation was the cause of my first serious disagreement
-with Barbara. Before parting with a property that had been in the family
-for three hundred years, I told her that we must explore the conditions
-of the County Kerry for ourselves. In my suggestion that we should go to
-Lake House for Whitsuntide she acquiesced at once, only stipulating that
-she should be allowed to stay behind at the last moment if the crossing
-threatened to be very rough. Next morning I reserved our sleepers and
-arranged with Spence-Atkins to postpone his own holiday and to take
-charge of our paper till my return; in the evening she warned me, rather
-fretfully, that she might not feel well enough to come. I asked if she
-would care for me to send for Gaisford; but, after a night’s rest, she
-assured me buoyantly that she was all right. I telegraphed to warn my
-agent of our coming; and, when I read out his reply, Barbara exclaimed
-with almost hysterical passion that, well or ill, in fine weather or
-foul, nothing would induce her to come with me to Ireland.
-
-“Well, do you mind my leaving you alone here?,” I asked, when I had
-recovered my breath.
-
-“No. Bobbie Pentyre has arranged his Croxton party for Whitsuntide.”
-
-“But why didn’t you tell me that before? I could have gone another week.
-Now I’ve made Spence-Atkins cancel his own plans . . .”
-
-“Oh, you’d better stick to your present arrangement,” she answered.
-Then, for some reason that I could not guess, she broke into wild
-weeping. “I’m so miserable! I’m mad! I don’t know what I’m saying!
-George, I’m sorry I was rude.”
-
-“You weren’t rude,” I assured her.
-
-“I’ve not slept for nights and nights,” she gasped. “You’ve been very
-patient with me. Go on being patient, go on loving me! I’m so
-miserable.” . . .
-
-This time I determined to be a moral coward no longer:
-
-“But why?”
-
-“Oh, I’ve told you! Because I’m a damned soul. I told you that when you
-asked me to marry you.”
-
-“And I told you that I’d make you happy or die in the attempt. There’s
-nothing I won’t do . . .”
-
-In her first convulsion of grief, Barbara had allowed me to take her
-into my arms; but, as she became more composed, I felt her struggling
-gently to be free.
-
-“You really mean that?,” she asked, with her head averted. “If it meant
-your honour, your life, your happiness, you’d give all that to see me
-happy?” I fancied again that she was challenging me and that, if I made
-unguarded reservations, I should be told that I did not love her as Jack
-Waring and Eric Lane had loved her. The second, as she believed, was
-paying with his life; the first had already paid with his soul. “I don’t
-know what I’m saying!” she cried, with her hands pressed to her temples.
-“I’m worried . . . No, I won’t see a doctor. You go off as you arranged.
-I’ll go to Croxton if I feel in the mood. When you come back, I may be
-all right; if not . . .”
-
-She stared distractedly round the room in a way that reminded me of the
-sad, mad time when Eric first went out of her life.
-
-“But you _will_ be all right,” I assured her.
-
-“If I’m not, remember you married a lost soul, George; I warned you. I
-kill whatever I touch.” . . .
-
- 4
-
-It is hardly to be imagined that I carried a light heart to Ireland. And
-the state of the country at this time was not of a kind to cure any
-private depression. In 1916 I entered Dublin as an academic nationalist,
-who had voted year after year with the staunch, self-effacing
-Redmondites; I left as a perfervid Sinn Feiner, when the men who had
-played with me as boys five-and-twenty years before were shot off their
-crazy barricades or done to death by a mockery of legal forms. Then for
-the first time, face to face with a people cheated of its promised
-independence, I too said that no trust was to be reposed in English
-honour and no sane leadership expected from men who believed in English
-pledges. Through weary years we liberals had fought constitutionally for
-our Home Rule Bill; it was inscribed on the Statute Book in spite of
-intrigues and intimidation; but treason triumphed over constitutionalism
-on the day when Germany made war in the belief that an Irish guerilla
-would keep Great Britain from taking part.
-
-Melancholy memories and uneasy forebodings were my companions on the
-familiar road to Holyhead. I was dining with my uncle Bertrand on the
-night when the Home Rule Act was suspended; he at least had protested
-and perhaps he was a little self-righteous, but in 1916 I was to
-remember his grim prediction that from the breach of that undertaking,
-which every party in parliament helped to repudiate, would follow
-inevitably the discredit of the simpleton nationalists and the rise of
-Sinn Fein. The rebellion, which he foretold so accurately, was succeeded
-by a repression, which he and every one else knew would continue until
-the next rebellion. Sinn Fein, in these first months of the armistice,
-was penetrating the country peacefully; but even John Carstairs, who
-usually advocated the use of machine-guns and aeroplanes against
-political opponents, recognized that there would be war if the present
-army of occupation interfered. As yet there were only sporadic outrages
-on both sides, followed by reprisals, followed by counter-reprisals. As
-always happens, the non-combatants, squeezed by both sides, suffered
-most.
-
-On this score, when at last I reached Lake House, I had no personal
-complaint to make. My agent told me that certain Sinn Feiners had been
-billeted on me and certain stores of food commandeered; my gun-room had
-been emptied; but both my cars, after a short period of detention, were
-returned with a permit from republican headquarters. This, I believe,
-made them liable to seizure by the forces of the crown; but my agent
-warned me that any license which recognized the authority of Dublin
-Castle would cause the cars to be taken and not restored. And nothing in
-Kerry tempted the Castle to send its emissaries so far into hostile
-territory. If I abstained from provocative acts or speeches, I should be
-left in peace.
-
-“They like you,” my agent was good enough to tell me; “and it’s what
-they’re all saying, that you should be living here.”
-
-“Are the tenants paying me any rent?,” I asked.
-
-“They are.”
-
-I drifted away by myself to see how well the house would suit Barbara.
-The lake was like a sheet of glass, in a frame of dense green wood,
-hanging from the gardens by the red ribands of the fuchsia hedges. Here
-and there I saw thin spirals of smoke: it was turf smoke, though I could
-not smell it. From Castlemaine, in the west, the air blew soft and salt
-from the Atlantic. I cursed the malevolence of man that disturbed such
-peace and desecrated such beauty. I cursed, too, the fate that had sent
-me to an English school, because there was none good enough in Ireland,
-so robbing me of one home without giving me another.
-
-“I’m a married man,” I told my agent, “since last I was here. I don’t
-care to bring my wife over till things are more settled.”
-
-That, he assured me regretfully, was what every one said; but I should
-be comfortable enough if I did not make trouble. He was himself an
-avowed republican, not from any hostility to the king, whom he admired,
-nor from devotion to the forms and spirit of republicanism: he wanted
-peace; and, whether Sinn Fein would achieve it or not, no other party
-had succeeded. Sinn Fein was feared, if not respected; and the English
-only remembered Ireland when they were frightened. If Redmond and his
-lot had put the fear of God into the English one half as well as the
-others, they would be lords and ministers and the rest now, like Mr. Law
-and the man who prosecuted Roger Casement. My agent disapproved of Sir
-Edward Carson’s politics but admired him as the Irishman who had put
-more fear of God into the English than any one since Parnell.
-
-The one sentimental relaxation that this hard-headed, soft-spoken man
-allowed himself was that Parnell was still alive and would come back to
-lead Ireland.
-
-“If I could find a purchaser . . .” I began.
-
-“An Englishman? The house would be burnt over your honour’s head if the
-whisper of it ran round!”
-
-“Then,” I said, “I may as well be getting back to London.”
-
-My agent protested with touching fervour, but I was uneasy at being
-separated from Barbara. Two days after I landed at Kingston, she
-telegraphed: “_Missing you dreadfully hope you arrived safely and are
-coming back immediately all my love bless you_”; and, if her language
-seemed still a trifle neurotic, she had almost recovered her
-tranquillity by the time she wrote to describe the Whitsuntide party at
-Croxton Hall. The week-end had been uneventful; and, though Eric Lane
-was in the house, I could not read any embarrassment between the lines
-that described their meeting. The nervous excitability, however, of
-which I had seen too much evidence in London, betrayed itself once in a
-comment on a rumour: “_You remember the Miss Maitland you met with the
-O’Ranes? She’s here. A pretty little thing! Obviously in love with Eric.
-I’d give anything to see him happily married, but I hope he’s not
-serious about this child. She’s too hopelessly young, she’d send him mad
-in a week. It’ll be too tragic if he lets another woman make a mess of
-his life._” The next day Barbara telegraphed again, telling me once more
-how much I was being missed and offering to join me at Lake House.
-
-I returned to London as soon as I had finished my business and was met
-at Euston by a shivering form in a scarlet tea-gown and an ermine cloak.
-
-“You crazy child, you’ll give yourself pneumonia!,” I cried as I hurried
-her into the car through a double line of smiling porters.
-
-“That’s a pretty way to greet me when I’ve stayed up all night for
-you!,” Barbara laughed. “I _am_ glad to see you again, George, though
-that wasn’t why I came to meet you. It’s your little friend Ivy
-Maitland: she’s gone down suddenly with appendicitis.”
-
-“Well, I’m very sorry, of course . . .” I began.
-
-“Yes, dear, but we must do something about it. You know she was acting
-as Eric’s secretary while his own girl had a holiday? Yes! And this
-child has collapsed in his flat. Dr. Gaisford’s attending her; and he
-says she’s not to be moved on any consideration whatsoever. When I heard
-about it last night, I felt we _must_ offer Eric a couple of rooms till
-she can return home. Things being as they are, though . . .” Barbara
-faltered and turned away. “It’s all such a muddle that I thought I
-couldn’t ask him without your permission.”
-
-From her consulting me, I surmised that she doubted the wisdom of her
-impulse. From my knowledge of Eric, I imagined he would sleep on the
-Embankment before he accepted a bed from us. If Barbara wished to make a
-sign of friendship, however, I would not check her.
-
-“You don’t need my permission,” I said. “If you think it will do any
-good for us to invite him . . .”
-
- 5
-
-We received our answer before the invitation could be sent. At the end
-of breakfast, Lady John Carstairs telephoned to say that she had herself
-placed her house at Eric’s disposal, but that he preferred to remain in
-Ryder Street till the girl was out of danger. On my way to Fetter Lane,
-I left some flowers and a card bidding Eric to let us know if we could
-be of any service; but we heard nothing till a week later, when O’Rane
-telephoned to catch me for five minutes before I went to bed.
-
-“I couldn’t get round before,” he apologized, “and I thought you ought
-to know. Poor old Eric! He’s getting all his troubles in a lump. Where’s
-Babs? I’m afraid she ought to hear this, too.”
-
-I was under the impression that she had gone to bed half an hour before;
-but I heard sounds in the drawing-room, almost as though she had
-expected news of Eric and was staying up because it was bad news.
-
-“What’s happened to him now?,” I asked, as we went upstairs.
-
-“He’s been ordered abroad immediately,” O’Rane answered. “California.
-Lungs.”
-
-I do not know whether Barbara heard more than the last word; but she
-seemed to rise from her chair and cross the room in a single movement.
-O’Rane’s expression changed to wonder and then softened to pity as she
-caught and gripped his hand. No name had been mentioned in her hearing;
-but I think we both realized that he and I and all the world—with one
-exception—might be ordered to California for our lungs without striking
-an equal terror into her heart. In that moment I knew how far I had
-always been from winning her love.
-
-O’Rane, I feel, atoned for want of sight by keenness of hearing. I
-fancied that a little of the pity in his expression might be intended
-for me.
-
-“Is he . . . dying?,” Barbara whispered.
-
-“Not yet awhile.” O’Rane withdrew his hand to feel for a chair. I
-thought I saw his expression changing again, this time hardening
-slightly as though to keep the flash-point of her emotions low or,
-perhaps, to douse them with a single chilling jet. “He can get all right
-if he wants to. You may imagine, he’s rather bowled over at present.” As
-he turned to me, I felt that he wanted Barbara to hear his next
-announcement without being watched. “It came quite suddenly,” he told
-me; “and, but for this, you’d have seen him happily married to Ivy
-Maitland.” If Barbara gave any sign of interest, I saw and heard
-nothing. O’Rane took time to let his announcement sink in; and I fancied
-again that he was tacitly advising her to close her side of an account
-which Eric had already closed against her. If she chose to think that he
-was still in love with her and that his engagement to Ivy was an act of
-despair, no argument would cure her; at least there was now no reason
-why this shadow should force its way between us any longer. “It’s rather
-a facer,” O’Rane continued, “when you lose your wife and your health on
-the same day. I’ve been telling him all evening that no woman in the
-world is big enough to spoil a man’s life, but at the moment he’s in the
-mood to creep into a corner and die. He’s too good for that. I want you
-to see him before he starts, George; and write to him while he’s away.”
-
-Naturally, I promised without hesitation. If Barbara sent a letter of
-farewell, she said nothing to me about it; when I told her next day that
-I was going to Ryder Street on my way to the office, she nodded
-abstractedly but made no suggestion of accompanying me; and, on my
-return, she sat like a spirit of tragedy, refusing to ask me the result
-of my mission, till I volunteered to tell her.
-
-“By the way, I missed Eric this morning,” I said.
-
-“Oh? Had he gone already?,” she asked.
-
-“The maid said he was not at home,” I answered; and, mercifully for me,
-Barbara did not enquire further.
-
-A less diplomatic version would have recounted that, as I hurried round
-to Ryder Street, I saw Eric getting out of the taxi in front of me. His
-front-door slammed as I was halfway up the stairs; and, when I said
-something to the maid about being one of his older friends, I was
-informed that Miss Maitland was still seriously ill. Divining that Miss
-Maitland could not be occupying all the rooms in the flat, I scribbled a
-note in which I begged Eric to see me for two minutes. A verbal message
-apprised me that Mr. Lane was engaged; and I went away, more hurt, I
-believe, than ever in my life before. Since his interrupted romance with
-Ivy, the fellow could bear me no grudge for marrying the woman he had
-tried so long to win; our friendship went back, sixteen years, to Oxford
-and the dinners of the Phœnix. There were not too many survivors from
-those days; and, coming to sympathize, I had seen my sympathy flung back
-in my face. I made every allowance for his illness and misery; but I
-could not write to him, at least for the present and, when a letter from
-him, several months later, hurtled like a flask of vitriol from
-California to England, I was too nearly blinded to attempt an answer.
-
-“Will you call again?,” asked Barbara perfunctorily.
-
-“I don’t suppose he wants to be bothered,” I said.
-
-There was a long silence; and Barbara’s shoulders moved in a slight
-shrug:
-
-“I don’t suppose he wants to be friends. I tried, when we met at
-Croxton; but, when there’s been love, I don’t think you can go back to
-friendship.” She looked at me almost guiltily; and for an embarrassed
-moment I feared that I was to be drawn into yet one more unwanted
-confidence. Then, changing her mind, she walked slowly to the fire and
-stood with the dancing flames reflected in her sombre eyes. “I’m . . .
-_glad_ he’s going,” she murmured at last. “I’ve not really been myself
-since I met him again, whatever I told you about feeling free. When you
-wanted me to come with you to Ireland . . . I was mad. I’ll go with you
-now, if you like . . . anywhere. We’ve talked so often about a fresh
-start: I can make it now. I _do_ want our life to be a success. If
-there’s anything I can do . . .”
-
-“You can’t do more than you’re doing at present,” I said.
-
-With a sudden turn, Barbara flung her arms about my neck and hid her
-face against my chest.
-
-“Is there nothing more that you want?,” she asked. “Don’t say ‘your
-happiness’! I know you want that, darling. Don’t you want anything for
-yourself? Don’t you want me to be like other women? Don’t you want me to
-have children?”
-
-“Most men want children,” I said, “but women have to bear them.”
-
-“Yes . . . I’ve always wanted children and I’ve always been afraid of
-them. I’m still afraid, . . . but I’m going to have one now, George,
-. . . for your sake. You’re pleased? Hold me tight, darling, and promise
-me one thing. If anything goes wrong . . .”
-
-“But, good God . . .!,” I began.
-
-“It _may_. If anything _does_ go wrong and one of us has to die, promise
-you’ll let it be me!”
-
-I was dispensed from answering by Barbara’s sudden surrender to
-hysterics. When she was recovered, I put her to bed and sent for
-Gaisford; as soon as he allowed her up, I took her to Crawleigh Abbey
-and left her to recuperate from something which the doctor described
-enigmatically as “a nervous breakdown that didn’t come off”.
-
-“I’ve been expecting this for years,” he told me. “And for years I’ve
-felt that she’d be a healthier, happier woman when she had some brats to
-look after. This business about Eric Lane must have been a shock to
-her.”
-
-“Well, thank Heaven, that’s all over,” I said.
-
-“At last,” Gaisford grunted. “If you’re going down to Crawleigh . . .”
-
-“I shall stay here, except for week-ends, unless I’m sent for,” I
-interrupted. “This is going to be a busy time. The peace terms are to be
-signed within the next few days.”
-
-“I wonder what kind of mess they’ve been making out there,” Gaisford
-mused.
-
-“You’re convinced it _will_ be a mess?”
-
-“My dear George, when two human beings get together, they always make a
-big mess,” he answered with more than his usual misanthropy; “and I’ve
-known human beings who could make a fair-sized mess with their four
-unaided paws.”
-
- 6
-
-The peace of Versailles was celebrated in London with thanksgivings by
-day and fireworks at night.
-
-“I wonder why,” said Bertrand sadly.
-
-“Lady Dainton wants me to bring you to her party at the Excelsior,” I
-said, though, when he repeated: “I wonder why”, it was not easy to find
-a convincing answer.
-
-“Are _you_ going?” he asked suspiciously, as though I were revenging
-myself on him for my dinners in Rutland Gate.
-
-“Yes,” I answered. “I wonder why myself; but I’m a bachelor at present
-and I must dine somewhere.”
-
-“All right,” sighed my uncle; and, on that, we drove to the office and
-sat until seven o’clock considering the terms and discussing, with
-Spence-Atkins and any one else who drifted in, what the future policy of
-our paper was to be.
-
-For several weeks the dearth of news in Fetter Lane and the claims of
-outside interests had brought our fragile bantling to the verge of death
-by starvation. Ministers, I thought, revealed a shrewd knowledge of
-mass-psychology in denying us all news of the conference.
-
-“Kid asks for a thing,” explained Sir Philip Saltash, when I loosed a
-grumble in his hearing; “you refuse it; kid screams. Go on refusing it;
-kid goes on screaming. Go on refusing still; kid thinks of something
-else.”
-
-By July, even the press had almost ceased to scream; parliament had long
-been silent; and the country was probably thinking of a prize-fight. My
-own record was representative of the vast majority: I went to my office
-six days a week, I continued the farce of exploring London to find what
-people were thinking, I supported a wall at the parties which my wife
-gave to please my uncle; but such intellectual energy as I possessed had
-been devoted at one moment to my private affairs in Ireland, at another
-to O’Rane’s inheritance and again at another to the havoc which poor
-Eric Lane’s return had wrought in my life with Barbara. At our editorial
-dinners I was chiefly concerned to see that we had enough readable
-matter of any kind to fill twenty-four pages. Like the child in
-Saltash’s parable, I was now indifferent; and, when at last the great
-secrets which we had screamed to know were flung to us in bulk, we were
-mildly bored.
-
-“I warned you at Cannes how it would be,” said Bertrand; then he lapsed
-into unhelpful silence.
-
-“You heard what they were saying in Paris?,” asked Spence-Atkins. “‘The
-seeds of a great and durable war’.”
-
-“Meanwhile,” I said, “as our first article will be on the treaty . . .?”
-
-We had reached no decision by the time my uncle and I adjourned for
-dinner with the Daintons; if seventy men out of London’s seven millions
-understood what kind of peace had been made, I do not believe that seven
-men of the seventy cared by now whether it was a good peace or a bad.
-
-“Indifference! Indifference!,” Bertrand sighed. “If you compare this
-night with the day of the armistice . . . We said ‘never again!’; and we
-meant it. Now, though half the world’s still in mourning, we’re racing
-along a road that will put the other half in mourning.”
-
-“I suppose you can never repeat your emotions,” I ventured, as I
-followed his gaze over the packed restaurant. “The war ended at the
-armistice; people say ‘All right! It’s _still_ ended.’”
-
-“And they’re not interested to see whether the present world is built on
-quicksand.”
-
-“No one can say _we_ haven’t done our best to warn people,” I said
-wearily, as the Daintons came into the lounge.
-
-“No one but a fool would say that any one had paid the slightest
-attention to our warnings,” Bertrand rejoined. “The harm’s done now.
-That phase is over.”
-
-As we went in to dinner, Lady Dainton told me that the scene was quite
-like 1914. From a long and intimate acquaintance with her no less than
-from the ring of pleasure in her voice, I realized that this was her
-return from exile: for thirty years she had lived and laboured to enter
-what she considered the “right” houses and to secure the “right” people
-in her own. The war had thrown her out of work; but she could begin
-again now. One of her sons had been killed, the other wounded; her
-daughter had disappointed the family by marrying O’Rane and shocked it
-by running away from him; for the Daintons, who had worked as hard as
-any one, it had not been a pleasant or an easy war; and now Lady Dainton
-was dismissing it as a regrettable incident, least said, soonest mended.
-She was not wanting in affection for her dead son nor for the son who
-would be among the first to die if another war came; but she was by now
-too inelastic to remodel her daily life, still less to attempt
-improvements on the scene of 1914 when there were no ‘profiteers’, no
-‘temporary gentlemen’, no six-shilling income-tax, no bloated wages for
-insatiable domestic servants.
-
-“You think it will last?,” I enquired.
-
-“I feel sure it will,” she answered. “It’s to _all_ our interests, don’t
-you know?, to keep the big houses open, to have plenty of employment,
-money circulating. . . . Of course, if the socialists had their way
-. . . but I don’t think there’s much socialism in England, George. The
-war has thrown people together so much. The agitators simply wouldn’t be
-able to make a living if they weren’t paid from abroad. There’s a little
-book I must send you on the Jewish peril.” . . .
-
-A new taste for spreading scares was the only change that I could detect
-in my hostess. Whereas she had occupied herself before the war by
-sitting on endless committees, she reached a larger public now by
-sitting at home and inundating her friends with pamphlets on bolshevism,
-prohibition, the white-slave traffic, secular education and every other
-danger that threatened, day by day, to sap the security of England. Sir
-Roger, I fancy, had changed even less. Whereas he had formerly jobbed in
-and out of wild-cat industrial securities, he now dabbled in the more
-chaotic of the European exchanges. Sonia danced; Sam had left his firm
-of contractors in Hartlepool for a vague “agency-business” of his own in
-London; Tom Dainton’s widow had married again; and I believe this single
-family could have been reproduced, in every detail of history and
-circumstance, in almost every town and county throughout Great Britain
-and Ireland.
-
-“George not being pessimistic, is he?,” Sir Roger enquired genially, as
-we settled into our places.
-
-“I confess I don’t like the outlook,” I said; and for the life of me I
-could not imagine how any one enjoyed the prospect of a peace abroad
-that was nothing but a silent war. My volatile host had been
-sufficiently dissatisfied a few days before when the labour party,
-realizing that the government was properly contemptuous of its servile
-supporters in the House of Commons, threatened the “direct action” of a
-general strike. Dainton knew; and I knew; and every man with a
-smattering of economic history knew that the present boom would be
-followed by a disastrous slump. “Things seem too good to last.”
-
-The flow of geniality ran suddenly dry.
-
-“You’d be the first to complain if they did,” said Dainton; and his tone
-surprised me out of a reply till I noticed his flushed face and watery
-eyes. “My friend George has great qualities,” he continued, with
-malicious jocularity, to the table at large, “but he’s no great shakes
-as a prophet. Before the war he told us there would be no war; when it
-came, he said it could never end one way or the other; now that it’s
-ended, he says it _must_ start again. Cheerful customer, George.”
-
-I might have reminded him that in the nineties he was prophesying an
-inevitable war with Russia, in the nineteen-hundreds with France. I
-might have asked him to reconcile the treaty of Versailles with the
-fourteen points. I might have enquired whether he would keep his
-promises of the December election that the kaiser should be hanged and
-the whole cost of the war covered by a German indemnity. In the
-interests of a quiet dinner, I said nothing; Dainton, as a political
-barometer, was more valuable to me than Dainton as a political
-controversialist. I realized for the first time that the class which he
-represented would be our most aggressive antagonists when we worked to
-secure a sane peace. Thanks to the determination of the French prime
-minister and the vacillation of our own, he was enabled to go back
-impenitently to the mood of his election address. No longer speaking of
-“Wilson, _le bienvenu_”, he had discovered in the president an insidious
-agent for strengthening Germany and weakening France. Forgetting his
-earlier lip-service to the League of Nations, he paraded comparative
-populations and, in my hearing that night, based his hopes of enduring
-peace on “bleeding Germany white and keeping her white”.
-
-I had not, for several months, mentioned the inflammatory fourteen
-points: had I done so, Dainton might have retorted that President Wilson
-had himself departed from them by throwing his lot in with M. Clemenceau
-and Mr. Lloyd-George. I did not discuss the equity of the peace terms. I
-discussed very little with Dainton; but I tried, as I had been trying
-all day, to envisage the new world which circumstances and the efforts
-of the peace conference were labouring to bear. Russia was in the grip
-of revolution, civil war and famine; Germany, Austria, Hungary and Italy
-might follow at any moment; the map of Europe was dotted with strangely
-named, new, self-governing republics, alike only in their complete
-ignorance of self-government; as we were soon to see, there was no
-European police to restrain the Italian who might be inspired to seize
-Fiume or the Rumanian who was tempted to march on Buda Pesht; the League
-of Nations had been invested with no power; and the world outside
-Europe, from India to Egypt and from Ireland to the Philippines, had
-been taught the magic word “self-determination” and had realized its
-possibilities more vividly than those who coined it.
-
-In an unguarded moment I did ask Dainton whether he imagined that the
-Germans could ever pay the indemnity which he had so sternly demanded.
-He believed it confidently. How, I asked him; but Dainton told me that
-he was not in the mood to split hairs: if they could pay it, they should
-(and the allies would remain in occupation till the last penny had been
-handed over); if the Hun ruined himself in the attempt, as I seemed to
-think likely, it would be something to feel that he would never again
-menace the world.
-
-“And if he ruins us too?,” I asked. “Economically, the whole world is
-knitted together. If the Russian revolution spreads to Germany?”
-
-“It won’t spread here,” Dainton answered in happy forgetfulness of
-earlier speeches against the corrupting influence of those Russian and
-German agents who controlled British trades unions. “Our people are too
-sensible. You’re very gloomy, George! This won’t do at all. Drink up
-that cocktail and let’s begin our dinner.”
-
-As I looked round on the scene of peace, now officially proclaimed, I
-reflected that five years, all but a few days, had passed since I
-strolled on to the valley-terrace at Chepstow, to smoke a cigarette
-between dances; it seemed less than five weeks since Colonel Farwell
-walked diffidently out of the darkness to say that, while war had not
-yet been declared, it was prudent for all officers to be in touch with
-their depots. They had gone, those first, in a spirit of routine
-enlivened by adventure; they were followed by men who went in a spirit
-of bewilderment clarified by sacrifice. The bewilderment passed; and the
-sacrifice turned to resignation. Soon the resignation became fatalism:
-every one went because every one else was going; none expected to come
-back, and, of those who went first, few were cheated of their
-expectation. Now we were celebrating the end of a war that dwarfed the
-campaigns of Napoleon to so many intermittent brawls.
-
-I must have spoken the name, for my uncle caught at it eagerly:
-
-“Seventeen-ninety-three, eighteen-fifteen,” he murmured.
-“Nineteen-fourteen, nineteen-nineteen. Napoleon ended the middle ages
-and changed the map. Have we begun anything, ended anything, changed
-anything? We spilt a paint-box over the atlas; but will the colours
-stick? Germany and Russia cancel out; the rest of us have to play for
-pennies instead of shillings; but have we ended war, have we ended the
-nineteenth century, have we done anything but lose a few pawns in the
-first moves?”
-
-“We’d won _everything_ at the armistice!,” I exclaimed. “The world was
-ready and willing to be disarmed, ready and willing to accept
-arbitration in place of war . . .”
-
-“What election-cry has a chance against ‘revenge’?,” Bertrand demanded,
-with a glance of contempt towards the end of the table, when Dainton was
-arguing heatedly with the wine-waiter. “‘The red account is cast’; and
-Germany must pay. You and I know that we shall be the first to suffer.
-You and I know that these dolts are laying the foundations of the next
-war. You and I know that we have some misty world-vision and that we
-must work for a united states of Europe and a brotherhood of man. People
-won’t listen to us . . . yet. I shall be dead before you’ve cleared the
-first unbelievers out of the temple. _Si monumentum requiris_ . . .
-George, George, this is a blacker day in the world’s history than the
-fourth of August.”
-
-I have forgotten almost everything about that dinner except the sense of
-depression that grew deeper with every advance to gaiety on the part of
-my neighbours. We were spared speeches; but at the end our host called
-us to our feet for some toast which I did not hear. As I sat down, a
-kite’s-tail of coloured paper floated to us from the next table. A giant
-bunch of air-balloons was divided among eager hands. Crackers exploded;
-and a blare of tin trumpets punctuated the cheeping of wooden whistles.
-Perhaps I had spent too many hours that day in discussion that led
-nowhere: I suddenly felt that I was not in the mood for such artless
-merry-making.
-
-“_Si monumentum requiris_ . . .” Bertrand repeated.
-
-At the table from which that tail of coloured paper had been thrown, I
-observed my old ally, Sir Philip Saltash, entertaining a party of
-friends. Dainton, in acknowledging a bow, informed us that Saltash had
-“done as much as any one to win the war”; and, in examining Saltash’s
-guests, I felt that the same tribute could be paid to each. Wilmot Dean,
-representing a government of new men and new methods, was resting a
-flushed face on the bare shoulder of a beautiful and, I should imagine,
-wholly brainless mannequin. Lord Lingfield, whose inclusion in the
-cabinet shewed that ministers were not indifferent to rank and lineage,
-was deep in conversation with a Balkan millionaire who had been
-naturalized in time to become private secretary to the needy holder of a
-sinecure. And any one with attention to spare had it unpityingly claimed
-by Mr. ‘Blob’ Wister, who had won the war by purchasing papers for the
-government.
-
-I did not know the rest. I did not greatly want to know them. If I had
-been asked who won the war, I should have named David O’Rane rather than
-Wilmot Dean, Lord Loring rather than Lord Lingfield. Saltash’s guests
-may have given body and soul to victory; but their material position was
-founded on the war. After fine winnowing, we had arrived—in these ‘new
-men’—at the governing class of the immediate future: borrowing the name
-from ‘Blob’ Wister, they called themselves “realists”, and the
-coalitions of 1915 and 1916 had certainly intrigued the “sentimentalist”
-in politics to his extinction. Peace was too welcome for me to complain
-if it had been ushered in by ministers with more ambition than scruple.
-An obsolescent administration may have needed business brains to fit it
-for war; a democratic country cannot ignore its press-man and
-publicity-agent; and the rich hangers-on of a government only prove that
-bricks cannot be made without straw. Of the men who had won the war I
-only felt what Bertrand expressed bluntly:
-
-“They look as if they’d made a damned good thing out of it.”
-
-“Seventeen-ninety-three, eighteen-fifteen,” I replied.
-“Nineteen-fourteen to nineteen-nineteen. We have changed our rulers.”
-
-“It’s about all we _have_ changed,” Bertrand rejoined.
-
-Then we stood up as a waiter begged leave to push our table away from
-the dancing-floor. Sir Roger, unexpectedly on his feet, exhibited
-symptoms of impending oratory, which was checked, at the instigation of
-Wilmot Dean, by a well-directed crust of bread from the hand of the
-mannequin. The band, for the first time in several years, played the
-national anthems of all the allies. Our host ordered more champagne and
-then called for his bill. Sonia led off the dancing with Lord Lingfield;
-and I invented an excuse to go home to bed.
-
-The streets round the hotel were too crowded for driving. I told my
-chauffeur to get home as best he could and walked with Bertrand into the
-quiet backwaters north of Piccadilly. At the door of Loring House we met
-my cousin Violet, who insisted on our going the rest of the way in her
-car.
-
-“I’ve missed all the celebrations,” she told us. “I’ve been unveiling
-the memorial to Jim at Chepstow.”
-
-“You’ve not missed very much,” I answered. “Are you satisfied with the
-memorial?”
-
-“Yes. It’s only a medallion in the chapel; and you can only see it from
-the corner where I sit. I have . . . rather a horror of the
-war-memorials that are being put up everywhere.”
-
-“They’re the easiest means of forgetting the dead with a good
-conscience,” Bertrand suggested.
-
-“But not the only means,” I said, as a dishevelled vagrant steadied
-himself against the bonnet of the car and invited us to a confession of
-political faith.
-
-Its form consisted of question and answer: “_What’s the matter with
-Lloyd-George? ’E’s orl right! And what’s the matter with Winston? ’E’s
-orl right. What’s the matter with Beatty?_” . . .
-
-“That fellow is surprisingly like our friend Dainton,” said my uncle.
-
-
-
-
- PART TWO
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
-
-
- THE NAKEDNESS OF THE LAND
-
-
- “Nothing except a battle lost can be half so
- melancholy as a battle won.”
-
- DUKE OF WELLINGTON: _Despatches_.
-
- 1
-
-On the day after the peace-treaty had been signed, my uncle sent me to
-make a political survey of England. If it brought no benefit to England
-or to our paper, it provided me with a pleasant holiday and a welcome
-break.
-
-Looking back on my two years’ labours in Fetter Lane, I feel that the
-first six months were given to creating an atmosphere. As Bertrand
-proclaimed at our inaugural dinner, no lasting peace could be
-established on a sense of grievance; and, until the terms of peace were
-published, we tried to deflect public attention from crude thoughts of
-triumph and cruder hankerings after revenge to a frank desire for mutual
-forgiveness and good-will. For twelve months after the treaty was placed
-in our hands, we laboured to demonstrate that it was unworkable. And in
-the six months during which the peace coalition was tottering to the
-fall I received my answer to the old question whether those who could
-neither keep peace nor make war were competent to make peace.
-
-“It won’t do,” Bertrand declared summarily, when we met to discuss our
-public attitude to the treaty of Versailles. “‘Revision’ must be our
-battle-cry. Revision of the treaty.”
-
-I fancy I was expressing what Spence-Atkins and Triskett and all of us
-had long felt, when I said:
-
-“Thank God we have a battle-cry at last.”
-
-“It will not be popular,” predicted my uncle, with his usual love for
-being in a minority. “The fools who shouted that we were ‘letting the
-Hun off’ will shout more than ever that we’re making the treaty ‘a scrap
-of paper’. . . . And yet, if we try to enforce it, all central Europe
-will go the way of Russia.”
-
-“I’m afraid it will be another unpopular cry,” added Jefferson Wright,
-“but it’s time we drew attention to the economic position at home. We’re
-pouring out money as though the war were still going on.”
-
-“Our battle-cry, then,” said Bertrand, “must be ‘Produce more and
-consume less’.”
-
-“We shall be told we’re trying to enslave labour. And there’ll be no end
-to unemployment when the ‘consuming less’ begins.”
-
-“We’re here to tell people the truth, even if it’s an unpleasant truth,”
-Bertrand rejoined with stern virtue; and our shorthand-writer looked up
-encouragingly to see if this also was to be a battle-cry.
-
-Then, as Wright and Spence-Atkins had been given their orders, he packed
-me out of the office to collect material for six articles on _England in
-Reconstruction_.
-
-“The great pulse of the people,” he ordained as my objective. “London’s
-a hot-house: abnormal.”
-
- 2
-
-My last duty, before taking the road, was to attend little Ivy
-Maitland’s wedding.
-
-She had wasted no time, I thought, in consoling herself for the loss of
-Eric Lane; but the quick decisions and quicker changes of this period
-were a conspicuous part of the “abnormality” which my uncle found
-devastating London in the first years of peace. We attended the
-ceremony, on O’Rane’s entreaty, to support Ivy, who was out of favour
-with most of her friends; and we went on to the reception in the hope of
-comforting Mr. Justice Maitland, who was deriving a morose satisfaction
-from prophesying the inevitable misery which his daughter was laying up
-for herself. I seem to possess an irresistible fascination for elderly
-bores; and the first chapter in my survey of England might have been
-headed: _Maitland on the Decay of Faith and Morals_.
-
-“It would break your heart,” he told me, “if you listened to some of the
-stories I have to hear in the Divorce Court. If young people thought
-less of themselves and more of their elders . . . The churches have lost
-their grip. Young people don’t take us into their confidence.”
-
-“Did they ever,” I asked, “where marriage was concerned?”
-
-The judge pursued his denunciation without a check:
-
-“Headstrong children like Ivy rush into it quite cynically. Their
-deepest affections are not engaged, so they have little to fear from
-failure; as for the scandal, none of their friends think the worse of
-them.”
-
-“It’s a reaction from the cramping discipline of the war,” I answered.
-“The people who find their way into the Divorce Court are taking their
-revenge, in private lawlessness, for long submission to a machine that
-had neither body to be kicked nor soul to be damned.”
-
-If my explanation was heard, it was not answered.
-
-“One woman, my dear Oakleigh,” the judge recalled sombrely and
-unseasonably as his daughter drove away for her honeymoon, “actually
-asked me—in court—what was to be done with a husband who insulted her
-in public: it was not, she explained, as if they had not a home where he
-could do that. It’s terrible!”
-
-I agreed; but, as I could suggest no remedy, I took my leave and motored
-Barbara to Chepstow for a week before we set our hand on the great pulse
-of the people in Scotland. Most of the houses where we stayed had been
-closed for five years or turned into hospitals; and, as they opened
-their doors, I felt that the interrupted play of 1914 was being resumed
-on a stage from which all the old actors had departed. The new avenue at
-Loring Castle seemed no taller; if the dogs were older, they were for
-the most part the same dogs; but the present marquess was a
-four-year-old boy whose father was reported missing some eight-and-forty
-hours before he himself came into the world. The terrible emptiness of
-those days returned to me when I saw Violet walking by herself along the
-valley-terrace, where I had walked with her husband on the last night of
-peace.
-
-I wondered how much of Jim Loring’s world would survive into this
-child’s manhood. The servant who unpacked for me confided that he was
-marking time till he heard of an opening in the colonies. The
-house-carpenter, who had married one of the maids, told me that he was
-setting up in business with her savings from a munition-works. The
-stud-groom engaged me unexpectedly in a discussion of the Pyramids,
-which he had visited since last I stayed at Chepstow. At first I thought
-that in his blood, too, unrest was stirring; but I discovered later that
-the war had only changed his outlook by convincing him of the literal
-truth of the Old Testament.
-
-“Moses . . . and them Pharaohs,” he murmured to himself, looking
-dreamily towards the junction of Wye and Severn as though it were the
-Red Sea waiting to pile up its waters and let the children of Israel
-through.
-
-He at least had no desire to roam. Grandfather, father and son, the
-family had lived and died in sight of the Castle stables; and he would
-have repudiated his king before he defaulted in his allegiance to the
-Lorings. In Gallipoli, I gathered, there were frothy, worthless
-fellows—the scum of midland factories and the dregs of South Welsh
-pits—who were ready enough to criticize their betters. Firebrands and
-hot-heads, they maintained that their betters had muddled them into the
-war and that, if the politicians and the generals had known their job as
-well as the hewers and fitters, the flower of an army would not have
-been sent to its death in this way. Their “betters”, according to these
-critics, had been found out.
-
-I suggested that the French, in spite of their scientific training, and
-the Americans, for all their democratic upbringing had also made
-blunders; so, I added, had the Germans; but I was preaching to the
-converted. This criticism was the yapping of town-bred curs; and, if
-anything exceeded my friend’s devotion to his feudal head, it was his
-scorn and hatred for the thieving upstarts of city streets.
-
-“Then you don’t think anything will come of all this talk?,” I asked.
-
-“Not while their lazy bellies are full, sir,” he answered.
-
-How long that would be was one of the problems that Bertrand had sent me
-to solve.
-
-“So long as the price of wheat stops where it is,” one of Violet’s
-tenant-farmers told me, “I can make a living. Of course, if her ladyship
-raises my rent . . .” He complained of the wages that had to be paid
-nowadays to old men and boys for a third of the work that was done
-before the war. “I can’t reduce them,” he added. “Why, d’you know, sir,
-what a pair of good boots costs you in Chepstow to-day?”
-
-I have forgotten the figure; but, when I had occasion to make a few
-purchases, the shop-keepers apologized for their charges. The cost of
-labour and materials had gone up; but you could not reduce them when
-living was so expensive.
-
-“A loaf of bread nowadays . . .” began the bootmaker who was oppressing
-the tenant-farmer’s labourer, who was keeping up the price of bread.
-
-Then he muttered something about “middlemen” and “profiteers”.
-
-At the other end of the scale, Violet Loring deferred making any
-improvements on the Chepstow estate until her tenants paid a rent
-commensurate with the high cost of labour and material. She was a rich
-woman, by the standard of gross income; but she had three houses in
-England, a palace in Scotland and a derelict barrack in Ireland. The
-greater part of her income was derived from coal; and the latest
-strike-cloud was being illuminated terrifyingly with lightning-forks
-that spelt ‘nationalization’. In one paper I read that some Angevin
-king, with more generosity than geography, had granted to Sir Humfrey de
-Loringe certain lands that were his by right of seizure alone; the
-paper—and I with it—knew of no service by Sir Humfrey to the community
-at large that justified this grant in perpetuity; and, if right of
-seizure was the basis of the Loring estates in one century, right of
-seizure—it was suggested—might be the means of expropriating the
-Lorings in another.
-
-“I don’t think there’ll be any confiscation in my time,” said Violet,
-“but I have to think of Sandy.”
-
-And her surplus income was therefore being invested in various
-securities of various foreign countries, in the hope that all would not
-default at the same moment.
-
-As I moved to houses less well endowed than my cousin’s, I found the
-uneasiness more marked. The Knightriders, taking early advantage of the
-boom in real estate, had sold their house in Raglan to a rich
-colliery-proprietor; John Carstairs, when we went to stay with him at
-Herrig, said that, after this experimental year, he would have to let
-the shooting; and our visit to Philip Hornbeck in Yorkshire had to be
-cancelled because his wife had suggested a general reduction of wages
-and his servants had left her in a body without notice.
-
-“_Insecurity is the first, universal quality of the times_,” I wrote to
-my uncle.
-
- 3
-
-At the beginning of the autumn, a railway-strike assailed the country
-with partial paralysis.
-
-“_It may help_,” wrote Bertrand from the security of London, “_to bring
-people to their senses. They think they’re rich because the
-printing-presses keep ’em well supplied with depreciated notes. As
-usual, Spence-Atkins prophesies a tremendous slump; and that will be
-just as unreal as the boom. If people would think in terms of
-commodities and services instead of chattering about money!_
-
-“_But this is not the worst of the trouble. The triple alliance is a
-political engine. Direct action is a political method; the reply of
-organized labour to a government that represents no one in particular
-and organized labour least of all. This is the first protest against the
-1918 election and I’ve been torn in pieces by the tory press for asking
-what else any sane man could have expected, when the present House never
-tries to control ministers._ ‘Vous l’avez voulu, Georges Dandin.’”
-
-Barbara and I turned south on the first day of the strike; and, by the
-time we reached Crawleigh Abbey, it was over. In the tone of my
-father-in-law, however, I detected a new rancour such as I had not met
-since the almost daily strikes and lock-outs before the war. Neave had
-been warned for duty; and, as he changed out of uniform, I fancied that
-father and son were like a pair of reluctant game-cocks, as difficult to
-drag out of a fight as to urge in.
-
-“I regret nothing,” said Crawleigh on the first night, “that shews
-labour it can’t hold the country to ransom. If I’d been the prime
-minister, though, I’d have recalled every man jack of them to the
-colours . . .”
-
-“And if they refused to come?,” I ventured to interrupt.
-
-“After being ordered to mobilize?,” asked Neave with the aloof patience
-of a Guards officer in teaching a civilian his A.B.C.
-
-“Yes,” I answered. “In 1914 the regular officer threatened to resign if
-he were ordered to put down rebellion in Ulster. That’s never been
-quoted, but you may be sure it’s not been forgotten. And if you ever try
-to use troops against an industrial strike . . .”
-
-“I should use troops to protect life and property,” Crawleigh
-interposed. “A very few days without trains, and the babies in every
-city would die for want of milk. One hopes that these drastic steps will
-never be necessary. One hopes the lesson’s been taken to heart.”
-
-“I hope so too,” I said; but I knew Crawleigh to be only one of many who
-regretted that the strike had not been fought to a finish.
-
-As I began my articles, I noticed sadly that neither he nor Neave,
-neither the capitalist press which called our paper “bolshevistic” nor
-the labour sheets which damned us with faint, patronizing praise
-suggested that strikes and lock-outs ought to be as impossible in a
-civilized state as a wheat-corner or that, whoever was to blame and
-whoever was punished, the noncombatant majority suffered most.
-
-“Human nature being what it is . . .” began Sir Roger Dainton, with a
-fine affectation of political wisdom, when I put this view before him.
-
-I had driven Barbara to luncheon at Crowley Court; and throughout the
-meal our host droned of high taxation without considering the capital
-loss of a strike.
-
-“Every one’s the poorer for a struggle that has changed nothing and
-proved nothing,” I said.
-
-“In time, perhaps, the agitators will see that,” answered Lady Dainton,
-who had been expatiating, from the other end of the table, on
-class-hatred and proving in alternate sentences that the man Thomas was
-responsible for all this unrest and that Mr. Thomas really seemed the
-only person who would stand up to these bolshevists.
-
-It was at this time that the secret funds on which labour disturbances
-throve were discovered—by her—to come from Irish organizations in
-America and Jewish societies in Russia; perhaps her brain was tired, but
-in the course of one brief conversation the Indian home-ruler, the
-modernist in religion, the eccentric in music and the individualist in
-dress were all found to be tainted with “bolshevism”. Their
-predecessors, I recalled, had all been anarchists.
-
-“I must send you a little book on _The Soviet Peril_,” promised Lady
-Dainton, who at other times and in her untiring search for whipping-boys
-had sent me pamphlets on _A Short Way with Profiteers_.
-
-I refrained from commenting on her husband’s incautious boast that he
-had increased his capital twenty _per cent._ since 1914.
-
-“Are these agitators actually to be found in England?,” I asked.
-
-Lady Dainton assured me that they were, though neither she nor any one
-she knew had actually met one. Not content with fomenting revolution on
-earth, they were unseating religion from on high. Communist schools were
-springing up to poison youthful minds with secularist literature. So far
-as I could make out, she accounted it for enlightenment when her own
-friends paraded their scepticism; but, if there had been no god, she
-would have invented one for the poorer classes. It was no defence that
-the secular propagandist might be a sincere secularist; so long as he
-was paid, he stood condemned.
-
-“By the same test,” I asked, “would you call the clergy of the
-Established Church or the officers of the Employers’ Defence League
-‘paid agitators’?”
-
-“Certainly not! Good gracious, why . . .?” she asked in a voice that
-faded into the silence of stupefaction.
-
-The pulse of the Dainton family was the last that I felt before
-returning to London and presenting Bertrand with my report on the first
-phase of reconstruction. Looking over this review later, I noticed a
-_diminuendo_ in the rather robust optimism with which I began. England
-was still enjoying superficial plenty; and yet I heard a mutter of
-misgiving. Some of the factories were over-producing; finished articles,
-of material bought at war prices, had to be sold at post-war prices;
-credit became harder to obtain from the banks; and, as the first year of
-peace hastened to its close, other people than the Daintons woke to the
-unpleasant discovery that income-tax would have to be paid as though the
-war were still being waged and that they had for a year, in disregard of
-Bertrand’s battle-cries, been producing less and consuming more than
-they could afford.
-
-It was a time to draw in horns. Barbara and I had ordered a new car; and
-in a spirit of prudence we decided to cancel the order. Sam Dainton—I
-hope, without his mother’s knowledge—gave me £300 for my place in the
-waiting-list and made another £300 within two days by selling it to one
-of the Jews against whom I was so indefatigably warned. After this one
-experience of practical finance and of an “agency-business” as conducted
-by Sam, I went back to the unassailable heights of theory; and for the
-next six months, until other cares claimed my attention, I watched the
-unreal boom of 1919 changing to the unreal slump of 1920.
-
-The one was no better justified than the other. While the country
-clamoured for houses, the building trade clamoured for work; domestic
-servants were not to be procured, and the figures of unemployment rose
-steeply. Every other country, I read, was working overtime; and our own
-exports threatened to dry up.
-
-“Ever heard of a man called Keynes, George?,” my uncle asked on my
-return, tossing me _The Economic Consequences of the Peace_.
-
-“Yes. I sent my copy to your friend Dainton. It was the least I could do
-after the literature that his good lady has been pouring in on me.”
-
-“What Keynes preaches from inside knowledge is what I’ve been preaching
-to you since the armistice.”
-
-“It’s what our worthy Wright and every other economist would have
-preached, if he’d had the figures before him,” I answered. “But have you
-seen Keynes’ reception in the press? This country’s still drunk from
-armistice night. _People won’t listen._”
-
-And then I told Bertrand of the psychological discovery that impressed
-me most in the whole course of my tour. On the minds of men who had
-taken part in the war the printed word had ceased to exert its old
-spell. In the first recruiting of 1914 the boys in my old Wiltshire
-constituency were forbidden to pluck the blackberries by the roadside,
-because a mysterious red car had been abroad, before daylight,
-sprinkling the hedges with what was believed to be a strong solution of
-typhoid germs. The story was printed in the papers and believed because
-it was in print. Five years later the same story—with a Russian or a
-Sinn Feiner in charge of the car—might have been believed until it was
-published; then it would have been relegated to the teeming limbo of
-“newspaper lies”. The captain of the Loring yacht, who had served for
-most of the war on an auxiliary cruiser, told me of his amazement on
-reading that the _Pelion_, which was at that time his home, had been
-sunk by a mine in the North Sea; he was less surprised, though more
-aggrieved, to read a year later that his ship, which had lately been
-sunk by a torpedo in the Irish Channel, was still convoying troopers in
-the Mediterranean. He accepted my explanation that the Admiralty was of
-malice aforethought misleading the newspaper-readers of England in the
-hope of misleading the German intelligence department; but his faith was
-shattered beyond repair. If the press lied to him on matters which he
-could check from his own experience, how much more easily it would lie
-about defeats and casualties, wages and prices!
-
-“And in future,” I told Bertrand, “we have to reckon with this
-incredulity in addition to all the apathy that’s been breaking our
-hearts.”
-
-“_And_ the misrepresentation,” he sighed with a sensitiveness surprising
-in so scarred a fighter to the charge of the Woburn press that he was
-selling the French for thirty pieces of German silver.
-
-“There are times,” I said, “when I feel that only the logic of events
-will convince people. Aren’t we wasting our energy, Bertrand? I’ve given
-the experiment more than six months’ trial; now I want to get away.
-Barbara’s going to have a baby.” . . .
-
-I could have piled argument on argument if my uncle had resisted me; but
-he sat without speaking, his hands crossing and uncrossing themselves
-tremulously over the ivory knob of his stick and his eyes set gloomily
-on the fire.
-
-“The logic of events?,” he repeated at length.
-
-“I don’t believe we shall do any good here till we have a revolution,” I
-said, with bitter memories of my battle-piece in its three panels. “A
-revolution; or another war.”
-
-“Our intention was to avert it,” he reminded me.
-
- 4
-
-Because Bertrand made no effort to detain me, I stayed in
-London—sullenly protesting that we only bored the converted and
-exasperated the inconvertible—till the end of the year. Looking back, I
-suppose the autumn brought with it the first signs of returning reason,
-though Sir Roger Dainton—more in sorrow than anger—burnt the _Economic
-Consequences_ and left me—with anger and sorrow nicely balanced—to buy
-myself another copy. It was one thing, however, to concede that the
-peace terms were unworkable; it was something quite different to
-precipitate a general election in the hope of mending them. The
-coalition survived the Paisley election, when Mr. Asquith was drawn to
-Westminster through an avenue of cheering crowds; it survived the
-awkward questions which the average voter was beginning to frame. And,
-so long as it steered clear of another war, it could disregard the
-academic questions of sentimental leader-writers who asked if any one
-was a penny the better for war and victory.
-
-“You’ve had a year to get your new heaven and earth into working order,”
-said Philip Hornbeck, when I visited him at the Admiralty on the
-anniversary of the armistice. “I’ve been tied here so much that I’ve
-entirely lost track of the millennium. It’s arrived, I suppose?”
-
-“A number of people haven’t heard of it yet,” I answered, with my
-thoughts on the filibustering expeditions of the last three months.
-D’Annunzio had revived memories of Garibaldi by seizing Fiume and
-defying the great powers to turn him out; admirals and generals of the
-old _régime_ in Russia were being supplied by amateur strategists in
-England with arms to crush a revolutionary government in a country that
-had never been successfully invaded since the coming of the Tartars. “If
-the allies had an agreed policy . . .”
-
-“You can’t have an agreed policy when you’re not on speaking-terms with
-a single one of your neighbours,” Hornbeck retorted. “I invited your
-friend Lucien de Grammont . . .”
-
-“He won’t come if he knows I’m here,” I interrupted. “And I don’t know
-that I’m very keen to meet French people at present.”
-
-It was twelve months, to a minute, since Violet Loring pointed out to
-her boy the men who had come from Rhodesia and Japan, Portugal and
-Vancouver to die in a common cause.
-
-“I offered van Oss as a bait,” said Hornbeck with a grin. “If you three
-high-minded idealists can’t make a millennium, you mustn’t get impatient
-with the rank-and-file.”
-
-It was a matter for congratulation that a party so rashly collected
-could meet and scatter without a scene of violence. Clifford expected,
-quite obviously, to be castigated because America would not sign the
-covenant of the League; Lucien, no less obviously, looked only for a
-chance of castigating me because I criticized the treaty in every issue
-of _Peace_.
-
-“I don’t quite know what we’re celebrating,” he muttered provocatively,
-with a morose eye on the gathering crowds in Whitehall. “The loss of the
-war?”
-
-“We haven’t lost it yet,” I said, “but some of us are doing our best. I
-wish you’d explain to me, Lucien, how you expect to make Germany pay for
-the war when you’re standing with your foot on her throat.”
-
-“I am sorry if we are keeping you from trading with her,” he answered
-with icy politeness, “but security is as necessary to France as trade is
-to England. You made _yourselves_ secure when you took the German fleet.
-Now, when France is left alone . . .”
-
-He glanced malevolently at Clifford van Oss and turned again to the
-window.
-
-“But, hell, Wilson had no power to commit us!” Clifford protested. “If
-you’d any of you gotten down to the constitution of the United States
-. . .”
-
-“I fancy America signed the treaty?,” said Lucian coldly.
-
-“We’d best quit talking about bad faith,” Clifford recommended, without,
-however, following his own advice. “Clemenceau and Lloyd-George let up
-on Wilson over the fourteen points; they let up on the Germans . . .”
-
-I turned to Hornbeck, whose square face was alight with malicious
-enjoyment.
-
-“What are you supposed to be doing nowadays?,” I asked, as we strolled
-up and down the room where we had worked so long together.
-
-“I’m adviser to the secretariat,” he answered. “What does that mean?
-Well, you may say, if you like, that I’m preparing for the next war.”
-
-“It’s a pity there’s no one to bang all our heads together,” I murmured,
-as a new wrangle broke out between Clifford and Lucien. “The German
-menace has gone, but there’s a French menace coming. Nine or ten months
-ago I told Lucien in Paris that his people were at the top of their
-prestige; now they’re the most hated, feared and despised people in
-Europe. A mad war, a mad peace . . .”
-
-“And nothing to prevent another war as mad,” Hornbeck began. Then we
-stood without speaking, in a silence that spread over London, freezing
-sound and movement. The customary rumble of traffic receded to a
-distance and faded away; the blare of horns, the ringing of bells, the
-click of typewriters, all the shouting, speaking and whispering that
-made up the unceasing drone of a great city now, for two minutes,
-ceased. Then, very far away, the rumble of traffic began again. I felt
-as if I were recovering consciousness after an anæsthetic. Nearer at
-hand I heard voices, then the scuffle of feet; a typewriter clicked
-interrogatively, as though wondering if the two minutes were over; then
-a telephone-bell rang; and the city heaved and roared its way back to
-life. “We’re no better off,” Hornbeck resumed. “Only you sentimentalists
-ever thought we should be.”
-
-I had been indescribably awed by that sudden silence and by the
-spectacle of those many thousands all stricken motionless at the same
-time. The street was a solid block of devout, bare-headed humanity; from
-the Victoria Tower to the National Gallery a single mood of gratitude
-and reverence bowed those myriad heads. Far from Westminster, far from
-London, the same silence had fallen, the same devotion had risen from a
-myriad other hearts.
-
-“Spiritually?,” I asked.
-
-“Not in the very least! A great many people were very brave in an
-emergency; a great many people always are very brave in an emergency. A
-great many people have suffered . . . shall I say, on behalf of
-civilization? A great many people always suffer on behalf of
-civilization, which is a wasteful and cruel business, George, only one
-degree less wasteful and cruel than barbarism. This wasn’t the first war
-in history; people like you have always looked for a spiritual
-regeneration; you’ve never found it.”
-
-“I should be content,” I said, “if one man in ten out of all that crowd
-would join me in making future wars impossible.”
-
-“I should be content if one man in all the world would tell me how
-that’s to be done.”
-
- 5
-
-I reached Fetter Lane in a chastened mood; and for the rest of the
-morning we talked of the year that had passed since Armistice Day.
-
-There was to be no United States of Europe, still less a United States
-of the World. The peace-treaty, to the view of us all, indicated the
-swiftest and surest way to another war; and there was no influence,
-outside parliament or within, to modify it. Trade depression was
-attracting attention to unemployment and taxation; but, of a hundred men
-who said “We must cut down expenditure,” ninety-nine added “You can’t
-touch pensions, of course; or the army and navy; or the air force.”
-. . . And, after nine months, the one political organ that looked beyond
-the cheap scores and cheaper promises of the 1918 election was read by a
-growing literary public for the sake of its musical notes and dramatic
-criticism.
-
-“Are we addressing the right people?,” asked Jefferson Wright.
-
-“Any person who’ll listen is the right person for me,” said Bertrand
-sententiously.
-
-“Then why not speak to labour?”
-
-“Because it’s no more opposed to war than any other class,” grunted
-Bertrand. “If it were, there’d have been no war in ’14. When your German
-workman mobilized, the British workman had to mobilize against him.”
-
-“The labour party kept us out of a war with Russia,” Wright interposed.
-
-“Would the labour party keep us out of a war with France if the French
-turned nasty? If you’ve the guts of a louse, it’s human nature to resist
-a threat,” said Bertrand with more rhetorical force than biological
-accuracy. “How can we stop people putting pistols to other people’s
-heads?”
-
-The discussion, like so many in these inconclusive months, ended with
-the evaporating discovery that we were all late for a meal. I drove to
-the O’Ranes’ house in Westminster with the now familiar feeling that we
-should waste our strength and temper until some force more potent than
-our mild and scholarly articles came to rouse the country out of its
-drunken sleep. My uncle reminded me that we had been through one period
-of incredulous apathy for half-a-dozen years before 1914. Then the only
-people to think a war possible were the militarists who, with the best
-intentions, precipitated it with their preparations and their talk of
-“inevitability”; the Disarmament League alone tried to make it
-impossible, as duelling was made impossible, by taking away the
-privilege and the means of private vengeance. What we had done then we
-must do now.
-
-“But in 1919,” I said, as we parted, “I am older and more easily
-discouraged than I was in 1909.”
-
-Barbara had come up from Crawleigh Abbey to make the acquaintance of
-Sonia’s new baby; and, as I strolled up and down the long library with
-O’Rane, I asked him how he enjoyed being the richest commoner in
-England.
-
-“I can’t say I’ve noticed any difference,” he laughed, “except in the
-number of people who think they’ve a right to be supported by some one
-else.”
-
-“And the millennium?,” I pursued in a fair imitation of Hornbeck. “The
-civic conscience? Man’s natural right to life, liberty and the pursuit
-of happiness?”
-
-“What would you do in my place?,” he asked. “I’m almost certain to
-follow your advice.”
-
-As he spoke without irony, we beguiled the first part of luncheon with
-the sort of conversation that is affected by somnolent house-parties on
-wet afternoons. As at Cannes, each of us spent his money in dizzy
-flights of imagination; but now he brought us to earth with the
-criticism that we were not spending “for the good of humanity”.
-
-“Which was Stornaway’s condition,” he reminded me.
-
-And, in O’Rane’s hands, it was a condition that we could not fulfil.
-When Barbara spoke of the incurable cripples left by the war, he
-enquired why humanity should be relieved of its obligations. When I
-talked, as so often before I had talked with Deryk Lancing, of
-universities and institutions for research, of libraries and museums, of
-travelling fellowships and exploration funds, of subsidized opera and
-national newspapers, of model cities and a country made perfect, he
-applauded my enthusiasm and asked what I was doing to give it effect.
-
-“I do my modest share,” I said.
-
-“And, if I take that responsibility off your shoulders, you’ll only have
-more money to . . . _waste_ on yourself.”
-
-I cannot recall that the tone or choice of language was more vigorous
-than I had long been accustomed to hearing from O’Rane. Certainly I
-should have taken up the challenge without concern, if Sonia had not
-rushed superfluously to my assistance. Her indignation, however, in
-demanding why personal expenditure should be called waste, warned me
-against taking sides in a family quarrel.
-
-“David’s _impossible_ about money!,” she cried. “So long as I have _one_
-crust of bread, _one_ dress that would disgrace a scarecrow . . .”
-
-“If this is how the poor live, let’s join them!,” interposed Barbara
-pacifically.
-
-In spite of herself, Sonia laughed as she saw us admiring her frock. The
-house was unpretentious, but it was enviably comfortable. I never wish
-to be given better food or wine. And, on a lower plane of morality,
-whatever she lacked from her husband was made up by the munificence of
-her friends.
-
-“It’s so difficult, when every one thinks you’re rich . . .” she began.
-
-“But it isn’t our money,” O’Rane objected.
-
-Another explosion was threatening; and, at a sign from Barbara, I ranged
-myself beside Sonia.
-
-“You’re entitled to pay yourself a salary,” I told him. “As chairman and
-managing-director of a trust-company with a capital of twenty-five
-millions, I think five thousand a year . . .”
-
-“I’m pretty sure Sonia will do less harm with it than I shall,” he
-sighed. “Is that _all_ the advice you can give me, George?”
-
-“Well,” I reminded him, “I told you at Cannes not to touch the money
-with a pole.”
-
-“And, as I told you ten minutes ago, I should almost certainly follow
-your advice if you repeated it. Sonia won’t let me talk about that,
-though . . . Tell me your plans for the winter. The south of France
-again?”
-
-By the time we left, the last echo of discord was hushed. On our way
-home, however, Barbara warned me that new trouble would break out if
-some one did not create a diversion. I hardly know what difference Sonia
-and her friends expected O’Rane’s inheritance to make; but she was
-bitterly and undisguisedly disappointed by what she regarded as a life
-of wasted opportunities.
-
-“Get your mother to invite them out to Cannes,” Barbara suggested; and I
-sent an invitation that night on my own responsibility.
-
-It was refused, rather tartly, on the ground that David, as we might
-have known, would not leave his work and that Sonia, as we might have
-guessed, would not come, “trailing clouds of infants”, without him. I
-comforted myself with the reflection that, whatever her provocation, she
-would not try to repeat an effect by running away; and then I dismissed
-them both from my thoughts till the crisis in my own life should be
-passed.
-
-The word, I think, is not too strong for a moment and an event that were
-to test the union of two people who, on any reasoning, ought never to
-have married. Good friends though we were, Barbara had never pretended
-to be in love with me; I could judge of all that she was withholding
-when she forgot to hide her love for Eric Lane. Though he was five
-thousand miles away, she was still haunted by him; and I sometimes
-wondered whether anything short of his death would cure the obsession.
-Then, on the day when she told me that she was going to have a child, I
-took hope again; what I had never been able to achieve was to be brought
-about by our son. She had decided that it would be a boy; we had even
-chosen his name; and I had begun to love him, before he was quickened,
-for drawing us together.
-
-As Lady Crawleigh wanted Barbara in the country, I spent most of the
-early spring by myself in London; and at the end of April I went down
-for a week to be at hand if I were needed. It was the twenty-first of
-the month when I arrived; and, though the date is of no interest to any
-one, I am unlikely to forget it; my car crossed the bridge into the
-abbey precincts at twenty minutes past seven in the evening, and I am
-not likely to forget that either. I shall not forget the eerie silence
-in which the abbey was wrapped, nor the scared faces of the servants,
-nor the darkness of the rooms, nor the atmosphere of disaster impending.
-I hope I am as self-controlled as my neighbour, but I seemed to feel a
-hand of ice on my heart as the butler helped me out of my coat and
-murmured that he believed his lordship was in the garden.
-
-“Everything all right?,” I asked as carelessly as I could.
-
-“Yes, sir. Lady Barbara is in her room. I believe her ladyship is with
-her.”
-
-When I went upstairs, Barbara was in bed. The blinds were down, and a
-closing door hinted that my mother-in-law was for some reason hurrying
-away to avoid me. As I crossed the room, Barbara told me to stop; and,
-as I tried to ask how she was, I was waved into silence. Then she
-covered her eyes and turned away:
-
-“You’ve not been told? It’ll be a shock, but I wanted to tell you
-myself. I’m sorry, George . . . I . . . I did my best. You mustn’t be
-_too_ dreadfully disappointed. Dead . . . He was born dead. If only it
-could have been the other way round!”
-
-Mercifully, as though she had been listening at the door, Lady Crawleigh
-came back to say that my father-in-law wished to see me. Together we
-drafted the announcement for the press; and I asked whether it would be
-prudent for me to go upstairs again. He said “yes” and “no” alternately,
-concluding on a “yes” in the frantic hope of getting rid of me. As I
-tapped on Barbara’s door, I heard Lady Crawleigh scuttling through
-another; and it was Barbara, undaunted and indomitable, who hid her own
-agony under a gentle concern for me.
-
-“I suppose people will want to sympathize,” she began. “May I have all
-my letters sent to you, George? Open them, answer them. I shall have to
-be here for some weeks, I’m afraid, but I’ll make up for deserting you
-when I come back to London. I’ll give some lovely parties for you. We
-shall be so busy we shan’t have time to think. I _want_ to keep busy.”
-. . .
-
-And, on that word, her dead child, her suffering and her disappointment
-were banished from Barbara’s life. Three years have passed since that
-April evening of 1920 when we made our compact of silence; and, with a
-single exception, we observed it with equal scruple on both sides.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
-
-
- THAT WHICH REMAINED
-
-
- No doubt, there’s something strikes a balance. Yes,
- You loved me quite enough, it seems to-night.
- This must suffice me here. What would one have?
- In heaven, perhaps, new chances, one more chance—
- Four great walls in the New Jerusalem,
- Meted on each side by the angel’s reed,
- For Leonard, Rafael, Agnolo and me
- To cover—the three first without a wife
- While I have mine! So—still they overcome
- Because there’s still Lucrezia,—as I choose.
-
- Again the Cousin’s whistle! Go, my love.
-
- ROBERT BROWNING: _Andrea del Sarto_.
-
- 1
-
-Before we settled in London for the summer of 1920, I asked Bertrand
-whether he was prepared to run our paper without me if I could persuade
-Barbara to dull the edge of her grief by coming round the world with me.
-
-“You’ll be leaving us,” answered my uncle rather blankly, “just at the
-moment when life is becoming normal after the war. We’ve hideous
-labour-troubles in store; unemployment . . . From all I hear, there’s
-going to be an explosion in Ireland.”
-
-“And this,” I interrupted, “is what you describe as normal conditions
-after the war?”
-
-Bertrand nodded slowly over his clasped hands:
-
-“I do. A peace-treaty you may regard as another aspect of war: the last
-chapter, if you like. Then you come to that which remains: the bill
-that’s still unpaid when you’ve counted your dead and disbanded your
-armies and dismembered your empires. All the complications of our
-spiritual convalescence are before us. Still . . .”
-
-I might have spared him my importunity until I had approached Barbara.
-With the choice of six months in London and twelve on a steamer, she had
-no difficulty in making up her mind; and I soon found myself studying,
-in her company and from a somewhat different angle, “that which
-remained” in London after eighteen months of armistice and peace. If the
-life was a little bewildering and sometimes more than a little
-uncongenial, that—as Bertrand would have said—was part of the unpaid
-bill.
-
- 2
-
-“One swallow may not make a summer,” said my cousin Laurence, when his
-long-suffering sister banished him from Loring House to the admittedly
-inferior amenities of Seymour Street; “but one duchess is going to make
-a season. Eleanor Ross has decided that London is again to be the
-metropolis of England.”
-
-“For that,” I said, “you must blame the prime minister. It’s one thing
-for her to keep open restaurant in Paris, it’s quite another to play
-round-the-world-in-eighty-days with an international conference. San
-Remo, Hythe . . .”
-
-In a few months I might have added Boulogne, Brussels and Spa, so
-swiftly did one final settlement follow on another. The hangers-on,
-meanwhile, had abandoned the pursuit and returned to London. A season,
-of some kind, was opening; and poor Barbara was giving the first of
-those “wonderful parties” which were to make her forget our recent
-tragedy.
-
-“Any one who ever had any money seems to have spent it,” said Laurence
-with irrelevant regret and an appraising glance round the table. “I
-suppose _you_ don’t know of a decent job? Something with a bit more
-money and a bit less work than the bar?”
-
-If I had, I told him, I could have filled the position fifty times over
-with the men who were being thrown on to the labour-market as the last
-regiments returned home and the last war-departments were dismantled. I
-hesitate to say how many men like my brother-in-law Gervaise I helped
-into lucrative billets in the first six months of peace; I can say
-without hesitation that in 1920 I looked vainly for a single position
-that I could recommend to the pathetic, unspecialized men and boys who
-sent me testimonials beginning: “_Public school and university
-ex-service officer_, 1914-1918, _wounded_.” . . . If others received
-half the appeals that came to me, the city was packed close with them;
-and the only man of my acquaintance who benefited by this congestion was
-the enterprising Sam Dainton, who expanded his agency-business into a
-colourable imitation of highway-robbery by making a corner in empty
-houses. The premiums which he imposed and the commissions which he
-accepted light-heartedly from vendor and purchaser would probably have
-landed him in the dock if he had remained longer in this kind of
-business; but vaulting ambition tempted him to compete with more
-experienced brigands in buying surplus stores from the government, and
-the blackmail which he levied on the homeless may have been balanced,
-with poetic justice, on the day when makeshift houses were erected below
-cost-price from the forced sale of his unmarketable stocks.
-
-“Nobody could want _less_ work than you do at the bar,” Philip Hornbeck
-pointed out.
-
-“I call that mocking a feller’s misfortunes,” replied my cousin with
-dignity. “I’ve a good mind not to tell you now.” . . . As we said
-nothing, Laurence pulled his chair close to mine and helped me to a
-glass of my own madeira. “These devastated areas, George: they’ll need
-the hell of a lot of building material. If you’ve any capital lying idle
-. . .”
-
-“My trustees see to it that I haven’t,” I answered.
-
-“Ready money’s gone out of circulation since the millennium,” explained
-Hornbeck; and for once I almost agreed with him.
-
-In these months I was indeed reminded of the embarrassing first days of
-hostilities, before the Treasury began to issue its own notes. Houses,
-land, stock-in-trade were visible and tangible; we could have rubbed
-along somehow under a general system of barter; but no one seemed to be
-blessed with cash. The owners of big fortunes made in the war, so useful
-a year earlier in buying unmanageable estates, disappeared as suddenly
-as they had emerged: a few, I fancy, were frightened by talk of a
-retrospective levy on their profits, but most of them derived their
-wealth from industry; and industry at this time was being attacked by
-creeping paralysis. Sir John Woburn’s group of papers set up a cry for
-economy; the ‘coupon’ system of electioneering was thrown into its first
-practical discredit by the success of independent ‘anti-waste’
-candidates; and, when my political barometer told me that all this talk
-of ‘reconstruction’ was well enough, but that we must reconstruct the
-whole of Europe, I felt that the logic of facts had done what the
-pleadings of _Peace_ would never do.
-
-At my own table, though I had achieved an ingenious double revenge by
-placing Dainton, who feared my uncle, within earshot of my uncle, who
-despised Dainton, I did not feel justified in pointing political morals;
-and it was with outward cordiality that I listened to his diagnosis and
-treatment of international prostration.
-
-“The _whole_ of Europe,” he repeated. “No good tinkering. Take Germany.
-Take Austria. _Take Russia._”
-
-And, with that, he lowered his voice conspiratorially and invited me to
-join a concession-hunting syndicate which the alert Sir Adolf Erckmann
-was forming. The proposal surprised me, inasmuch as a sense of personal
-unworthiness, stronger even than my impatience of Dainton’s politics,
-had frightened me away from Rutland Gate since Lady Dainton chose it for
-her second blooming. Whenever I failed in an excuse to dine elsewhere, I
-seemed to pick my way through the melancholy ruins of fallen European
-dynasties. Starting with refugee Russian princes, the Daintons extended
-the net of hospitality to catch expropriated Poles and were only waiting
-for a change in public sentiment before opening their doors to the
-crownless heads of Germany. All were welcomed with the ceremony which
-England accords to the runaway scions of a kingly house: Sir Roger
-received his guests in the hall with a braver display of decorations
-than etiquette warranted; Lady Dainton curtseyed till I felt giddy; and,
-if the throne of the Czars remained empty, that was only because Moscow
-was so far from London.
-
-I had heard so much of the coming royalist counterrevolution that I
-fully expected to find Dainton smuggling arms into Russia.
-
-“Your foreign information is better than most,” he began darkly; and
-then the plans of the syndicate were laid before me.
-
-Listening with half of one ear, I seemed—with the other—to catch the
-thick tones of Sir Philip Saltash as he discoursed of the waters which
-he troubled and of the adventurous anglers who fished therein. My sleek
-tempter, I confess, appeared to me at this moment rather in the guise of
-a vulture; and, when I thought of the get-rich-quickly schemes that were
-discussed daily in my hearing, the heavens seemed to darken with these
-birds of prey. Sam, with his options on empty houses; Laurie, with his
-plans for holding the devastated areas to ransom; Dainton, with his
-gambling in marks and francs: all looked on Europe primarily as a place
-to loot. Yet two of these three had offered even their lives so few
-years before; and the third had given away his cars and sold his
-securities to fit out Red Cross ambulances!
-
-“Are you shaking the bloody hand of the soviet?,” I enquired, with
-shocked memories of Dainton’s attacks on ‘bolshevism’.
-
-“The soviet? Good heavens, why . . .?” he gasped with much the same
-perplexity as his wife had exhibited when I asked if ministers of
-religion should be regarded as paid agitators.
-
-Dainton would have nothing to do with the soviet. Lenin and his gang
-would, with the help of God, be brought to book by Admiral Kolchak; but,
-without waiting for that consummation, he was ready to help the
-commercial recovery of Russia by pouring in goods, machinery and the
-material of a new transport-system. As he could not hope to receive
-commodities in exchange, he would be content with gold.
-
-“Then you’re recognizing the revolution?,” I asked, as we moved
-upstairs.
-
-“Recognizing . . .?,” he echoed testily. “This is a business deal;
-politics don’t enter into it. And I shall be obliged if you’ll keep it
-absolutely to yourself.”
-
-I promised readily enough for the sake of sparing him the embarrassment
-of explaining how he could accept confiscated Russian gold by day and
-monopolize the despoiled Russian nobility at night. I did not feel,
-however, that Europe had yet been made safe for the amateur financier.
-After their last international flutter the Daintons had let their house
-in Hampshire; and I imagined that they, like many others, were trying
-belatedly to economize, though Lady Dainton gave another reason that
-night for their retirement.
-
-“I honestly find no pleasure,” she told me, “in the life people are
-leading in London. Perhaps I’m old-fashioned. The people themselves,
-don’t you know? . . . I’m not criticizing _this_ party, of course; but
-the tone . . . A gigantic beanfeast.”
-
-If she had criticized the party in words, as she was criticizing it with
-her eyes, I should have been constrained to side with her. Old-fashioned
-or no, I was bred in an age of strict formality, when Loring House still
-bore its hatchment. When I first stayed at House of Steynes, old Lord
-Loring hunted us into smoking-suits at eleven o’clock and assembled us
-furtively in the billiard-room, where he plied us with “weeds”, negus
-and comments on current yearling-sales. My first London dinner-parties
-had the ceremony and pomp of a _levée_. In 1920 we had no time for the
-ceremony, no money for the pomp.
-
-“I suppose a beanfeast is all that people can afford,” I said, as I
-contrasted this revel with the gaieties of a vanished generation.
-
-The opera and the ballet were trying valiantly at this time to make us
-feel that we were back in 1914; but there was no public for both. The
-Crawleighs and perhaps a dozen others gave their balls and receptions
-according to the old tradition; but people who wanted to dance found the
-Turf and Stage less troublesome and more amusing. Those who wished to
-see their friends could collect them by telephone at the end of dinner
-and return from the theatre to see their houses converted out of
-recognition.
-
-“Twenty people can find money to entertain,” said Lady Dainton severely,
-“for one who can find time to be hospitable.”
-
-As we drifted uncomfortably about the house, I found it expedient to
-leave at least this charge unanswered. The smoking-room was given up to
-bridge, the dining-room to an endless supper; musicians, whom in time I
-came to suspect our butler of keeping on a chain in one of the cellars,
-were imprisoned on a landing: and both drawing-rooms were cleared for
-dancing. “_Solitudinem faciunt: pacem appellant._ I’m off,” said
-Bertrand in bewilderment. “Promise you won’t invite me again!” And I
-shared his bewilderment. The success of the party, as of the late war,
-lay in unity of command. Our butler was _generalissimo_; and Barbara
-asked only that I would leave him alone. If the men could not find
-cigars, they appealed to Robson; when an uninvited guest strayed into
-the hall, demanding who the guy was who was giving this show, Robson
-introduced him promptly to his hostess; I saw him supplying powder and
-carrying out repairs to torn dresses; and, when our musicians knocked
-off work for the night, Robson obliged at the piano, apologizing for the
-slow, melodious waltzes of my undergraduate days and regretting that he
-had no temperament for jazz-music.
-
-“I _wish_ I knew his history,” Barbara murmured plaintively. “I daren’t
-ask for fear of finding he has a wife. That would break my heart,
-because I’m determined to marry him if anything happens to you, George.”
-
-Lady Dainton, meanwhile, was going from strength to strength of
-disapproval.
-
-“I would sooner give up society altogether,” she announced, “than
-countenance its present form. This, of course, is different,” she added
-vaguely and without conviction.
-
-Mentally, I acquiesced in her condemnation. And it was not worth while
-to explain that I assisted at these beanfeasts because I believed they
-amused Barbara.
-
- 3
-
-“This is what remains,” I told Bertrand, when he insisted on holding a
-_post mortem_.
-
-“These people don’t _amuse_ you?,” he cried.
-
-“They interest me,” I answered. “Looking on, listening . . .”
-
-Since I had given up dancing on the outbreak of war and am one of the
-three worst bridge-players in London, I was thrown back on the delights
-of conversation; and, as every gathering included a contingent of
-Barbara’s literary friends, I tried to discover what inspiration they
-had won from the war. It was soon, however, made abundantly plain to me
-that the dangers of this quest were more apparent than the delights. I
-was welcomed at first—I hoped for my own sake—to the little circles of
-young writers, who—for want of better accommodation—camped on the
-landing and stairs outside my dressing-room. Soon, however, I found
-myself being used as a stick to beat my literary editor for having
-beaten one or other of my bitter-tongued guests. When I refused to help,
-they took the beating into their own hands. The “top-hat school of
-fiction” was flayed by the “sham-corduoroy school”, the “high-brows” by
-the “pin-heads”, the “best sellers” by every one. Shocking tales of
-self-advertising were exchanged for dire revelations of log-rolling; and
-critics who had been unanimously condemned a moment before were
-unanimously reprieved on condition of their taking service against yet
-another school that did not happen to be represented in our symposium.
-
-“Aren’t you perhaps exaggerating the importance of contemporary
-opinion?,” I asked as soon as I could make myself heard. “If the men who
-praised and blamed twenty, forty, sixty years ago could read their
-notices now, they’d find they hadn’t spotted one winner in five hundred.
-If you’re suffering at the hands of irresponsible reviewers, you’re
-suffering in the company of Meredith and Hardy.”
-
-And then I left the rising generation of writers, who had slain more
-reputations in half an hour than my staff could hope to scotch in six
-months. Truth to tell, I felt rather unworthy of their too
-discriminating society. Hampstead was so suspicious of Chelsea; Chelsea
-was so contemptuous of Bloomsbury; and all three were so scornful of
-Mayfair that I thanked Heaven my house was two hundred yards north of
-Oxford Street. The few names that these exotics praised were always
-unknown to me; and I was ashamed to admire publicly the work which they
-damned so comprehensively. If the war was to produce a new Elizabethan
-splendour of imagination, I saw no sign of it at present: perhaps we
-should have to wait a generation till the stench of blood and the shriek
-of shells had been forgotten.
-
-“Are your very modern friends doing any good?,” I demanded of Barbara,
-when our party had dispersed. “If you were analysing the effect of the
-war on art . . .?”
-
-“D’you get any reaction from their work?,” she asked. “In art there’s no
-such thing as absolute good.”
-
-“I don’t understand it.”
-
-“And I’m thrilled by it!,” she cried in unaffected rapture. “All the
-violence and horror and madness of the war are reflected in the art of
-to-day. It’s not pretty, but it’s true. This party, which dear Lady
-Dainton hated so much . . . The restlessness, the hysteria . . . Jazz,
-in itself . . .”
-
-“That which remains,” I murmured, in Bertrand’s phrase.
-
-I was reminded of the days before the war when revues and ragtime first
-established their empire in London. Then, as the curtain prepared to
-fall, principals and supers, the latest beauty and the last comedian, a
-scene-shifter or two and the prompter all jigged and shuffled to the
-haunting syncopation of the _Honeymoon Rag_ or _That Ol’ Mason-Dixon
-Line_. The audience jigged and shuffled up the gangways; the men were
-still humming, the women still working their shoulders when they drove
-away. ‘_Oh, honey, I feel funny when dat coon begin to play_ . . .’ Now
-they jigged and shuffled through the streets and into the houses; they
-could not stop; life was become an endless syncopation.
-
-I wondered when our friends would settle down. If the art of the day
-seemed, in my philistine eyes, epileptic, it was at least faithful to
-the epileptic contortions and fitful mood of the times. Reviewing these
-stupefying parties, I see men and women in a high fever. The girls all
-wear the same short skirts and exhibit the same bare backs; they have
-achieved the same flat figure; and, granted an upturned nose, they bob
-their hair in the same way. Very young, very pretty and very full of
-high spirits, they think the same thoughts and express them in the same
-jargon with the same loud assurance. Their sameness makes every party
-the same. I see myself talking feverishly of films with some star from
-Los Angeles and being told, by little Ivy Gaymer, of the latest divorce;
-I see young poets discussing a recent lampoon and young actresses
-describing their last triumph. There are financial groups and political
-caves; my cousin Laurence, who has cultivated a knowing and shrewd
-manner, runs feverishly from one to another, nodding, whispering, waving
-a vast cigar and, I fancy, rather modelling himself on Saltash. Sam
-Dainton, who is beginning to look dissipated, engages in feverish
-pursuit of one woman after another. This fever has infected the women;
-the divorce-court does a flourishing trade; no one can remember who at
-any moment is allied with whom; and Sam makes overtures to all in the
-sure belief that some—and, perhaps, most—will prove to be complaisant.
-Sir Rupert Foreditch spreads the fever among the young politicians.
-
-I can understand that Lady Dainton is too inelastic for the universal
-syncopation of these days. I could wish, in this season of comprehensive
-toleration, that I were far more tolerant or far less, for many of these
-women would not be received by Violet Loring or my mother, many of the
-men would be roughly handled if their business records were examined by
-unsympathetic counsel. And no one can for long live comfortably in a
-state of delirium. The clatter from the dining-room and the din from the
-musicians’ corner are unceasing. Every one is moving, talking, smoking
-at top speed. And Robson holds all the threads in his capable hands; he
-is, to my house in Seymour Street, what Gaspard is to the Turf and
-Stage. My house is indeed a small and noisy club.
-
-It is to be hoped that our guests enjoyed themselves; I believe that
-they, like Barbara, were only concerned to be so busy that they could
-not think. I should not be surprised to hear that, like Barbara, some of
-them broke down before the end. We had intended to stay in London until
-I went to shoot with the Knightriders; but early in July Barbara
-collapsed suddenly and was ordered to the country. Though there was
-nothing organically amiss with her, Gaisford threatened to throw up the
-case if she remained in London.
-
-“When I die, you can tell people I was the only honest leech you ever
-met,” he muttered with a frown. “I’m never afraid to say I don’t know;
-and I don’t know now what’s wrong with that child. She’s very ill
-indeed; and there’s nothing the matter with her. I have my suspicions.
-You’ll go with her?”
-
-“If I can arrange things at the office,” I answered.
-
-“Office be damned! If she wants you, go!”
-
-More than a little frightened, I took Barbara to Crawleigh next day and
-for a week tried to run our paper by means of special messengers and an
-indistinct telephone. Then I returned to London. The explosion which
-Bertrand had predicted four months earlier took place at a moment when
-the office was entrusted to the learned and wholly unpractical
-Spence-Atkins; and I judged—God knows how rashly!—that Ireland called
-to me the more urgently. I suppose our lives would have been different
-if Barbara’s rest-cure had been postponed till September; if Bertrand
-had taken his holiday in August, I a month earlier.
-
-“If you _must_ go, you must,” sighed Barbara. “Will you open all my
-letters, as you did before? I’m not to be worried; and my letters are
-always so uninteresting that they send my temperature up two points.”
-
-“I’ll do anything if you’ll only promise to get well,” I answered.
-
- 4
-
-London, on my return, was in what Bertrand called “its tadpole
-condition: all head and no body”. The residential streets and squares
-were deserted; the clubs and newspaper-offices were thronged.
-
-“I had to cancel leave all round,” he explained, as we left our
-dismantled house for dinner at the Eclectic. “Now that the
-peace-treaty’s out of the way, the government is looking for fresh
-triumphs. Happy thought: an Irish policy! I felt it was time for us to
-define our attitude.”
-
-“Hasn’t it been defined for us,” I asked, “by the impetuous gentleman
-who invented ‘self-determination’? What’s good enough for
-Czecho-Slovakia should be good enough for Ireland.”
-
-“How do you propose to apply it?,” he asked.
-
-Literally, I told him: by electing a constituent assembly on universal
-suffrage and then by enforcing on all Ireland whatever constitution the
-assembly framed.
-
-“But that,” said my father-in-law, who had invited himself to dine with
-us, “means coercing Ulster.”
-
-As I felt we could hardly have too many opinions in our symposium, I
-urged Frank Jellaby and Carstairs to join us; and every party was
-represented by the time that Roger Dainton pulled a chair to the end of
-the table.
-
-“I detest coercion,” I said; “but, if it has to be applied, I’d sooner
-coerce the few than the many. Because ministers refused to coerce Ulster
-in 1913, the rest of Ireland has been coerced ever since. And I never
-know why a thing should be called coercion in one country and
-‘maintaining law and order’ in every other.”
-
-Having propounded my own policy, I was free to listen while others
-propounded theirs. Our speeches, at this date, would make melancholy
-reading, for every one said precisely what was expected of him and
-precisely what he had said a hundred times before. Writing now at two
-years’ remove, I believe and hope that Ireland is on the road to a
-settlement; and this dinner two years ago lingers in my recollection as
-one more heart-breaking proof that, if the Irish were incapable of
-governing themselves, the English were no less incapable of governing
-them. Crawleigh, a former viceroy; John Carstairs, a retired diplomat;
-my uncle and Dainton, Jellaby and I, with some hundred years of
-parliamentary experience between us, all talked with the white-hot
-irreconcilability of Capulets and Montagues. It was this temper, I
-reminded myself from time to time, that kept me exiled from the County
-Kerry: it was this temper that tore me from Barbara’s side. In the years
-that followed, when I tried to mark the rock on which my life split, I
-always thought of this fatuous debate and of the pale, angry faces round
-our echoing table.
-
-It was something, I suppose, that no one prayed for a new Cromwell,
-though I attribute this moderation to a doubt whether even Cromwell
-could now “reconquer” Ireland and to a fear that those who had drawn the
-sword might be the first to perish by the sword. In the last six years
-Ireland had made the dire discovery that the north had won an advantage
-by threats of violence and that, if the south wished to redress the
-balance, it must employ the same means.
-
-“Can’t we cut out ancient history?,” I suggested, as my patience wore
-thin. “We need a policy to meet the present position; and the present
-position is an evenly matched civil war.”
-
-As the phrase left my lips, I wondered whether the war was any longer an
-even match. Two days before, I heard from Hornbeck that a mail-train had
-been held up and the contents of the lord lieutenant’s bag forwarded,
-after perusal, with an endorsement “_Passed by the Censor I. R. A._”; my
-agent reported that stores were being looted and ammunition seized. If
-attacks on private persons and on property were still rare, this was due
-to prudence on the one side and to intimidation on the other. Some one,
-however, would soon be shot because he refused to be intimidated; the
-shooting would be avenged; there would be reprisals against the
-avengers; and, worst fate of all, no one would be allowed to remain
-neutral.
-
-“It’s begun already,” said Dainton. “That man they murdered in Limerick
-. . .”
-
-“That spy they shot?,” Jellaby substituted.
-
-“You call a man a spy for saving British troops from being butchered in
-an ambush?,” Crawleigh enquired acidly.
-
-“You called Flaherty a spy,” boomed my uncle, “from your place in the
-House of Lords. He gave exactly similar information to the republican
-troops.”
-
-“Who were in armed rebellion against the king,” said John Carstairs.
-
-“Whose king?,” asked Jellaby.
-
-The dialogue tripped on with the ease that comes of practice; and most
-of us were tried players in the farce or tragedy of mistranslating an
-opponent’s terms. In the interests of peace I begged that we should
-avoid the more flagrantly question-begging labels; but by now, grown men
-though we were, each owed himself the satisfaction of just one more stab
-before he laid down his arms.
-
-“You know who’s at the back of all this?,” enquired Dainton, carefully
-avoiding my uncle’s eye.
-
-“The bolshevists?,” Bertrand asked indulgently. “You said it was the
-Germans in ’16. It was the Americans before that. Good God! I’m old
-enough to remember O’Connell: it always _has_ been somebody else! Will
-you English never learn that an Irishman’s feeling is for his _own_
-country? The more you’re pleased to call a man ‘loyalist’, the more I’d
-call him ‘traitor’, as I’d say ‘traitor’ to a Pole who boasted of his
-‘loyalty’ to Russia or Germany.”
-
-“As your people _do_ say ‘traitor’ to the loyalists who fought for you
-in this war,” muttered Carstairs. “You’ll hang them all as traitors, of
-course, when you’ve got your republic?”
-
-My uncle was understood to say that he wished to hang no one; but this
-laudable restraint won no favour from the rest.
-
-“I should hang Carson and Bonar Law,” said Jellaby, as though he were
-ordering a well-considered dinner.
-
-“Then you must hang Asquith and Birrell for not hanging them,” said
-Crawleigh, partly from proconsular devotion to firmness, but chiefly
-from hatred of liberalism.
-
-“I,” said Dainton, “should be quite content to shoot de Valera as
-Casement was shot. Like a dog. Hanging’s too good for him. President of
-the Irish Republic, indeed! It’s treason to the king.”
-
-“If you’re going to hang for treason, you must hang for constructive
-treason, for constructive mutiny and for acquiescence in constructive
-treason and mutiny,” I pointed out: “that brings in the covenanters, the
-Curragh people and the Asquith cabinet.” Dainton, I knew, was a
-covenanter; and I wanted him to see the implication of his wholesale
-executions. “Personally, I don’t think hanging or shooting ever does
-much good . . .”
-
-“It would have been a good thing,” Bertrand interrupted, “if you’d shot
-the entire 1914 House of Commons.”
-
-“But as a policy for the government in 1920?,” I asked.
-
-I have thought over this dinner a dozen times since; and, when ministers
-were attacked for permitting the slaughter and reprisals that followed,
-I would sometimes ask their critics if they could do better than the
-reasonably intelligent, reasonably well-informed and reasonably sane men
-who shewed themselves so crass, ignorant and mad at this meeting.
-
-“For all the good we’ve done,” I told Bertrand, as we walked home, “I
-might as well have been in the country.”
-
-“Don’t leave me yet,” he begged.
-
-And throughout the late summer and early autumn I was torn between
-Barbara’s entreaties that I should come back to Crawleigh and Bertrand’s
-reproach that I was deserting him when he most needed me.
-
-As a study in “that which remained” I suppose these barren passions
-claim their place: in our politics, as in our work and play, our
-gettings and spendings, our crimes and insanities, we lived more
-rapidly, more violently. The growing disorders of Ireland were ascribed
-to a “murder-gang”; in the spirit of the age, they were met by irregular
-troops, with general instructions to give at least as good as they
-received. Under the reign of reprisals, there was inaugurated an
-organized terror for which there had been no parallel since the first
-French revolution. Burning, looting, killing and torturing were paid
-back, with interest, in the same currency. Mysterious and fatal lists of
-names were passed up and down the country; the mails were now
-intercepted at will; and, when far-scattered, unsuspecting men and women
-were done to death by simultaneous blows, a whisper of “spy” and
-“counter-spy”—words that had lost their meaning—explained this
-opposing secret carnage which no man had power to stop.
-
-Face to face with this slow bleeding to death, I could not shrug my
-shoulders and drift away for a holiday with Barbara. The peace of the
-world seemed a madman’s dream when we could not stop this butchery at
-our doors. Day after day Bertrand and I wrote and talked, interviewed
-and argued. On one set of lips or another, every public man was by now
-branded as a traitor who had threatened rebellion in Ulster or a traitor
-who had broken faith with the South.
-
-“If our own statesmanship is bankrupt, we must look elsewhere,” my uncle
-pronounced.
-
-For a week he laid siege to the League of Nations, then to the Foreign
-Office. Simultaneously I went as a suppliant to Crawleigh in the hope
-that he would forward my petition to the Vatican. On the same day, in
-almost the same words, we were told that there was no precedent to guide
-a sovereign power in summoning an arbitrator to settle differences
-between a government and its subjects.
-
-“You can’t run an empire on those lines,” said my father-in-law.
-
-“You’re not running an empire on your present lines!” I retorted.
-
-He was impregnable. Until the republican leaders came, like the burghers
-of Calais, barefoot, in their shirts, with ropes round their necks, he
-would not parley with them; and, unhappily for him, no one was strong
-enough to compass an unconditional surrender.
-
-As I walked empty-handed away from Berkeley Square, I met Hornbeck
-returning home from the Admiralty.
-
-“Making a nice, tidy world for heroes to live in?,” he enquired with a
-grin.
-
-Though his tone was bantering, it was free from malice. Philip Hornbeck
-had no political predilections and less than no belief in the
-perfectibility of man. Government, for him, always came back to a whiff
-of grapeshot, which he was always ready to discharge, always without
-passion and always without error.
-
-“The problem’s _not_ insoluble,” I maintained. “We settled Quebec; we
-settled South Africa. We could settle Ireland, if we wanted to; but, of
-a hundred men who talk of settlements, ninety-nine will only settle on
-their own terms.”
-
-On reaching Fetter Lane, I found my uncle at work on an appeal to the
-nation.
-
-“The Foreign Office,” he told me with frozen rage, “wanted to know what
-business this was of mine. Perhaps we can shew them.”
-
-While he wrote, I hardened my heart to the unpleasantest duty that had
-befallen me since my marriage. After the usual enquiries when I was
-coming down to Crawleigh, Barbara let fly such a cloud of reproaches
-that I was ashamed to finish her letter. A delicate wife was no doubt a
-nuisance; but ought I not to have thought of that before marrying her?
-Engrossing as my work was, did I—as a matter of academic interest—rate
-it higher than her reiterated request that I should come to her when she
-was more ill and miserable than ever in her life before?
-
-I was halfway to the station when my secretary overtook me with an
-hysterical telegram: _If you love me destroy letter unread_; and I
-should be hard put to say whether telegram or letter was the more
-disturbing. Crawleigh and the local doctor assured me that she was
-progressing famously; Bertrand urged me to go with a vehemence more
-inhibitive than the strongest veto; and, in the end, I lamely begged
-Barbara to be patient and promised to come at an hour’s notice if she
-really needed me.
-
-“Peace,” I reminded my uncle, “is only another aspect of war. ‘The last
-chapter, if you like’ . . .”
-
-“Please God it may be!,” he answered with emotion.
-
- 5
-
-And, as we spoke, the last chapter was opening. Though neither of us had
-paid much attention to the report that certain political prisoners were
-being removed to England, we awoke next day to find that public interest
-had been deflected to another part of the battle. As a football match is
-suddenly suspended at sound of the referee’s whistle and the players
-stand apart to watch one of their number who has been injured, so the
-armies in Ireland, the factions in England, the spectators all over the
-world now stood apart to watch one man slowly dying. The lord mayor of
-Cork, arrested and imprisoned, refused to take food. For a week or two,
-while life still ticked loudly, we debated over our dinners whether he
-had been rightly condemned, whether the government would let him die of
-starvation, whether he and his cause would not be made ridiculous if he
-were fed forcibly. Then the contest became more determined: the
-government would not yield to a hunger-strike; and Terence McSwiney,
-with life ticking now less clearly, would not yield to the government.
-It was a question of endurance.
-
-“_Do come here next week-end if you can possibly manage it_,” wrote
-Barbara. “_This business about the lord mayor must be decided one way or
-the other by then._” . . .
-
-I could give no promise. The papers were at this time recording the days
-of the fast and hunting for stories of men who had lived for three,
-four, five weeks without food. The ticking became feebler; and, one
-press-night, when I sat shuffling an obituary, an appeal and a
-face-saving leader on McSwiney’s surrender, we heard that the strike was
-over. The report was contradicted before I reached the composing-room. A
-week later, as the unwound spring stopped, jerked and stopped again, we
-were told that the lord mayor was dead. He was still alive next day,
-next week. Sympathy flowed and ebbed. The government was entreated to
-spare a game fighter; the public grew angrily unhappy at being made an
-accomplice in this slow torture. Then a gust of impatience blew against
-such crazy stubbornness; there followed a flash of illumination, and
-Dainton, who would have shot McSwiney out of hand two months before,
-asked dubiously whether an Ireland of McSwineys would be easy to
-“reconquer”.
-
-At length the dying prisoner became an institution. His name was tucked
-into inconspicuous corners of the daily papers. There were other claims
-on the public attention. At last he died; and we realized that, as the
-injured player no longer obstructed the field, the match must go on.
-
-On the day of the funeral procession I received an unexpected call from
-O’Rane, white-faced and enigmatic. In all the years I had known him I
-doubt if we had talked of Ireland a dozen times; but this day stirred
-passions older than any he could remember, and I felt that the taut,
-bare-headed figure who gripped my arm was saluting McSwiney’s coffin in
-the name of his father, “O’Rane the liberator”. The Irish of London were
-present in thousands; but the English watched or followed in tens of
-thousands. Some, I well believe, came to salve a restless conscience;
-some in homage to a brave man; most to gratify an idle curiosity. The
-republican colours fluttered unfamiliarly in English faces; the way was
-lined with English police.
-
-“In any other country there would have been a riot,” murmured O’Rane,
-when I described the scene.
-
-“There will be all the riots you can use when this is over. . . . You’ve
-been lying very low the last few months, Raney.”
-
-“I’ve been thinking. All Lancing’s money . . .”
-
-“And ‘the good of humanity’?”
-
-“Yes. I believe . . . I’ve decided . . . to save humanity . . . from
-ever touching it,” he answered slowly.
-
-At the time he would say no more; and we spent the afternoon strolling
-along one embankment and back by the other. In the course of our walk,
-we had a good view of St. Thomas’ Hospital, if he wished to heal the
-sick, and of the Tate Gallery, if he cared to foster the fine arts;
-south of the river we walked through streets that were more sordidly
-grimed with poverty than any I wish to see again. There were, I pointed
-out, inequalities of wealth for a millionaire to adjust.
-
-“But is all this for the good of humanity?,” O’Rane asked, breaking
-silence for the first time as we pressed into his house. The side-door
-of The Sanctuary was like the out-patients’ entrance to a hospital; his
-writing-table was submerged in appeals to his charity. “You can begin by
-adjusting the difference between yourself and those people outside.”
-
-There was a sneer in his tone that roused my natural perversity. I
-distributed a handful of small change and returned to find him smiling.
-
-“What did you give them?,” he asked.
-
-“About a sovereign. Whether they’re deserving cases . . .”
-
-“They’re more deserving than you, George. And, if I’d given Lancing
-money, I should have been handing _you_ a sovereign. That’s my
-difficulty. Every time I give to a hospital or a gallery, I’m relieving
-prosperous people like you of your responsibilities. If the material
-good is outweighed by the spiritual harm . . .” He broke off to stalk up
-and down the darkening library with shoulders hunched and head thrust
-forward. “There’s still plenty of wealth in the world. Places like the
-Turf and Stage stink of it. And, if people want things badly enough,
-they’ll pay for them. If London had a smallpox epidemic, we should press
-money on our neighbours to get them vaccinated.”
-
-“But, while you’re saving humanity from itself,” I pointed out, “the
-money’s increasing automatically.”
-
-“I can find outlets farther afield. You wouldn’t let those people starve
-under your eyes; but you’ll let people starve to their hearts’ content
-if you can’t see ’em.”
-
-“With a million or two of unemployed here,” I began, “you won’t be
-popular.”
-
-“If I could afford to consider my popularity!,” he broke out with a
-joyless laugh.
-
-As Sonia was in the country, I brought him to dine with me in Seymour
-Street. We gossiped until nearly midnight; and, when I had sent him
-home, I settled to my daily duty of opening Barbara’s letters for her.
-She had been right, three months before, in calling her correspondence
-uninteresting; and, until this night, I had not been troubled with any
-doubts which letters to send on and which to destroy.
-
-Now I encountered a problem for which I was unprepared. The first letter
-referred to an occasion eighteen months before, when my wife—according
-to the writer—had invited him to run away with her.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
-
-
- AS YOU SOW . . .
-
-
- “. . . The morrow brought the task.
- Her eyes were guilty gates, that let him in
- By shutting all too zealous for their sin:
- Each sucked a secret, and each wore a mask.
- But, oh, the bitter taste her beauty had! . . .
-
- “. . . A star with lurid beams, she seemed to crown
- The pit of infamy: and then again
- He fainted on his vengefulness, and strove
- To ape the magnanimity of love. . . .”
-
- GEORGE MEREDITH: _Modern Love_.
-
- 1
-
-I hardly remember when the meaning became clear to me.
-
-I was reading with but half my attention, when I met a reference to
-Croxton Hall, followed by familiar names. The letter was badly written,
-in pencil, and more than badly arranged. The writer had been ill; he was
-so ill at that moment that I could not make out the signature. I
-examined the envelope. There a different hand had traced the bold
-address; I noticed for the first time that the letter had been forwarded
-from the Crawleighs’ house in Berkeley Square; then I saw an American
-stamp and understood the faint pencil scratching.
-
-It was from Eric Lane; and he was dying as he wrote.
-
- 2
-
-The shock numbed me; and I read again with so little attention that I
-had to turn back in the middle. Then a second shock drove the first from
-my mind.
-
-Eric was dying: yes, I realized that. He was bidding Barbara farewell;
-and, in my first uncaring glance, I had seen so much that I must now see
-all. After losing Barbara, he had found little inducement to live; and,
-though he had once hoped to marry little Ivy Maitland, John Gaymer had
-returned—almost on the eve of the wedding—to establish again his
-empire over Ivy’s will. Eric had made his failing lungs an excuse to set
-her free:
-
-“_Two years would have cured me; but I wanted her to choose for herself.
-And, when she too dropped out of my life, I didn’t try to get well._”
-. . .
-
-There followed pages of apology, pages of explanation. Eric’s love for
-Barbara was consuming him; and, as the flame died to a pale flicker, he
-forgot family, friends and self in desperate prayers for her happiness.
-Once more the name of Croxton Hall fell like a black shadow across his
-mind. There was an agonized reference to some rebuff that he had
-inflicted upon her. Then came the reason for the rebuff.
-
-It was while I was in Ireland that Barbara had gone to the Pentyres.
-When the party broke up on the first night—Eric’s apology could not
-have been more damningly circumstantial if he had been indicting her—,
-she had concealed herself till he came up to bed, then invaded his room,
-finally begged him to take her, take her away. Her marriage to me was a
-mistake; I should not want to keep her when I realized my mistake; I
-loved her enough to forgive her. . . .
-
-I remembered, I now understood her distraught questions whether I should
-be broken-hearted if I lost her, whether I was prepared to sacrifice
-life, honour, everything to secure her happiness. . . .
-
-In the heartlessness and abandonment of that moment, I knew, as well as
-if I had seen her, that Barbara was wholly mad. I recalled the telegram
-in which she said that she was missing me; I remembered her loving
-welcome, on my return; I heard again her promise that she was going to
-make a new start. And then I called up any self-control that remained to
-keep me from going mad too. The child that lay buried at Crawleigh was
-not Eric’s. His letter told me that; and, when I found myself believing
-his letter, I felt that I was still sane. Barbara was innocent of
-everything but a whole-hearted will and intention to betray me; and Eric
-had saved her from that. After he had repelled her, she was innocent of
-everything but calculated hypocrisy, sustained triumphantly for fifteen
-months. I could never believe her again.
-
-And what then?
-
-A lust for revenge blinded me; and, though I could hardly hold a pen, I
-addressed an envelope to Barbara and thrust Eric’s letter, without
-comment, half inside it. Then I thought of him dying in California, by
-now perhaps dead. I burned the envelope. As it crinkled and scattered, I
-promised Eric’s letter the same fate; then I hesitated for fear that my
-lust for magnanimity might prove more deadly than my impulse of revenge.
-Was my life, also, to be a calculated hypocrisy?
-
-I paced up and down the room till a clock struck midnight. I had lost
-the post, I realized.
-
-Then I looked at the other letters. The first was from Barbara. If I
-intended to take a holiday at all this year, would I not come down to
-Crawleigh? Thanks to this Irish trouble—how remote it all seemed!—I
-had refused all my shooting invitations; but now that the McSwiney
-chapter was closed . . .
-
-I knew, unreasoningly, that I could not meet Barbara. Whatever happened
-to us later, I must have time to think. I telephoned to O’Rane and asked
-him to accompany me on a motoring tour. I believe I told him—I, of all
-people!—that he seemed overwrought.
-
-“No holidays for me, old man,” he answered with regret.
-
-“I doubt if you’ll find it a holiday,” I said. “I want to discover what
-the great public’s thinking about.” . . .
-
-“I wish I could manage it . . .”
-
-And then my self-control left me:
-
-“Raney, you must!,” I said. “I’m going through the worst time of my
-life, something more awful than I thought could ever happen to me. If
-you _knew_ . . .”
-
-“You can lend me some pyjamas, I suppose?,” he interrupted in a changed
-voice. “I’ll have my gear sent round in the morning. I’m sorry, George.
-To the best of my poor ability, you know I’ll see you through to the
-grave and beyond.”
-
- 3
-
-As I waited in the hall, I drafted a telegram to explain that I was
-being called away from London on business. O’Rane arrived in the middle;
-and I led him at once to his room. I could not unburden myself yet; and,
-as we drove out of London next day, I found it necessary to pretend that
-I was enquiring into unemployment.
-
-“Bertrand’s afraid the men will get out of hand,” I explained.
-
-I might have said that in some parts of England the men were already out
-of hand. It was at this time that the “Homes for Heroes” campaign was
-launched: as the government failed to provide sufficient houses, a
-homeless band of Welsh quarrymen seized a public hall and announced that
-they would stay there until cottages had been built for them. They were
-led by a man, then unknown, named John Griffiths, who followed up his
-first success by organizing similar raids on any convenient unoccupied
-land. No one was paying much attention at present; as Bertrand said, we
-were resigned to unemployment in London, but danger would march
-hand-in-hand with winter, when the government declared its
-housing-policy and when the official leaders of labour indicated whether
-they supported “Griffiths’ landgrabbers.”
-
-“Where are you making for first?,” O’Rane asked.
-
-Until that moment I had not thought of any destination.
-
-“We’re half way between Reading and Hungerford. I don’t know. . . . I’ve
-had a bit of a shock; and you’ll find me rather disjointed. . . . God! I
-don’t know what I should have done without you!,” I broke out.
-
-O’Rane’s fingers rested for a moment on my arm:
-
-“Old man, you knew I was always at hand if you needed me!” His unseeing
-eyes softened; and his voice fell to a whisper:
-
- “_‘I cannot come to you—I am afraid._
- _I will not come to you. There, it is said._
- _Though all night long I lie awake and know_
- _That you are lying waking even so:_
- _And all the day you tread a lonely road_
- _And come at sunset to a dark abode._
- _Yet, if so be you are indeed my friend,_
- _Then, at the end,_
- _There is one road, a road I’ve never gone,_
- _And down that road you shall not pass alone;_
- _And there’s one night you’ll find me by your side—’_”
-
-He paused; and I waited for the rime that should complete the couplet:
-
-“How does it go on?”
-
- “_‘And there’s one night you’ll find me by your side—_
- _. . . The night that they shall tell me you have died.’_
-
-It’s . . . Chinese, I was told. Two or three hundred years before
-Homer.”
-
-I drove on, staring drowsily ahead of me at the broad, unfolding ribbon
-of black road and the monotonous water-meadows on either hand. The
-tender warmth of the little poem made me forget for a moment the
-bleakness of the Kennet valley in late autumn; and, after a sleepless
-night, the rushing wind drugged my brain.
-
- “_Though all night long I lie awake and know_
- _That you are lying waking even so.” . . ._
-
-I murmured the lines to keep myself from falling asleep. What had
-Barbara’s thoughts been when I lay waking the night before? Suddenly my
-sight was dimmed with a curtain of blood; and I stopped the car in twice
-its length because I could not see the road before me. If indeed I had
-fallen asleep, I had looked for a moment, through this red curtain, on a
-sun-washed verandah, where a dying man was gasping for breath.
-
- “_And there’s one night you’ll find me by your side—_
- _. . . The night that they shall tell me you have died._”
-
-The vision faded before I could make out whether Eric was speaking to
-Barbara or listening for her voice.
-
-The unexpected jolt had flung O’Rane out of his seat; and, as he pulled
-himself back into place, he could hear me stopping the engine.
-
-“Is anything the matter?,” he asked.
-
-“Eric Lane’s just died.”
-
-“Good God! When?”
-
-“This moment. I . . . pulled up to avoid him,” I answered without
-knowing what I was saying. “He’s gone now. Poor devil! Oh, poor devil!”
-
-If I was shaken, O’Rane was in no better case:
-
-“Those lines . . . I had them from him.”
-
-“I know.”
-
-“You’d heard him . . .?”
-
-“I heard him then . . . At least I think . . .” The road was once more
-stretching firmly ahead of me to a belt of leafless trees. In the
-meadows on either side I saw deliberate cattle splashing up to their
-knees in muddy water. “It’s ten to two, Raney. Shall we see if we can
-find a place for lunch?”
-
-“That’ll wait. You’re not fit to drive any more at present. . . . You’d
-. . . better tell me everything, old man.”
-
-“But I’ve told you! I knew Eric was dead or dying because I had . . . I
-saw a letter from him quite recently. My nerves are rather jumpy.” . . .
-
-“It’ll break poor Lady Lane’s heart,” he murmured. “And it’ll be a shock
-for Ivy.”
-
-Slipping his arm through mine, O’Rane led me into a field by the
-roadside. Though he must have guessed that Eric’s letter had something
-to do with my frantic appeal the evening before, I could not speak at
-present for fear of breaking down. ‘_Boyish to cry—can’t help it—bad
-fever—weak—ill._’ For many moments my head sang with Mr. Jingle’s
-clipped phrases. A shock for Ivy? Some one had told me her marriage was
-all the failure that Mr. Justice Maitland had predicted. It would have
-been better if she had married Eric: she might have kept him alive. It
-would have been better if Barbara had married him, better if he had
-never left America, best of all if he and she and I had never been
-born. . . .
-
-“Babs can’t be ill,” O’Rane murmured as though he were thinking aloud;
-“or you wouldn’t be here. Sit down and smoke a cigarette.”
-
-When he returned with the basket, I was able to tell him. I wondered at
-the time, I wonder still, whether I did right; but I know that I could
-not help it. He let me talk myself out, only asking dispassionately at
-the end:
-
-“What are you going to do about it?”
-
-And I talked myself out a second time, until the fever left me and I lay
-back on the rug, almost too much exhausted to move or think. Physical
-infidelity, committed in a moment of passion, stood in relation to this
-long infidelity of spirit as a blow struck in hot blood stands to a
-calculated and artfully concealed murder. Had Barbara left me and come
-back, as Sonia left and came back to Raney, I believe I could have
-forgiven her. After deceiving me once, she could deceive me again; to
-get what she wanted, in her own way, she would sacrifice me as she had
-sacrificed Jack Waring and Eric Lane.
-
-It was all over. And I wanted her desperately. And it was all over.
-
-Hitherto, I had always pretended that there was something I did not
-understand in her tragic entanglements: Jack and Eric were straight as
-the day; if they both fled from the woman they both loved, I wished to
-think that they were parted by a lover’s quarrel which both were too
-proud or obstinate to heal; I refused to believe that they had run from
-her in disgust.
-
-“I’m here because Barbara will soon be coming back to London,” I told
-O’Rane. “I . . . couldn’t divorce her if I wanted to; but I can let her
-divorce me.” . . .
-
-“She won’t be very . . . happy alone,” he answered reflectively. “When
-Jack Waring disappeared, she turned to Eric out of sheer loneliness and
-misery; when Eric went, she turned to you. If you go, George, she’ll
-turn to some one else. A married woman without children, without a
-husband, more lonely and miserable than ever before . . . Well, you
-won’t have long to wait for your divorce.”
-
-Four-and-twenty hours earlier, I should have called my best friend to
-account if he had warned me that Barbara needed watching. Now she had
-convicted herself and robbed me of all temptation to defend her.
-
-“I don’t see much difference,” I said, “between the woman who runs away
-with a man and the woman who only stays at home because the man won’t
-run away with her.”
-
-“There’s still a difference between the woman who keeps her reputation
-and the woman who loses it. When women become reckless . . . It’s a big
-responsibility to give them the first push down the slope.”
-
-The short sunlight of late autumn was fading; and I busied myself with
-packing our luncheon-basket. As I had not asked for sympathy, I could
-not complain if none was offered.
-
-“If I give her the chance of divorcing me,” I said, “I’m not accountable
-for anything she does after that.”
-
-There was a long silence. Then O’Rane asked:
-
-“What will you do?”
-
-I had not thought; but, in that moment, I had a vision of the blue
-water, the close-packed green woods and the vivid fuchsia hedges of Lake
-House.
-
-“Go back to Ireland, I expect.”
-
-I was making enough clatter with plates and knives to convince the least
-attentive that my patience was exhausted; but O’Rane lay with his hands
-clasped behind his head, frowning a little at his own thoughts and
-wholly unmoved by my demonstration.
-
-“Will divorce make for Barbara’s happiness?,” he asked in a maddening
-drawl. “You can’t quite wash your hands of a woman you’ve married. You
-weren’t content, you see, with somebody of your own mould. Your wife had
-to be brilliant, beautiful, romantic, tragic. . . . You married Babs
-when you knew she’d been shaken to the depths of her soul by Jack
-Waring, when she’d been broken to the bottom of her heart by Eric Lane.”
-
-“I thought she’d had so much romance and tragedy that she’d be glad to
-settle down quietly.”
-
-“When she wasn’t in love with you? Has any one settled down quietly
-after gambling with death for nearly five years?”
-
-“I’d have forgiven anything if she’d told me!,” I cried, as we went
-back.
-
-We must have driven for an hour before he spoke again:
-
-“Well, George, if you want my advice, I should recommend you to burn
-Eric’s letter and pretend you’ve never seen it. Then begin again at the
-beginning.”
-
-“You imagine I can forget it?,” I asked.
-
-“If you think more of her and less of yourself. The bigger the crime,
-the more she must have been tempted: try to understand that instead of
-counting up the things a man has a ‘right’ to expect of his wife. Rights
-here, rights there! _Every one’s_ thinking too much of his individual
-rights, George! Every group of nations, every nation, almost every man
-and woman.” . . .
-
- 4
-
-After two years I can appreciate O’Rane’s patience better than was
-possible at the time. I know now that he was distracted by a civil war
-of his own; but I was too much preoccupied to enquire why Sonia and the
-children were in Hampshire; I should have been aggrieved if any one else
-had presumed to be unhappy.
-
-“I suppose it’s all the same to you where we spend the night?,” I asked,
-several hours later, as we paused at a sign-post.
-
-In the gathering dusk I could distinguish nothing but the gloomy
-contours of Stonehenge and the sharp, black outline of innumerable
-government huts. Then I saw O’Rane prick up his ears at the tramp of
-weary feet.
-
-“Anywhere you like,” he answered, as a white-faced army advanced into
-the glare of my lamps. “I was in camp here in ’14. It’s a dam’ bad step.
-Recruits, I suppose. We should have been given hell if we hadn’t been
-smarter than that.”
-
-As the column approached, I saw fifty or sixty men in tattered civilian
-clothes. Two or three wore medals; the rest had a brave line of ribbons
-on their coats. At their head marched two standard-bearers with the
-adequate device: “_Wanted in 1914. Not wanted now._”
-
-“They’ve had their hell; and they’re not through with it yet,” I said.
-
-It was the first time that I had encountered the searing reproach of
-that device; and, as I described it to O’Rane, I recalled—as in a dream
-of some other life—that I was the editor of a political review and that
-I had been sent to study unemployment. There was an external world,
-then. At this moment my uncle was probably taking the chair at our
-weekly dinner.
-
-As the tramp of feet grew fainter, O’Rane half rose in his seat and then
-subsided with a groan:
-
-“No, I _can’t_! It’s _not_ my business to pay other people’s debts. The
-state turned these men into soldiers, in a moment of blue funk; the
-state must turn them back into civilians. Sometimes I see so red that I
-want to hold this country to ransom. ‘You’ve no use for these fellows,’
-I want to say. ‘Well, now I’m going to shew you what would have happened
-if they hadn’t come forward when they did.’ After a week of Belgian
-atrocities, there’d be a marked increase in popular gratitude! And I
-thought this war would produce a . . . spirit of fraternity!”
-
-I had hoped for it, even if I had not expected it after the first months
-of 1915. Quick conversions are never permanent: and permanent
-conversions are never quick. Our drive that day, past great estates and
-big manufacturing towns, might have been chosen as an object-lesson in
-the aggressive competition that strangles fraternity at birth.
-
-That night, when we lay at Gloucester, and next day, as we drove through
-the soul-searching loveliness of the Stroud valley, we talked of
-education and the gospel of humanity, as we had not talked since our
-Indian summer at Cannes; and once or twice, for ten or fifteen minutes
-at a time, I forgot to think consciously of Barbara. H. G. Wells, after
-years of criticism, was turning teacher on his own account; and _The
-Outline of History_ was conspicuous in every house and railway carriage
-I entered at this time. One man at least was pleading for the universal
-spirit; and his plea gave food for thought to the people who had shouted
-for blood and gold in the 1918 election. The havoc which Keynes had made
-in the economics of the peace-treaty was completed by the havoc which
-Wells made of its history and its spiritual trend.
-
-“And yet,” I exclaimed in sudden reaction, “those books have left things
-where they were!” The treaty, which could not be enforced, had to be
-modified: the British representatives had to explain why their crazy
-election-pledges could not be fulfilled. At regular intervals Germany
-threatened to default; France retaliated with a threat of further
-occupation; a flustered knot of prime ministers collected at the first
-convenient watering-place; and a punctual press announced that the
-results of the conference were wholly satisfactory. “I sometimes despair
-of education. . . . And, damn it, Raney, you haven’t told me what to do
-when I get back to London!”
-
-“You’ve not yet told me what you want to do. . . . It’s strange how
-people can hold mutually destructive opinions at the same moment! Lucien
-de Grammont talks piteously about German ‘revenge’ at a time when the
-French are pouring Senegalese troops into the occupied area!”
-
-“Roger Dainton will tell you that a restored Germany means a new war and
-that an unrestored Germany is losing us our best customer.” . . .
-
-At O’Rane’s skilled prompting, we argued our way farther west and
-farther until, at the end of a week, we stalled the car and strolled on
-foot, because we had reached Land’s End. Surrounded by water, in the
-spray and wind of the last rocky outposts of England, I felt my sanity
-and self-control returning to me; but a single day without the
-distraction of driving brought back the obsession. I flung myself into a
-voluminous report on _Unemployment and Public Feeling_, only to discover
-that my four folios might have been compressed into the single word
-“indifference”. There was no question of class or party: every one
-flabbily deplored the breakdown of industry, flabbily pitied the
-unemployed, flabbily felt that somebody should do something. Accent and
-idiom might change, but the stale thought and worn expression changed
-only by becoming more stale: the wayside tap echoed the slipshod
-reasoning of an Atlantic liner; a benighted book-maker in a forgotten
-Cornish village talked of trades unions in a way that I had thought only
-possible in my father-in-law; and there were Roger Daintons manipulating
-beer-engines in every bar.
-
-I reminded O’Rane of his scheme for endowing schools and buying papers
-till the education of an entire people proceeded from a single pair of
-lips.
-
-“I still believe a press-monopoly is possible,” he answered, “but who’s
-to be trusted with it? Horatio Bottomley is a political messiah to
-several millions; but I’d never give a messiah the power of a messiah
-unless he were ready to die as a messiah.”
-
-“Talleyrand’s advice to those about to found new religions,” I said.
-
-“‘Get yourself crucified’? Wasn’t he right? Since people began to doubt
-the old heaven and hell, the churches have been losing their power: they
-had less to offer, less to threaten; and their ministers became
-officials instead of martyrs. Christianity was born of one martyrdom;
-and it will only die when there are no more martyrs. There were martyrs
-in the war, if we could only make people remember them . . .”
-
-“But the war’s over,” I interrupted. “How can you keep that exaltation
-alive in time of peace?”
-
-The question was unanswered when I turned the head of the car, next day,
-towards London. We were both shirking our private difficulties; and,
-though we argued endlessly about the world as we wished to make it, the
-shadow of our own narrow troubles darkened that free, generous concern
-for humanity which we talked so eagerly of inculcating in people whose
-narrow troubles engrossed them no less blindly.
-
-“I’d better tell Sonia we’re on our way back,” said O’Rane. “If you’ve
-any idea where we shall be to-morrow morning, I’ll say she can wire to
-the post-office.”
-
-“Is she at Crowley Court?,” I asked.
-
-“Yes. Remember taking her down there the night Tom’s death came through?
-She’d put her eyes on sticks for you over that, George.”
-
-“She was at her wits’ end, poor child,” I began.
-
-Then, whether or no he was spreading a snare for me, I thought of
-Barbara by herself at the Abbey, reading of a “well-known playwright’s
-death” and stumbling blindly through the dim, panelled rooms in vain
-search of some one to comfort her.
-
-“We can go back by way of Crowley Court,” I said. “I’ll send Babs a
-telegram. If she’s still at the Abbey . . .”
-
-“I’m entirely in your hands,” said O’Rane.
-
-That night we lay at Exeter; and next day we headed for Southampton. As
-we got into the car, I was given a telegram from Barbara:
-
- “_All well here hope you are enjoying yourselves can you
- possibly return by way of Crawleigh I need you._”
-
- 5
-
-Only when I was committed irrevocably did I realize that I had not
-decided how I was to meet her.
-
-“I can’t pretend for five minutes,” I said. “I never could.”
-
-“She’s . . . entitled to see her own letters,” O’Rane suggested. “You
-opened this at her request . . .”
-
-“But, good God, man, she’s my wife!,” I broke out; and, remembering the
-sustained deceit of these fifteen months, I could not trust myself to
-say more.
-
-We drove our last stage with heavy hearts. Southampton was shrouded in
-the first fog of the year; and, when it lifted on the confines of the
-New Forest, I saw bare trees, dead leaves and all November’s decay.
-Every few minutes O’Rane asked me what point we had now reached; and I
-knew that for him too every turn of the road was marked by a memory and
-guarded by a ghost. Through eyes half-closed I could see Jim Loring and
-the Daintons striding, three abreast, on a leave-out walk from Melton to
-Crowley; I could see Eric Lane piloting me through Lashmar village to
-call on his father. . . . Strange! Though he was now dead, though I had
-almost loved him and though we had both been punished for trying to play
-a game according to its rules, I could not forgive him for flinging this
-last shadow across Barbara’s life, I could not whisper his name without
-a shudder.
-
-As we drove through a country that was haunted with the shades of our
-dead selves, I fell to thinking whether a man was happier in the
-discontent of eighteen or the disillusion of thirty-eight. I no longer
-aspired to Westminster Abbey and a nation’s gratitude; but, like other
-men on the threshold of middle-age, I made the discovery,
-incomprehensible to a schoolboy, that I had no heir to shelter himself
-under the trees which I had planted; and love seemed almost to have been
-left out of my life.
-
-In Crawleigh village, my nerve broke and I headed for London; then, for
-very shame in the reproach of O’Rane’s silence, I turned, though I knew
-that no love was awaiting me here, and splashed through the floods to
-the Abbey. Neave was fishing perfunctorily by the bridge and volunteered
-to take the car up to the house if I wanted to look for Barbara.
-
-“The guv’nor’s in London for this Unknown Soldier business,” he
-explained. “So it’s only the four of us. Just right for a nice game of
-cards.”
-
-“How’s Babs?,” I asked, as unconcernedly as I could.
-
-“Oh, fit as a flea,” he answered. “She’s wandering about the park,
-waiting for you.”
-
-I made a pretence of hurrying forward as the car shot ahead; then, as it
-passed out of sight, I leaned against the parapet of the bridge till the
-low grey line of the refectory wall deepened to black and was gradually
-lost in the oncoming tide of darkness. I was still there when the first
-rare lights twinkled at the windows and paled as the curtains were
-drawn. Then I heard a distant whistle and turned to the house before my
-impulse to hurry away got the better of me.
-
-I was halfway to the gardens when I saw the white coil of Barbara’s
-furs.
-
-“Darling! I was expecting you hours ago!,” she cried. “Did you have a
-breakdown? I hope I didn’t upset your plans by asking you to come here,
-George: I wanted you most awfully.”
-
-I could not see her face clearly; but her voice thrilled me till I had
-to bite my lip and look away. I wondered how I had existed without her
-all these weeks. The long rest had given her back her old vitality. Her
-eyes, when we entered the hall, were shining; and for a moment I fancied
-that I was seeing her in a vision or that I was emerging from twelve
-days’ delirium.
-
-“My _dear_!,” I cried; and she laughed with childlike exultation at my
-joy in her.
-
-“Pleased to see your deserted and ill-used wife?”
-
-“Babs . . .” Her cheeks were pink from the biting cold outside; her hair
-and eye-lashes were spangled with tiny raindrops. As she flung her coat
-aside and twined her arms about my neck, a familiar, faint, warm
-fragrance rose from the carnations at her waist. As she clung to me and
-our lips met, I could have fancied that no other man had ever made her
-heart beat so quickly. “I’ve never _seen_ you like this before!,” I
-cried.
-
-“I’ve been getting well . . . for _your_ sake, sweetheart. I’ve been so
-patient, so good. And I _did_ miss you so.”
-
-“I’ve been thinking of you day and night,” I answered truthfully enough.
-
-“The next time you go away, I’ll tell your secretary to send me a daily
-telegram: ‘_Missing you dreadfully best love George._’ You’d never do it
-on your own account. What’s the matter, darling?”
-
-Unconsciously I must have drawn away from her embrace. The delirium was
-returning; and I could only think of the telegram which she had sent me
-the day after she asked Eric Lane to run away with her.
-
-“Some bad news, I’m afraid. I didn’t want to spoil our first moment
-together, but you’ll have to be told some time. I’ve not seen any papers
-. . .”
-
-Barbara’s hands fell from my shoulders; and she walked slowly to the
-fire.
-
-“I . . . _have_,” she whispered; and her head drooped as though I had
-struck her.
-
-“You mean . . . what . . . what _I_ mean?,” I stammered.
-
-As she turned, her eyes were blinded with tears; and her hands groped
-for support.
-
-“Darling, if it had been any one else, should I have had to say ‘I
-_need_ you’? . . . When I saw the great cruel headlines, I hoped and
-prayed that I might die . . . till I knew you were being sorry for me.
-You’re all I have; and I promised myself I’d repay you for all your
-patience.” She could go on no longer; and her terrible tearless sobbing
-shook her till I feared that her heart must break. “I _can’t_ be brave
-any longer.” As she once more hid her face against my chest, I could
-feel her whole body trembling in the last vain effort to restrain her
-weeping. “When . . . when . . . when did you hear?”
-
-“Twelve days ago,” I answered, as I led her to a chair.
-
-“The day he died. You . . . didn’t tell me, George. Did you think I
-shouldn’t see?”
-
-“Strictly speaking, I didn’t hear for certain. I knew he was dying
-. . .”
-
-“There was a long article in _The Times_. Oh, so _cold_! . . . I knew he
-was terribly ill. That’s what made _me_ so ill this summer, though I
-couldn’t tell you before. I thought you might guess; the doctor did.
-I’ve been going up and down, up and down, as he got better or worse. The
-afternoon he died I fainted; and they all thought I was dead too. Now
-you understand why I wrote such horrid letters: as he slipped away, I
-couldn’t bear myself. I _did_ try to keep it all to myself. I knew how I
-hurt you by talking about him. But no one told me anything! . . . I
-couldn’t ask Lady Lane for fear she’d say I’d killed him. And he died
-before I could ask him to forgive me.”
-
-Barbara was no longer trying to control her tears; and I was no longer
-thinking of anything but a means of comforting her.
-
-“He didn’t feel there was anything to forgive,” I assured her.
-
-“Ah, that was the way he talked!”
-
-“It was the way he thought, Babs.”
-
-“Then he might have spared me this!,” Barbara broke out. “Just one
-word!”
-
-As her head fell forward, I knelt down and chafed her hands.
-
-“He may have been too weak,” I said.
-
-“A message, then! I can’t _bear_ it! I didn’t think he _could_ be so
-cruel.”
-
-In furious self-scorn, I remembered telling O’Rane I could not pretend
-for five minutes that I had not received Eric’s letter. Very little more
-than five minutes had passed since Barbara and I met.
-
-“In justice to him,” I said, “there _was_ a message. I was paraphrasing
-it. He never dreamt you needed his forgiveness, he was begging for
-yours. He loved you as much at the end as he’d ever done. His last
-words—so faint I could hardly read them!—were ‘God bless you’. And we
-must assume that he died at peace. You’d forgiven him so often, he said,
-that, if God was disposed to judge him, he believed you would
-intercede.”
-
-In her agony of spirit, Barbara’s thoughts were reflected as clearly as
-if she had spoken them. Her eyes lightened for a moment in unutterable
-relief; they clouded as she looked suspiciously to see if I was
-inventing this opportune comfort; then she stared through me and past me
-to Eric’s death-bed six thousand miles away.
-
-“He . . . wrote to you?,” she enquired after a long silence.
-
-I half nodded; but, with Barbara’s eyes on mine, I could not put a lie
-into words.
-
-“The letter was to you,” I said. “I opened it with the rest.”
-
-There was a single piteous whimper. Then she looked at me in perplexity:
-
-“Where is it? Why didn’t you tell me?”
-
-“It’s in my despatch-box. . . . I didn’t want to harrow you, darling. I
-think he was delirious part of the time.” . . .
-
-“Will you get it for me?”
-
-“I’ve told you all that matters. It will only make you miserable to read
-it.”
-
-She seemed not to have heard me; but a strangled laugh, more terrible
-than her crying, shewed the worth of my comfort:
-
-“D’you think anything can make me more miserable than I’ve been these
-last twelve days?,” she asked. Then she tore herself from me and stood
-with her hands pressed to her temples, staring at me in mingled
-bewilderment and rage. “All the time . . .? And you . . .? The last
-thing he ever wrote . . . oh, I might have reached him while there was
-still time! When did you get the letter?”
-
-“Just before I left London.”
-
-“While he was still alive . . . Ah, God, the cruelty of kind people!”
-With the tears still wet on her cheeks, she forced a smile. “And you’ve
-been carrying it about ever since? George dear, you’ve punished me for
-all the crimes I’ve committed and all that I shall never have time to
-commit if I live to be a thousand. . . . May I have my letter?”
-
-For an instant, as she stood limply drying her eyes, I thought of
-telling her that I had destroyed the letter; then I saw that this would
-never be forgiven me, even if I had not already told her that it was
-with my other papers.
-
-“It will only hurt you to read it,” I said. “Forget it! Forget _him_, if
-you can. I’ve told you he had nothing but love for you . . .”
-
-“Then why mayn’t I see it? George, I don’t understand! I’m not a child;
-and, if I didn’t know you were trying to spare me, I could almost kill
-you for your ghastly kindness. Pocketing it for twelve torturing days,
-as though it were a bill! Pretending he was too weak to write! Saying it
-was a _message_! You’ll send me mad if you’re not careful!,” she cried
-hysterically. “For the last time, please give me my letter.”
-
-“For the last time please try to forget there ever was a letter. I’ve
-told you he must have been delirious when he wrote. I won’t answer for
-the consequences if you read it. All this time _I’ve_ been trying to
-forget it.” . . .
-
-My voice told her all that I was trying to hide. Her eyes were startled,
-then compassionate, then defiant. I thought I heard a whisper of ‘Poor
-George’. She raised her eyebrows as though to ask what I was minded to
-do. Getting no answer, she shrugged her shoulders and turned wearily to
-the fire:
-
-“Was that why you left London?” I said nothing. “You told me it was on
-business. And you’ve been . . . sitting in judgement on me ever since.”
-. . .
-
-I took a step forward and tried to catch her hand:
-
-“It has made no difference.” . . .
-
-“Put it down to my curiosity!,” she taunted. “It’s not pleasant . . . to
-be . . . _condemned_ unheard; but I couldn’t _bear_ to be acquitted.
-Your despatch-box, you said?”
-
-“Babs, I implore you!,” I cried, as she moved to the bell.
-
-“You’re afraid of being certain?,” she interrupted scornfully. “I’m only
-afraid of sheltering myself behind a dead man. . . . Oh, Henry, Mr.
-Oakleigh wants his despatch-box. And will you see that there’s a good
-fire in the tapestry-room and have his things moved in there? The . . .
-peacocks make so much noise on my side of the house,” she added.
-
- 6
-
-As I finished dressing, Barbara tapped at my door and came in with
-Eric’s letter in her hand.
-
-“If you want this, I must give it you back,” she began. Her voice had
-almost left her; and the radiant vitality of an hour before had flown.
-“I hope you won’t have to quote it, because these things are so terribly
-vulgarized in court. Do I . . . have to be unfaithful? I wasn’t . . .
-with Eric,” she added carelessly.
-
-“I know you weren’t.”
-
-“I meant to be, . . . if I must use that . . . unclean word. For one
-moment I had a vision of perfect happiness, I forgot everything
-else. . . . It would be generous of you to say you won’t use this.
-Eric’s dead. And people would think he was to blame.”
-
-“I certainly shan’t use it. Barbara, why are you talking like this?”
-
-Before she could answer, the letter had to be thrust into safety. Then,
-with one hand clutching it to her breast, as though Eric’s heart were
-beating against hers, she looked up and forced her mind on to my
-question:
-
-“Because father’s coming down to-morrow, and we must decide what we’re
-going to do. We had to fight him pretty hard to get married, but we
-shall have to fight much harder to get divorced.”
-
-“But no one has mentioned divorce.”
-
-“_I_ have. You said you could never forget that letter. . . . It was a
-great risk for us to marry; but you were so sweet and I was so
-miserable. . . . I see now that the thing never had a fair chance while
-Eric was alive. I heard his voice in the streets, wherever we’d been
-together, when I knew he was the other side of the world; and, as soon
-as I had a chance, I rushed to him. When he wouldn’t have anything to do
-with me, I _did_ try once more to make a success of our life. You wished
-for a son; and I did my best, though Eric was the only man I wanted as
-father of my children. Perhaps that’s why I . . . couldn’t keep him
-alive, poor mite. . . . It’s funny that little things should cause such
-big troubles. If I hadn’t asked you to open my letters, we _should_ have
-made a success.” . . .
-
-There was a moment’s break in her terrible composure; and she turned
-away with a single dry sob.
-
-“Why didn’t you tell me, Babs?”
-
-“You wouldn’t have understood; you don’t understand now.”
-
-“If I hadn’t understood . . . a little, should I have come?”
-
-Unwittingly, I moved a step forward; and she held up her hand against me
-as though I were assaulting her:
-
-“If you’d understood, you wouldn’t have waited twelve days.”
-
-I was goaded beyond discretion by the scorn in her voice. I had
-understood and forgiven too little, it seemed, when I fancied that I had
-forgiven and understood too much.
-
-“It was . . . a startling letter,” I answered in her own measure.
-“Whenever you told me you’d try to forget Eric . . .”
-
-“You wondered for twelve days whether you could ever trust me again.”
-She did not trouble to look at me, but I felt myself flushing. “As
-though any other man could tear my heart out of me as Eric did! Why
-_did_ you come?”
-
-“Because _I_ needed _you_.”
-
-Barbara’s lip curled in derision:
-
-“Your servant’s too useful to discharge, so you pretend you haven’t
-caught her stealing! When we met to-night, I noticed a difference. I
-thought you must have seen in the papers about Eric’s death. When you
-kissed me so tenderly, my heart leapt; and I thought you really
-understood. Now I know . . .”
-
-The incisive scorn cut deeper as her failing voice died away.
-
-“Well?”
-
-“You _need_ me because I’m a woman. That’s why you insult me with your
-forgiveness. And that’s why you must divorce me, George. We’re divorced
-in spirit; and we should both be dishonoured if we put your _need_ in
-the place of love.”
-
-In the distance I heard the gong booming for dinner. Neave’s door opened
-and slammed. A cautious footfall, accompanied by a warning whistle, told
-me that O’Rane was making his way downstairs.
-
-“I shall not divorce you,” I told Barbara, “even if I could. And I
-can’t. You’ll be as independent of me in Seymour Street as if you were
-on a South Sea Island. But we mustn’t do anything irrevocable till we’re
-more cool-headed.”
-
-“But . . . this is impossible!,” Barbara cried.
-
-“If we find it impossible, I shan’t try to keep you.” As I followed her
-down to dinner, I wondered whether we either of us realized what we were
-saying. “Coming here to-day,” I told her, “I was thinking that life only
-becomes intolerable when there’s no love in it. If I can get back to the
-state we were in a fortnight ago . . .”
-
-“You’ll never do that. You’ll be very kind and attentive, as you always
-are; but I married you because I thought you understood. Now you’ve
-become like any other man who puts a cushion at my back or tucks a rug
-round my knees. I’m utterly, utterly indifferent to you!”
-
-On this, the first night of what she called for two years our “life in a
-gilded cage”, I was chiefly concerned that her indifference should be
-concealed from the sharp eyes of Neave and the abnormally sharp hearing
-of O’Rane. With the same intention or in her usual reaction to an
-audience, Barbara sparkled her way through dinner in a manner that set
-me wondering whether I had not waked from another nightmare; but, when
-we looked for her afterwards, she had disappeared; and, when I went—as
-a matter of form—to bid her good-night, she answered me through a
-locked door.
-
-Neave had asked me at dinner how long I was staying; and, when I reached
-my room, I found a note from Barbara:
-
-“_If I am to come at all, I had better come to-morrow. Mother has a big
-party this week-end._”
-
-I sat down in front of the fire and tried to picture our life on the day
-after to-morrow. Could Bertrand direct my paper if I found it necessary
-to live in Ireland? Was Ireland tolerable or even safe? Could I afford
-to keep two houses in commission if my wife refused to live with me. And
-how long would Barbara endure this spiritual starvation?
-
-“_Utterly, utterly indifferent._” I had never been the romance, the
-passion, the great love which she still demanded as of right; even with
-Eric Lane out of the way, I could not deck out my humdrum self as a
-fairy prince. If I failed in the “understanding” for which alone she had
-married me, how was her indifference ever to be overcome? The whole of
-our life must be such an evening as this, when she donned a brilliant
-mask of gaiety for dinner and discarded it when she locked her door
-against me.
-
-A sudden thought urged me from my chair and sent me pacing up and down
-my room. How many other masks did Barbara employ? She dramatized her
-life so richly that, though her grief for Eric was unfeigned, I doubted
-if she could resist the temptation to make a romance out of his death.
-Had she been still unmarried, she would have cast herself for a part of
-inconsolable bereavement; as I obtruded awkwardly into her scene, she
-chose a blend of remorse for the injury she had done him and of heroic
-endeavour to forget him in her devotion to me. Unconsciously, in that
-queer childish brain that could never separate sincerity from pretence,
-the phrases had formed themselves; the emotion that fed the phrases had
-been fed by them. Instinctively she had changed her attitude and
-improvised a new part when she heard of Eric’s letter; and this trick of
-dramatizing her life was now so much ingrained in her nature that within
-half an hour she was perfect in her lines, her expression and her whole
-reading of the part. Henceforward she would continue to regard herself
-as “a damned soul”, with the added damnation of being tied to a crass,
-unsympathetic husband and of conspiring with him to deceive her
-neighbours as she had deceived O’Rane and Neave at dinner.
-
-I readily believed that Barbara had forgotten half the agony of Eric’s
-death in the joy of playing her new part.
-
-“But how long is it to go on?,” I asked myself in despair.
-
-The new part had in some sort been forced upon her; she could not
-relinquish it without abandoning her attitude of moral superiority to
-one who already believed her to be morally in the wrong and would
-believe her to be yet more deeply in the wrong if she admitted that even
-her grand romance had been a piece of play-acting. And play-acting it
-had been for half the time! She could have married Eric if she had dared
-to admit that Jack Waring was tired of her, instead of pretending that
-she was pledged to him. . . .
-
-Next day the Crawleighs arrived in time for luncheon; and we returned to
-London in the afternoon. Our departure was on the border-line between
-farce and tragedy. Muffled in furs and bathed in the warm fragrance of
-her beloved carnations, Barbara took her place by my side; her eyes were
-shining as when I came back to her the day before; and her
-undemonstrative mother was stirred to exclaim: “My dear, you really _do_
-look very lovely.” Crawleigh, who had recently met my uncle at dinner
-and was overcharged with repartees that had not occurred to him in time,
-stood with one foot on the running-board and emphasized his endless
-rejoinders with excited cutting movements of a tremulous forefinger. In
-the background stretched the low grey walls of the Abbey, unchanged
-since the days when the first marquis criticized the treaty of Vienna,
-unchanged since Lord Chancellor Neave cavilled at the peace of Utrecht,
-unchanged since some nameless political abbot pointed the significance
-of Crécy and attacked the staff-work at Poictiers. I can no more
-reproduce my father-in-law’s arguments than I can reconstruct those of
-his predecessors; but I remember being told that now, two years after
-the armistice, we were in a more parlous state than when the war was
-still raging.
-
-“That’s what my uncle always tells me,” I answered, though it was not
-worth while to remind Crawleigh that this was what I had been preaching
-in despised _Peace_ for fifteen months. “If you sow the wind, you must
-expect to reap the whirlwind.”
-
-The reply probably bore no relation to the argument, but I wanted to get
-away; and I had not listened to the argument.
-
-As the car turned out of sight, Barbara flung aside one mask and pulled
-another into place. Her eyes lost their colour; her whole body seemed to
-grow limp. Appearances no longer needed to be maintained.
-
-So we returned home, to reap a whirlwind. My trite phrase haunted me. I
-wondered who had sown the wind.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOUR
-
-
- IN A GILDED CAGE
-
-
- For remember (this our children shall know: we are too near for that
- knowledge)
- Not our mere astonied camps, but Council and Creed and College—
- All the obese, unchallenged old things that stifle and overlie us—
- Have felt the effects of the lesson we got—an advantage no money could
- buy us!
-
- . . . . . . .
-
- It was our fault, and our very great fault—and now we must turn it to
- use;
- We have forty million reasons for failure, but not a single excuse!
- So the more we work and the less we talk the better results we shall
- get—
- We have had an Imperial lesson; it may make us an Empire yet!
-
- RUDYARD KIPLING: _The
- Lesson_.
-
- 1
-
-My return home from Crawleigh Abbey brought to my mind the reappearance
-of the small boy in _Punch_, who, finding his running-away unremarked at
-the end of one whole day, drew attention to it by observing that his
-parents had the same old cat. For a single moment, as O’Rane and I
-reached Salisbury Plain, I had remembered that the world was revolving
-in sublime unconcern at my private tragedy; then a starless night of
-misery enveloped me once more. In London, a fortnight later, I was
-amazed to find letters and messages, proofs and manuscripts from people
-who seemed still interested in unemployment or reparations, in the fate
-of Ireland or the coalition.
-
-Now and for many weeks I thought only of new means to win back a woman
-who had become a stranger to me. After her first declaration of
-“indifference, utter indifference”, Barbara never weakened the effect of
-her action by talking about it; when I had influenza, she nursed me as
-she would have nursed any man who had the misfortune to fall sick in her
-house; when she caught my influenza and aggravated it with pleurisy, she
-allowed me to take her abroad to recuperate. No two acquaintances,
-sharing the same house, could have lived in greater harmony; and no
-woman could have devised a keener torment than by treating lover,
-husband or friend as an acquaintance.
-
-Meanwhile, the external world was still revolving. . . .
-
-“_I want to see you about these articles of yours_ . . .”, wrote
-Bertrand.
-
-“There’ll be a general election within six months,” Sir Philip Saltash
-predicted.
-
-“_I hoped to find you had knocked some sense into David’s head_,” Sonia
-lamented.
-
-“‘I see you have the same old cat’,” I whispered to myself in
-astonishment.
-
- 2
-
-It is a tribute, I think, to our loyalty in public that my marriage to
-Barbara was commonly quoted at this time as one of the very few
-successful unions in an age of confessed failures and desperate escapes.
-Had I imagined at the beginning that our unreal separation could drag on
-for two years, the myth of our blissful harmony would soon have been
-exploded. As it was, we drifted. I thought by day, I dreamed by night,
-of a romantic reconciliation that never came. There were moments when I
-fancied that Barbara, with her passion for dramatizing life, forgot her
-boredom in the excitement of martyrdom. On some plea, which I do not
-remember, she gave up entertaining; and, while the young “London of the
-restoration”—in Bertrand’s phrase—went leaderless, she had the barren
-pleasure of feeling herself wasted.
-
-By degrees which I cannot recall I was driven to spend more and more
-time at my office and to dine more and more often at a club. Her
-indifference spread beyond me to all the men and women who in other days
-had interested her; it culminated in her dispassionate efforts to
-interest her husband in some other woman. I returned home one evening to
-be told that Ivy Gaymer had fled to us for sanctuary and that Barbara
-was waiting for me to say whether we should send her back to her husband
-or communicate with Mr. Justice Maitland or wait helplessly for
-something to turn up. As Ivy was already in bed, we could hardly prick
-her into the street at midnight; and next morning she ruled out our
-first two courses by declaring that she would never again enter the
-house of a man who intrigued with other women under her nose and that
-her father’s advice and sympathy were limited to the triumphant
-question: what else could any one expect?
-
-We decided to wait for something to turn up. I did not want to be
-inhospitable, but I wanted still less to hear Barbara talking about my
-“little _protégée_”. After a week or two I suggested that there were
-hotels in plenty and that Ivy was not without money. Barbara confined
-herself to saying that, as I had insisted on the creature’s staying on
-in the first instance, it was now my delicate task to evict her.
-Following the cowardly expedient of writing what I was afraid to utter
-by word of mouth, I sent a note to Ivy’s room one night, asking what her
-plans were; we should, I said, be going down to Crawleigh for Easter. By
-ill luck, she was still up; and her reply was delivered from the foot of
-my bed, where she sat, smoking cigarettes, in scantier clothes than
-women usually wear in public. If we kept the house open, she would not
-in the least mind staying on by herself; her solicitors were advising a
-divorce; it was saintly of us to take her in; and she would not have
-troubled us if she had not been in fear of her life. The interview was
-ended damagingly by Barbara, who came in to insist maternally that, if
-Ivy and I wanted to talk, she must put on a warm dressing-gown.
-
-Though my door was locked against similar conferences in the future, my
-next attempt was no more fortunate. Ivy agreed that she must go and then
-broke into piteous weeping. I comforted her as well as Barbara’s
-expression of scornful amusement permitted; and, when the weeping broke
-out afresh as Ivy began to pack, I recollected an overdue appointment at
-my office. On my return, our guest was still in possession.
-
-“She’s cried herself sick,” Barbara told me. “You can say she must go,
-George, or you can say she may stop on; but it’s cruel to keep making
-her cry.”
-
-“I want her to go,” I said, without enlarging the field of debate.
-
-“It was a pity you asked her in the first place, if you were going to
-turn her out.”
-
-“I fancy she asked herself.”
-
-“I thought she was a passion of yours,” said Barbara in faint surprise.
-“You made me go to her wedding, when I hardly knew her.”
-
-“At O’Rane’s request: because her father was being so difficult.”
-
-There was a pause; then Barbara shrugged her shoulders.
-
-“I think she’s rather in love with you,” she murmured.
-
-“That’s very flattering,” I said, “but it doesn’t make things any
-easier. Her affections are quickly aroused. First it was Eric, then
-Gaymer; now . . .”
-
-“You don’t believe it? George, you’re sometimes rather unobservant. Why
-d’you think she came _here_ of all places?”
-
-“I should think she was banking on the softness of your heart or of my
-head,” I answered.
-
-I hardly knew whether to be surprised or not when I found Ivy still with
-us next day, but I made no further attempt to dislodge her. At the end
-of the week Barbara went to Crawleigh and I telephoned for a room at the
-Eclectic Club. New developments in Ireland kept me tied to the office at
-the last moment; and I did not choose that my wife or Ivy’s husband
-should be able to say that the two of us had been alone together. After
-four-and-twenty hours’ solitude Ivy discovered that it was possible to
-live in an hotel without being tracked by her drunken and homicidal
-lord; and the incident closed when Barbara came into my room, on the
-night of her return from the Abbey, with a brief letter of thanks.
-
-“You’d get tired of her very soon,” she said judicially, as though I
-still needed to be saved from myself. “So would any man. That’s why I
-begged Eric not to marry her. I believe you’d be happier, though, if you
-found some woman who really interested you.”
-
-“That advice is more suitable for a bachelor than for a married man,” I
-pointed out.
-
-Barbara walked to the door in silence, then paused with her fingers on
-the handle.
-
-“And how long is this going on?,” she asked with a sigh of utter
-exhaustion.
-
-“You alone can say that,” I replied.
-
-The tragic farce had been running for six months and was to run for
-another eighteen before the farce was eliminated and only the tragedy
-remained. Without regular employment, I should have gone out of my mind;
-and I am thankful that my uncle’s increasing infirmities threw ever more
-and more of our work on my shoulders.
-
-It was in the spring of 1921 that he despaired openly and finally of the
-existing government; it was in the summer that he called for a change.
-
-“Though, mark you, there’s not another man who could have done what
-George has!,” cried Bertrand with the generous appreciation that Jack
-Sheppard might have exhibited towards Dick Turpin. “After two years of
-power he’s made a tumbledown peace that satisfies no one. He _hasn’t_
-hanged the kaiser; he _hasn’t_ made Germany pay for the war. The League
-of Nations, which we were promised, _isn’t_ functioning; he calls a new
-conference every few weeks to settle finally the problems which were
-finally settled at Versailles. If that isn’t an achievement . . .”
-
-“Oh, admitted!,” I said. “I’m thinking about the day of reckoning.”
-
-We were walking slowly along Knightsbridge on our way to one of the
-weekly editorial dinners; and, as we approached the French Embassy, I
-crossed the road for fear of encountering Lucien de Grammont. My
-shoulders were not broad enough to support the load of obloquy which he
-kept in reserve for our few, uneasy meetings; and, though I stated
-candidly that the French were now the chief obstacles to peace, I could
-not persuade Lucien that it was the prime minister and not the humble
-editor of an obscure review who had coaxed the French to open their
-mouths and shut their eyes at Versailles. Now that no sweetmeats were to
-be had, the French were threatening to undertake the search themselves.
-
-This was the first bill to be met on the day of reckoning; but I was not
-prepared to say that it would be the last or the heaviest. In Ireland,
-the practice of wholesale murder and destruction was being met with
-reprisals in kind. Of India and Egypt it is enough to say that we knew
-very little, that all we knew was bad and that we were not allowed to
-print all we knew.
-
-“That’s my point,” said Bertrand with cynical complacency. “Any one of
-these things would have brought down a government in old days. Take
-taxation! Take unemployment!”
-
-“My one consolation,” I broke in, “is that _no_ man, even if damned
-fools call him a ‘little wizard’, can cope with all that at the same
-moment.”
-
-“I’ll write you an article on _The First Duty of Government_,” Bertrand
-promised. “And that, some of these gentry may be surprised to hear, is
-. . . to _govern_.”
-
- 3
-
-My most vivid memory of my uncle’s subsequent diatribe was that I
-declined to publish it. In Ireland or France, where irony is understood,
-it would have gone with a swing; but we were unpopular enough already
-without assailing the cherished conviction of the English that they have
-a natural talent for self-government. And this is what Bertrand
-attempted with artful citations from any convenient speech in which an
-English publicist had asserted that Dervishes, Hottentots, Andaman
-Islanders or even Irishmen were unfit to govern themselves. Could
-darkest Africa shew such a record of misrule as we had at our doors? Had
-Egypt plunged to bankruptcy with greater recklessness than we displayed?
-By the standard of our Indian crimes and blunders, was not Abdul the
-Damned unjustly damned? The English were mistaken, but it was not too
-late to repair the mistake; and my uncle proposed in conclusion that the
-United States should lend Mr. Herbert Hoover for six months to organize
-and run the British Empire Protectorate.
-
-“It won’t do, Bertrand,” I said.
-
-“But isn’t it true?”
-
-“It’s too true.”
-
-That, however, was not to say that the English had enough detachment to
-relish the truth underlying the irony. Roger Dainton, on the eve of
-signing the Ulster covenant, told me—as an Englishman—that the Irish
-would never be fit for independence till they had acquired respect for
-law; I had seen Violet Loring whiten to the lips at the report of a
-lynching in some southern state and then regain her colour in a spasm of
-indignation that a Quaker had not been shot for refusing to enter the
-army. Collectively, I had watched the people of London—and, for all I
-know, the people of England outdid them—exhibiting, at the time of the
-Pemberton-Billing case, a ferocious credulity that was not exceeded by
-the French in the Dreyfus trial.
-
-“Well, write your own damned article,” said Bertrand. “If you think you
-know these people . . .”
-
-I believe that in one respect I understand the English, among whom I was
-brought up, better than Bertrand, to whom they were always a race of
-despised aliens. What they lack in imagination they make up in a queer
-political instinct. Every one at the Eclectic Club was sublimely
-indifferent, in these days, to the case of Egyptian autonomy; the
-Amritsar sentences only provoked a desultory discussion whether “damned
-black men”, as I heard them described by Sir Roger Dainton, would not be
-all the better for “an occasional dressing-down”. When, however,
-national bankruptcy was threatened, I encountered an instinctive
-preference for solvency; and, when refugees from all parts of Ireland
-flooded England with tales of assassination and counter-assassination,
-the British liking for order at home grew clamant. I remember carrying
-back to Seymour Street an official poster in which recruits were invited
-to “_Join the Royal Air Force and_ _See the World_”; an unofficial hand
-had appended the grim warning: “_Join the Royal Irish Constabulary and
-See the Next World_.”
-
-“It’s beyond a joke: that’s what it is,” said Robson, on whom I tried
-the last of my experiments.
-
-For soul-deadening years, my butler’s sentiment had been expressed, from
-different angles, by Crawleigh and Bertrand, by O’Rane and Dainton, by
-_Peace_ and the _Morning Post_. I believe, however, that no change of
-heart can be effected by one man or one paper. England accepted the
-reformation and acquiesced in the decapitation of Charles the First when
-the Robsons of those days—inarticulate and irrational, for the most
-part, but numerous and determined—decided that the unreformed Catholic
-Church or the divine right of kings was “beyond a joke”.
-
-“I’ve written my own damned article,” I telephoned to Bertrand. “I think
-it’s an improvement on yours.”
-
-“You _would_,” he replied.
-
-“I don’t think this government has very long to live,” I added.
-
-The oldest trick in the bag of a political journalist is to find out
-what policy is going to be followed, to insist vehemently that this
-policy must be followed and to take credit for having forced his own
-policy on a vacillating and apathetic government. During the war, Sir
-John Woburn preached conscription from the moment when his chief spy in
-the cabinet had revealed that ministers were agreed to bring
-conscription in: the Press Combine advertised itself for months as the
-mouthpiece of that opinion which demanded conscription; and, when the
-first military service act was passed, Woburn stood forth as the giant
-who had forced the government, in his own phrase, “to give Haig the
-men”. I have to guard against the temptation to employ this trick in
-writing of our campaign in 1921. Independently of our prompting, every
-one was saying that ministers must govern or go; and I only realized how
-far opinion had swung, when I met the lately ennobled Lord Saltash at a
-public dinner.
-
-“Well, things are moving,” he began darkly, as he led me to the Turf and
-Stage and pointed from an unobserved corner of the gallery to Lord
-Lingfield’s customary table.
-
-I needed a few minutes to penetrate the familiar externals. My cousin
-Laurence Hunter-Oakleigh was entertaining a party of American revue
-actresses; Sam Dainton was dancing with Ivy Gaymer; and the inscrutable
-Gaspard was watching and ministering with his wonted resourcefulness and
-address. It was like going back to a play at the end of a long run. I
-felt that they must all of them have been frozen in the same attitude
-since last I looked down on the top of their heads a year before. The
-band, which played unceasingly from the moment we arrived to the moment
-we left, might well have been playing for twelve months on end. It was
-impossible to think of these sleek heads and slim figures without their
-Turf and Stage frame, unless you thought of them as the brilliant,
-glossy chorus of mannequins and salesmen in a musical comedy at the
-Hilarity in old days. Had they homes? Had they private lives?
-
-“I see Wister is withdrawing the support of his papers from the
-coalition,” I said.
-
-“Yes, he’s out for an all-conservative ministry,” answered Saltash.
-“Foreditch put him up to it; and you can see they’re trying to nobble
-Wilmot Dean for their new ginger-group. The rank-and-file tories don’t
-want to drive Ll-G. out, though, till they’re sure of keeping him out.
-And Lingfield, who’s leading the rank-and-file, doesn’t believe they can
-do it yet, unless Bonar comes back. That’s why he wants a centre party,
-to include Birkenhead, Winston and that lot. It’s interesting, devilish
-interesting! The dying lion ain’t dead yet.”
-
-“What line are you taking yourself?,” I asked.
-
-“A wise man wouldn’t commit himself till the dying lion was much nearer
-his last kick,” Saltash answered with refreshing candour. “If
-Lingfield’s centre party falls down, he and Birkenhead and Austen won’t
-get any mercy from Foreditch and the men who want an all-conservative
-ministry; and, if Foreditch wounds Ll-G. without killing the coalition,
-his die-hard tories needn’t look for office from the centre party. It’s
-too early to say. When I give you the hint . . . I’m here most
-evenings,” he concluded with an affability that rather disquieted me.
-
-“I’ll remember that,” I said; and, when the last of many political
-crises ended fifteen months later in the prime minister’s resignation, I
-made it my business to dine nightly at the Turf and Stage. I was never a
-member; but Sonia, who also was not a member, introduced me to Gaspard;
-and Gaspard, bowing from the waist, assured me in the French of the Midi
-that Mrs. O’Rane’s friends were always welcome.
-
- 4
-
-She was not at the club on the night when Saltash took me to observe the
-signs of the times; but I found her husband talking to Barbara when I
-arrived home. He was armed with the notes of an article and wished to
-use my paper for an attack on the entire English system of inheritance
-and property.
-
-“We’re hypnotized by 1914,” he broke out stormily. “We treat the old
-world like a vast Pompeii, which we’re uncovering bit by bit. People
-won’t see that we’re repairing from copies of old models.” . . .
-
-“I’d sooner live in old Pompeii than in new Turin,” Barbara murmured.
-
-“If Pompeii had been paradise in 1914, it would be an outworn paradise
-now!” O’Rane, I thought, looked tired and old, as though perpetual
-opposition was gradually wearing him down. “The world changes in seven
-years, especially if the inhabitants have spent four of them
-withstanding a stream of molten lava. Can you tell me a single idea
-we’ve put forward, a single effort we’ve made to improve on 1914 so that
-Pompeii shall not be buried again?”
-
-I left Barbara to wrestle with his question while I glanced at the
-manuscript article. O’Rane’s own contribution to the ideas of the new
-age seemed to be that the hand of every man must be against his
-neighbour so long as unequal wealth made the one arrogant and the other
-envious. As human capacities were unequal, wealth must continue to be
-unequally amassed for a single lifetime; but to perpetuate this
-inequality was to perpetuate the friction that ultimately lead to
-revolution and civil war.
-
-“You’re at least consistent,” I said. “On the night Stornaway died, you
-told me there was no room in the modern state for these gigantic
-fortunes.”
-
-“I doubt if we have room for private transmitted wealth of any kind,” he
-answered. “It debilitates the individual, it demoralizes society. I’m
-seeing that every day in my own work.”
-
-The subject was too big to discuss at midnight; but, as his article was
-avowedly the preamble to a declaration that he was bent at all costs on
-saving humanity from the poison of the Lancing inheritance, I warned him
-that the unemployed might break his windows if they heard that a million
-a year was going to feed distant Russians when they themselves had not
-eaten a square meal for twelve months. I asked whether his wife approved
-of the article, but received no answer. Finally, I returned him his
-manuscript with a reminder that I could not stultify my weekly
-predictions of insolvency by proclaiming of a sudden that we were all
-suffering from too much money.
-
-“I’ll try elsewhere,” said O’Rane without resentment. “I’m sorry, but
-I’m not surprised. You’re hypnotized by 1914, too, and you think you can
-avert another eruption by treaties and boards of arbitration. They
-didn’t stop the war in ’14, George; they never _have_ stopped wars, they
-never will. If you’d change the course of history, you must change the
-heart of man.”
-
-“The more I study the heart of man . . .” I was beginning.
-
-“It changes daily,” O’Rane cried. “It changed when man turned sick at
-gladiatorial shows and slavery and torture. It will change again when
-men find that cooperation is more comfortable than competition. But
-you’ll have competition always—the competition of the rich with the
-poor, among individuals and nations, the inevitable forerunner to every
-revolution and war—so long as you crystallize an unequal distribution
-of wealth.”
-
-“Write me an article on that theme,” I said, “and I’ll publish it
-gladly.”
-
-My invitation and promise were forgotten by O’Rane, I imagine, as
-quickly as I forgot his demand that I should find a new spirit moving on
-the face of the waters. When I reached Fetter Lane next morning, I was
-greeted by Spence-Atkins with news which made Saltash’s predictions
-obsolete and O’Rane’s researches premature. With or without our reminder
-that the business of a government was to govern, ministers were hatching
-a new Irish policy. Like most Irish policies, it could be guaranteed to
-divide England even if it failed to unite Ireland; and I felt then and
-later that the decay of the coalition set in on this day. Like all new
-moves in the Irish game at this time, it was certain to keep me in
-London when I wanted to take Barbara to Scotland.
-
-The result of the new negotiations has passed into history; and from
-first to last I was narrowly preoccupied with their effect on my own
-fortunes. If the south-west of Ireland became habitable again, I was
-resolved to make it my home; and, at the end of many months’ parleying,
-I was wakened by a telephone-message from my uncle to say that a
-settlement had been reached. After threatening reconquest, the
-government had ascertained that to “reconquer” Ireland would cost as
-much and take as long as the last South African war; those who had
-preached coercion changed their text to conciliation; and, as I passed
-through Inverness, the king’s ministers were meeting the ministers of
-President de Valera on equal terms.
-
-“The treaty,” Bertrand’s message ran, “was signed in the small hours.
-Outside a portion of Ulster, Ireland is to be a Free State.”
-
-“And now,” I answered, “and now . . . now perhaps we may see home-rule
-for England.” In 1906 I had brought a young man’s ideals to Westminster;
-thirty years before me, my father had done the same; and ten years
-before him, though he might now call his ideals illusions, Bertrand had
-entered parliament with hope and vision. One after another, each in our
-generation, we had seen our vision clouded and our hope deferred by the
-shadow of Ireland. “May I go home now?,” I asked.
-
-“I can’t spare you yet,” Bertrand sighed. “The trouble’s not over. There
-are thousands of Irishmen who’ve taken a solemn oath of allegiance to
-the republic for which their fathers and brothers laid down their lives.
-There are thousands of English who will say in every passing difficulty:
-‘I _told_ you so! Ireland is unfit for self-government.’ We must preach
-patience, George. We must try to sweeten the bitter taste that all this
-blood has left on our lips. Lake House can get along without you for the
-present.”
-
-“I was only thinking Barbara and I should be the better for a change,” I
-answered with deliberate vagueness.
-
-If I kept my disappointment to myself, I could not help being
-disappointed. This talk of peace had suddenly opened an unexpected vista
-of escape from the “gilded cage”; and my single glimpse of freedom
-convinced me that I could not continue the armed neutrality which
-Barbara had been imposing on me for a twelvemonth. We must be reconciled
-or divorced. If we could separate even for a short time, we might be
-able to decide what we wanted. I therefore told Bertrand that he must
-not count on me indefinitely; and the old man shewed the wisdom to give
-me my change by sending me to America for the Washington Conference.
-
-“One of us ought to be there; and I’m too old,” he explained. “I don’t
-know what stuffing the new president has inside him; but this is the
-first serious effort to undo the harm of the Versailles treaty, and
-Harding is the first responsible statesman to say frankly that we’re all
-committing financial suicide. You’ll go?”
-
-“I will,” I promised.
-
-“And you’ll take Barbara?”
-
-“I’ll talk to her about it.”
-
-And that night I told her of my decision.
-
-“Are you expecting me to come with you?,” she asked.
-
-“It will be better for us both if I go alone. When I come back, you’ll
-have had time to think quietly . . .”
-
-“I can picture you talking to your clerks like this,” Barbara mocked.
-“‘Your last chance, remember!’ . . .”
-
-“To think quietly,” I repeated, “whether you would prefer me to live in
-Ireland. Conditions are becoming normal there . . .”
-
-“You must _really_ decide for yourself where you want to live,” she
-answered, without hinting whether she wished me to live alone.
-
-A week later I sailed from Southampton.
-
-If I had expected to find any striking change on my return, I should
-have been disappointed; but I fancy that I had by now ceased to look for
-the romantic reconciliations of the film-world. There was little enough
-change anywhere. My father-in-law had given me a farewell dinner on the
-night before I sailed; he gave me a dinner of welcome on the night that
-I returned. Tempers, I thought, were a little shorter; nerves a little
-thinner. The vague feeling that something decisive must soon happen
-reminded me of 1914, when the world expected a cataclysm and almost
-hoped for it.
-
-“And certainly the conference has done nothing to avert it,” I told
-Bertrand at the end of dinner.
-
-“Not the French show-down?,” he asked. “After this, we can talk frankly
-instead of gushing about our gallant allies. We all made grievous
-mistakes at the peace conference, George, but it’s the French who are
-keeping us from repairing them.”
-
-“Which will coerce which?,” I asked.
-
-The question, I could see, was not palatable.
-
-“They’ve the best air-force in the world and could lay London in ruins
-within a week,” Bertrand growled. “It’s immeasurably superior to
-anything we saw in the war. They can hold Germany down with aeroplanes
-and niggers; and, when you ask them why they won’t reduce their
-submarines, you don’t get a satisfactory answer. I can give it to you.
-They’re going to make themselves masters of Europe before any one has
-time to stop them. They worked against us in Poland, they’re working
-against us in the near east.”
-
-“How do you propose to make use of this knowledge?”
-
-“It may lead to clear thinking. Why _we_ should pay six shillings in the
-pound to relieve them of an income-tax, when they’re amassing armaments
-. . .”
-
-There was very little change anywhere. Lady John Carstairs hoped vaguely
-that we were not going to desert our late allies; Violet Loring
-whispered that it was all very well for dear Phyllis to preach at us,
-but America had deserted every one. I provoked a passing storm by
-asserting that all international debts would have ultimately to be
-forgiven; and, had any one asked wherein the world was safer or happier
-than in 1914, he must have waited long for an answer.
-
-An hour later, as we drove home, Barbara enquired expressionlessly
-whether I had enjoyed my holiday from her.
-
-“I wanted _you_ to have a holiday from me,” I answered. “No, I missed
-you horribly. I should like to think you missed me.”
-
-“Oh, why say that?,” she exclaimed with sudden petulance. “If I could
-have a holiday from myself so that I didn’t see how my life has been
-wasted, if I could lose my memory . . . Dear God, if I could only die!”
-
-There was no change in her; and I was driven to issue my ultimatum:
-
-“If you’d like me to go away again, I will. And this time I shouldn’t
-upset you by coming back. I’ve done my best; and I’ve failed. We can
-part friends. If you want a divorce, you can have it now.”. . .
-
-“Somehow, I don’t see you in the divorce-court,” Barbara murmured half
-to herself. “I feel you’d bungle it. When I wrote and begged you to come
-back, you _would_ . . . by special train.”
-
-“Well, the matter is now in your hands,” I said.
-
-“I think you’ve a finer collection of worn-out phrases than any man I
-know,” she cried, again without answering my question.
-
- 5
-
-“No change of any kind!,” I told my cousin Violet when we dined with her
-a fortnight after my return to England.
-
-Barbara had not mentioned divorce again; and I believe we were summoned
-to Loring House with a view to mending the latest breach between Sonia
-and her husband. He, unchanging in stubbornness, had published the
-article which I rejected and was threatening to follow it with others;
-Sonia, unchanging in tactics, had announced that she would walk out of
-the house unless he yielded. Bertrand, unchanging in the beloved formula
-which he applied indiscriminately to cigarette-smoking, Christianity,
-_vers libre_, welfare-work, side-whiskers and “self-determination”,
-explained that this was only a phase, which one or other or both would
-outgrow. And Violet, whose kindness of heart nothing could change, was
-playing counsellor and friend of all parties.
-
-“We, I suppose,” said Barbara, “are to be the object-lesson in domestic
-felicity. When women have married the wrong men, as Sonia and I did,
-it’s rather a waste of time for any one to patch it up.”
-
-“If there’s been a fair trial,” I said, “you should end what you can’t
-mend. Armed neutrality is intolerable.”
-
-From Barbara’s thoughtful look I fancied she was wondering whether I
-wanted a divorce in order to marry some one else.
-
-“The trouble is,” she continued, “you never know who is the right man
-till you’ve married him. I always thought you had more perfect
-understanding than any man I knew . . . Funny!,” she added, as I made no
-answer.
-
-No answer seemed possible. There was now no change in our rare private
-passages, though I thought the reference to my want of understanding was
-dragged in to close the subject of divorce. There was no change in the
-atmosphere of this party. Nearly seven years had passed since Violet and
-I last dined together at Loring House. The noble line of portraits had
-been reinforced by a black-and-white sketch of Jim in uniform; Sandy was
-old enough for his mother to consult me about schools; but we were
-arguing now in the very mood and terms that we had used in 1914.
-
-“I wish people wouldn’t talk so much about ‘the next war’,” Violet
-muttered with a frown in the direction of Philip Hornbeck. “I’ve lost my
-husband; I’m not going to lose my son if I can help it.”
-
-The big, softly-lighted room reminded me of my interminable discussions
-with Jim and of his own admission on the outbreak of war that the old
-governing classes were played out. I was reminded, too, of the question
-that had haunted me in the first weeks of the armistice: if the order
-that was represented at this table could not keep peace or make peace,
-would it have to give way?
-
-“We talk about the next war,” I said, “because the combined wisdom of
-the world has done nothing in the last three years to prevent it.”
-
-“I suppose the prime minister _is_ the only man . . .?” she hazarded.
-
-“Every prime minister is indispensable,” I answered, “till he finds
-himself on an opposition bench, watching his successor taking command.
-Five minutes after George goes, every one will ask why he didn’t go
-before. Every one will discover then the vice of all coalitions: which
-is that there’s no one to oppose them. You don’t expect Curzon to admit
-that Lloyd-George’s foreign policy is dangerous?”
-
-“Can nobody do anything from outside?”
-
-“The press does its best, but this government is stronger than the
-press. Otherwise, Woburn and his combine would have had George out in
-the street a year ago. Your best hope is an intrigue from inside. Ll-G.
-was at least equally responsible for the shortage of high explosives in
-’15; yet he put the blame on the others and broke the Asquith
-government. It may be done again.”
-
-My voice carried to Bertrand’s side of the table and roused him from one
-of his now periodical lapses into slumber.
-
-“If the House of Commons contained anybody one half as clever, Ll-G.
-would not now be prime minister,” he answered.
-
-No change; and no prospect of a change until it was forced upon us by
-another cataclysm. It was the public temper that alarmed me more than
-any concrete problem of unemployment or proved blunders of policy. On my
-first appearance in Fetter Lane I asked young Triskett for a sketch of
-the political position; and the tone of his reply reminded me
-disquietingly of the recklessness and exasperation of 1914.
-
-“The prime ministers of the allies,” proclaimed Triskett with the pomp
-of a toast-master, “have been meeting in discord and parting in harmony,
-without settling anything. The public, however, me lords, ladies _and_
-gentlemen, has by now ceased to expect settlements. We have had a new
-policy once a week to bring Russia back into what the poet so
-felicitously calls ‘the comity of nations’; a protest once a fortnight
-against bolshevist propaganda in the far east; and winged words from the
-labour party once a month, when it thinks Winston has a new scheme for
-invading Russia. Reparations, my dear Oakleigh, are rather _vieux jeu_:
-we don’t remind Ll-G. of his promises to hang the kaiser or ‘make the
-Huns pay’; if we did, the French might try to catch us up for an
-invasion of the Ruhr. We’re rather short with the French since the
-Washington Conference. At home, you’ll find the prime minister has got a
-new wind, but everybody’s very sick of him. Gawd, and I’m sick of
-everything!,” he added with his first approach to sincerity.
-
-The bitter, neurotic voice reminded me of a night, some eight years
-earlier, in my old room, a quarter of a mile away in Bouverie Street.
-Van Arden and Jack Summertown then burst in with the announcement that
-they were bored beyond endurance; we must break windows or light a
-bonfire in Trafalgar Square. “Sick of everything!,” they repeated at
-short intervals. I could not join in whatever debauch they arranged: it
-was press-night, for one reason; and, for another—unless my memory be
-at fault—, this was the Thursday following the Serajevo assassinations,
-when universal dissatisfaction sought practical expression. Arden and
-Summertown were now dead; but Triskett stood in their place. And
-Trisketts, multiplied to infinity, furnished the atmosphere, the fuel
-and the spark whereby the world was periodically set ablaze. The
-Triskett of an earlier generation had told his friends in Paris that a
-bit of a revolution would at least liven things; he had urged Lafayette
-to fire on the mob at Versailles “just to see what would happen”.
-
-I mentioned this fancy to Bertrand and O’Rane at the end of dinner.
-
-“It’s the revolt against peace, after the incessant excitement of war,”
-said my uncle, who had been loudly regaled with private mutinies for the
-last hour. Ivy Gaymer was now in the precarious legal region “between
-the _nisi_ and the absolute”; Sam Dainton had scandalized his parents by
-opening a cocktail-bar in Swallow Street; and Barbara was contemplating
-a volume of autobiography. “I’m afraid we’re drifting . . .”
-
-“We’re refusing to admit there’s been a war,” Raney struck in. “You
-can’t expect anything to be the same; and it’s because I’m afraid to
-drift that I’m carrying out a new idea with this money.”
-
-We were not encouraged by O’Rane’s tone to break the rather embarrassing
-silence that followed. I had noticed before dinner that he and his wife
-had not merely—in the language of stage directions—“come into the
-room”; they had “entered, conversing with animation”. As we drove home,
-I asked Barbara whether Violet had effected a reconciliation.
-
-“If he publishes any more articles, Sonia will repudiate them,” she
-answered.
-
-“And if he repudiates her repudiation?”
-
-“She’ll repudiate him.”
-
-“Um. I rather hoped, when I saw them together . . .”
-
-“Husbands and wives who get on well in public always arouse my worst
-suspicions,” said Barbara. “No, there’s no change.”
-
-I was still pondering our hard-worked phrase when we re-entered our
-“gilded cage”; and Barbara had slipped away to bed before I could ask
-her whether a man erred more grievously by doing everything that his
-wife demanded or nothing.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIVE
-
-
- “UN SACRIFICE INUTILE”
-
-
- “. . . They say, the tongues of dying men
- Enforce attention, like deep harmony;
- Where words are scarce, they are seldom spent in vain;
- For they breathe truth, that breathe their words in pain.” . . .
-
- SHAKESPEARE: _King Richard II_.
-
- 1
-
-“On the turf,” expounded my uncle Bertrand, “races are won by the
-intelligence of the individual backer. It is only when you lose that you
-divide the responsibility between the breeder, the trainer, the jockey
-and the horse. That is why the sporting tipster is the happiest of men.
-Why shouldn’t we call ourselves ‘the Brigadier’ and run a sporting
-column in _Peace_? You and I, George, get neither pleasure nor profit
-from seeing our political forecasts being fulfilled.” . . .
-
-“Perhaps, if we’d backed our fancy . . .” I began.
-
-“I’ve backed _Peace_,” said my uncle grimly, “to a tune that would make
-an unsuccessful racing-stable seem like a safe investment. I pay tens of
-thousands a year for the privilege of casting myself for the part of
-Cassandra. We _can’t_ be so much cleverer than other people . . .”
-
-“If we were,” I interrupted, “we might make them believe what we tell
-them.”
-
-“The world believes what it wants to believe,” said Bertrand.
-
-“And is quite unabashed when it’s proved wrong,” I added, as I pocketed
-the article which I had brought to Princes Gardens for my uncle’s
-_imprimatur_.
-
-Many months had slipped away since we discussed the day of reckoning
-that awaited an opportunist government and an indifferent country. In
-the last four months of 1921 and the first eight of 1922 every storm
-that we had foretold blew against our doors or broke through our roofs.
-By the time that the peace coalition fell, the great powers were at
-loggerheads, war was at a day’s remove and the mutter of social
-revolution was heard in England for the first time since the Chartist
-riots. No one heeded our jeremiads; and there is little satisfaction now
-in recalling our prescience. Indeed, before presuming to lecture the
-public, I might well ask myself what hearing I won from my friends and
-what attention I paid to my own warnings. Did O’Rane listen when I told
-him that his stubbornness had already alienated his wife and would, as
-likely as not, encourage the unemployed to break his windows? Did I
-listen when I told myself that, though I had sworn to have no scene with
-Barbara, the armed neutrality could not last?
-
-Did I really believe that the conditions created by the Versailles
-conference could only be changed by another war?
-
- 2
-
-I am writing so near to the times which I am trying to describe that I
-must occasionally invoke the judgement of posterity. I may be told that
-my facts are wrong, that I have distorted them by unintended omissions,
-above all that I worked in a false perspective. My only answer must be
-that I have written the truth as I saw it, that I have no thesis to
-maintain and that my conclusions have been reached without bias. At the
-armistice I believed that we had done with war; when peace was signed, I
-believed that another war was being made inevitable; and, when the
-peace-coalition fell, I believe that the sense and conscience of the
-country rose in revolt against a system that threatened it with another
-war. From this standpoint, the general election of 1922 closed the
-chapter that began in 1918 and the book that opened in 1914. If it did
-not answer my question whether the old governing classes could make
-peace, it gave an unmistakable answer to those who demonstrated that
-they could not. So far as the people of England are concerned, I feel
-that the diplomatic moves and counter-moves of this period, the division
-and regrouping of political parties, the influence of the party and
-press managers and the historical significance of the Irish settlement
-or the unemployment problem were all leading to the upheaval of 1922. If
-history admit of beginnings and ends, a system ended with the end of the
-1918 parliament. In using the word “revolt”, which Louis XVI favoured, I
-wonder whether I should not use the word “revolution”, which de
-Liancourt substituted.
-
-According to my uncle, the first responsible attack on the peace-treaty
-was delivered by President Harding; a counter-attack was opened by the
-French, when they stultified the Washington Conference; and an attack,
-in reply to the counter-attack, was launched by the Balfour Note on
-inter-allied indebtedness.
-
-On the day after it was published, Clifford van Oss called in Fetter
-Lane to enquire whether the note was an overture to repudiation.
-
-“I should rather call it our reply to the French _non possumus_ at
-Washington,” said Bertrand. “If we pay our debts to you, the French must
-pay their debts to us instead of building submarines against us.”
-
-“From what I know of the French,” said Clifford, with the detachment
-that some of us found irritating in a country which had so
-disconcertingly washed its hands of European problems, “they won’t take
-it lying down.”
-
-The assertion was so intrinsically probable that I did not contest it;
-but, if I spent little time wondering what the French reply would be,
-that was chiefly because I was watching the fulfilment of another
-prophecy. The controversy that raged for six months over O’Rane’s
-articles in the _Democratic Review_ is now public, if not ancient,
-history; and my chief memory is of his victory by silence. If one of his
-million critics had troubled to study his argument, he would have seen
-that the flamboyant gifts of embarrassed millionaires were attacked for
-their demoralizing effect on the recipients. Those who wrote to the
-papers or passed unanimous resolutions of protest laid emphasis on the
-crying needs of hospitals and the like; they assumed an almost
-impertinent right to tell other people how they should spend their
-money; but they did not meet O’Rane’s contention that every university
-could be endowed, every laboratory subsidized and every great work of
-art purchased for the nation from the money that was spent on luxuries.
-
-I paid less attention to those who lectured O’Rane from expensive
-addresses than to those who heard, on the authority of a millionaire,
-that a great many people had a great deal too much money.
-
-“Any windows broken?,” I asked him on one of the rare occasions when we
-met in these months.
-
-“Not yet,” he laughed.
-
-I did not dare to enquire whether any wives had been running away
-lately. Sonia’s threatened repudiation had not yet been published; but
-this, Barbara told me, was only because he had not yet stated in public
-that he would renounce his inheritance. The controversy imparted a
-transient heat to the chilly summer of 1922; and no doubt I should still
-be printing letters of protest if O’Rane’s theories of property had not
-been drowned in the thunder of a more urgent conflict. In August I took
-Barbara to stay with the Knightriders; and I had only reached
-Northumberland when my uncle recalled me to London with a telegram that
-revived for many days the agonizing fears and uncertainties of 1914.
-
-I returned alone to find Bertrand breakfasting in bed.
-
-“You’ve asked me more than once what we’ve done to prevent another war,”
-he began. “Here’s your answer: nothing.”
-
-In the last week I had seen but a few provincial papers; I had almost
-forgotten the diplomatic moves that led to this check. With all the
-suddenness of those August days eight years before, however, I stepped
-out of the train at King’s Cross to learn that Great Britain was being
-left to fight, single-handed, for the freedom of the Straits, against a
-restored and rejuvenated Turkey.
-
-“This is the French reply to the Balfour note,” I said; “their revenge
-for our refusing to accompany them into the Ruhr.”
-
-“If you’ll be good enough to tell me what it’s all about . . .” Bertrand
-thundered; then he lay back, spent and very old, until I suggested
-calling in Fetter Lane to see the latest telegrams.
-
-There was nothing to be learned there; almost nothing to be learned when
-I invited myself to dine with the Crawleighs, though I remember this
-night with pleasure as the only one on which my father-in-law and I
-looked on any political problem with the same eyes. Halfway through
-dinner, Neave entered in service-uniform. His battalion had received its
-orders for Chanak; he did not know why he was going; we could not tell
-him.
-
-“Harington’s a cool-headed fellow,” said Crawleigh to keep his own
-courage up. “If he _can_ avoid a conflict . . .”
-
-I remembered the days eight years before when Jim Loring and I kept our
-courage up by telling each other that Sir Edward Grey would prevent war
-if war could be prevented.
-
-“I _still_ don’t understand,” muttered Lady Crawleigh, as though we were
-conspiring to keep some discreditable secret for her.
-
-“No one does, ma,” Neave snapped and then left his father to reach the
-same conclusion in less few words.
-
-War was again at our gates; and we had not willed it, we did not want
-it. Stalking across Europe from that country which had been most
-completely vanquished, it hammered at our gates within four years of the
-war that was to have ended war. Whenever in the last three years I had
-urged that the incorrigible and blighting Turk should be forced into the
-hinterland of Asia Minor, Crawleigh had annotated my articles with the
-red-ink comment that we should pay for a peaceful Europe with a hostile
-India. Now, though he knew better than most men that Mohammedan India
-was not bound to us by ties of love, we awoke to find that, while the
-victorious allies were quarrelling at a distance, Turkey had set herself
-quietly to recover all that she had lost in the war. When British troops
-went unsupported to uphold the Treaty of Sèvres, they were to find their
-old enemies equipped with the arms which we had shipped to Russia and
-restored to fighting form by officers of the French army.
-
-“But . . . but _why_ . . .?,” Lady Crawleigh kept repeating with
-pathetic helplessness.
-
-Parliament, as represented by Crawleigh, the services, as represented by
-his son, the press, as represented by me, were not allowed to know all
-that was involved in this apparently aimless squabble about distant
-waterways.
-
-“Nobody knows and nobody cares,” Neave cried in ungovernable
-exasperation.
-
-And this was all that I could report in answer to Bertrand’s request for
-news.
-
-“The first shot fires the magazine,” he predicted; “and we know from the
-Balkan wars that people can fight when they’ve no food and no money.
-Russia and Hungary will come in search of pickings. One will bring in
-another.” . . .
-
-For once, however, my uncle was at fault. The political instinct of a
-somnolent people was again expressed by my butler in his favourite
-formula that another European war would be beyond a joke.
-
-“If they can’t do better than that,” he decided, of the coalition
-ministers, “they’d better let some one else have a try.”
-
-I handed on this opinion to Bertrand next day, with the rider that he
-looked like winning an old bet on the life of the coalition. Before I
-went north again to bring Barbara back to London, the Lloyd-George
-government was under sentence; and, had Bertrand been at hand in October
-to claim his wager, I should have had to entertain him at dinner.
-
- 3
-
-Mindful of Lord Saltash’s invitation, I called without delay at the Turf
-and Stage to hear the latest movements of political parties. Now, as
-before, there was no one to turn the prime minister out if he could hold
-his cabinet together; now, as before, the insurgents were thrown into
-confusion by their cross-divisions. While Rupert Foreditch ran up and
-down in search of a conservative leader, the centre party counted its
-big guns.
-
-“_It is hard_,” the Lingfield press stated, “_to imagine a conservative
-administration without Lord Birkenhead, Sir Robert Horne and Mr.
-Chamberlain, all of whom, it is well known, have promised their
-allegiance to Mr. Lloyd-George_.”. . .
-
-“_Recent events in the near east_,” retorted the Wister papers, “_have
-signed the death-warrant of the coalition_.”. . .
-
-The organs of both parties combined to ignore the existence of liberal
-ministers; and I judged that the political wire-pullers on all sides
-were estimating whether the old but awkward conservative organization or
-the new but efficient coalition would be the harder to split.
-
-As I failed to see Saltash, I deduced that the tocsin was either not to
-ring yet or else had rung already in some other place; and my nearest
-approach to a party-manager was the trim and ill-informed Frank Jellaby,
-who demanded without preamble what line my paper would take in the
-election.
-
-“What line are the independent liberals taking?,” I asked in my turn.
-“And how many seats can you be sure of winning? I’d support the devil
-himself if he promised a homogeneous majority.”
-
-“_Our_ line . . .” he began eagerly; and, as I turned from the things he
-had forgotten to the things he had never learned, I classed him
-unhesitatingly with those who—in O’Rane’s phrase—would not admit that
-a war had taken place.
-
-“I suppose a political whip can’t live without an abnormal endowment of
-optimism,” I said, more to myself than to him.
-
-Jellaby forged ahead with growing enthusiasm. The local associations
-were solidly in support of the Asquith wing, solidly opposed to the
-Lloyd-George renegades. Much capital could be made out of the
-Safeguarding of Industries Bill (“which is pure protection; you’d have
-thought the tories had had enough protection in 1906”); more from the
-Black-and-Tan reprisals in Ireland; most of all from the unpopularity of
-the coalition.
-
-“But have you considered why it’s unpopular?,” I broke in at last. “Not
-because its policy is faintly protectionist—the electors to-day don’t
-care tuppence about free trade—; not because it tried to put down
-murder with more murder. What people care about is taxation and the cost
-of living and unemployment and, above all else, my dear Frank, security.
-We’re in sight of another and a bloodier war.”
-
-“With a man like Lloyd-George . . .,” he began with a kindling eye.
-
-I did not wait, however, for the end of the tirade. No one beyond
-Jellaby’s immediate circle of colleagues cared about the internecine
-feuds of exasperated factionaries; and I look back on this night as the
-time when so temperamental, congenital and impenitent a liberal as
-myself had to realize that there was at present no hope for liberalism
-in the liberal party. So far as the roar of his indignant rhetoric
-allowed me, I tried to formulate the demands of all who shared my own
-feeling of insecurity. The country was demoralized by the war and by the
-paralysis of government that followed it; instinctively the country
-wanted to be put into training, to have its muscles hardened and—still
-more—its nerves steadied. Though the heat of civil war had died down in
-Ireland, it had been replaced by the fitful blaze of individual
-assassination; the chief of the imperial general staff was done to death
-this summer on the steps of his house in London; the commander-in-chief
-of the Free State army was ambushed in Ireland. It was idle to bandy
-figures of murders and reprisals, when the country demanded a cure for
-its own demoralization.
-
-“People feel it’s time to pull up, take stock, overhaul,” I said. “It’s
-the spirit of 1914, when the war did for us what we could not do for
-ourselves.”
-
-“And that security is just what the liberal party offers,” said Jellaby.
-“Standing midway between a tory reaction and socialism . . .”
-
-“If you’re going to be the safe, middle party,” I interrupted, “go
-all-out for that. In 1918 you had no policy; you have no living policy
-now. The only thing you’ve learnt since 1914 is that you have a score to
-settle with the coalition-liberals. While you’re settling that, the
-country will look for a government that will tackle unemployment before
-the unemployed get out of hand, a government that doesn’t bring us as
-near war as we are to-night.”
-
-We argued inconclusively until the theatres emptied. As there was still
-no sign of Saltash, I judged that—in his favourite phrase—he must be
-troubling the waters to some purpose; and I was preparing to leave when
-Sam Dainton hurried up to demand why I had not yet patronized his
-cocktail-bar. He was followed—at an interval of time and space
-calculated to disarm the king’s proctor—by Ivy Gaymer, who told me that
-she expected her decree to be made absolute the following week.
-
-“These six months have been hell,” she cried viciously, as she danced
-away with Sam.
-
-Marking her difference of outlook and appearance since she first sought
-from me an introduction to journalism, I felt that we were threatened by
-a worse spirit than that of 1914 and that we stood in need of harder
-moral training. Ivy’s reputation was hanging by a thread; her fingers
-and Sam Dainton’s were itching equally to snap it.
-
-“A mad world,” I said, as I parted from Jellaby. “A mad world,” I
-repeated, two days later, when I went north to bring Barbara home. “A
-mad world face to face with its madness,” I thought to myself, on
-reading an announcement, sandwiched between news of now greater moment,
-that Mr. David O’Rane was withdrawing the funds of the Lancing Trust
-from England.
-
-On reaching Seymour Street I found a telephone-message from Sonia,
-begging me to see her at once. I replied that I would come; but, as I
-walked to Westminster that afternoon, I felt—as in the similar
-atmosphere of eight years before—that the individual had shrunk in
-importance. Barbara, shaken out of her usual aloofness, now only cared
-to know what chance of life I would give her brother; and, though I felt
-for Sonia as I should feel for a popular actress who married a country
-curate, I was mildly aggrieved that she should absorb my time when I
-wanted to explore the last frantic hopes of peace.
-
-The case which I prepared for O’Rane was, I fancy, not unpersuasive; but
-I had no chance of putting it forward. If the inheritance three years
-before had been a nine-days’-wonder, the news of the renunciation seemed
-likely to cause, in some quarters at least, a nine weeks’ consternation.
-I blundered into the wake of a deputation and entered the library in
-time to hear the venerable Bishop of Poplar pleading for men and women
-whom O’Rane had kept alive for more than two years. Thousands, the
-bishop asserted, were on the verge of starvation; before the winter,
-they would be reckoned by tens of thousands. While Mr. O’Rane’s
-arguments might be unassailable in normal times, the aftermath of an
-unprecedented war demanded abnormal remedies.
-
-“From half-a-dozen abnormally long purses?,” O’Rane enquired wearily. “I
-want _every one_ to give and _every one_ to feel it. If your few rich
-men go on strike, what will happen?”
-
-The bishop was too old a controversialist to be trapped:
-
-“You would like me to say that some one will come forward in their
-place. I wish I could believe it. When the pinch becomes unbearable, the
-government will provide relief out of the taxpayer’s pocket. But, before
-that relief comes, many people will be dead; there will be rioting
-. . .”
-
-“It’s a nice question already how long we can keep ’em sweet,”
-interposed an anxious voice on behalf of the National Unemployment
-Committee.
-
-“It’s a nice question whether you’ll get anything done till they turn
-nasty,” retorted a small man with a Cardiff accent.
-
-The bishop smiled and explained that, to make his deputation
-representative, he had included his friend Mr. Griffiths, with whose
-well-known bolshevist views we were no doubt already acquainted.
-
-“What would you think, Mr. O’Rane,” he continued, “if I threw the bread
-of London into the Thames on the plea that it would be better for the
-people to eat cake? You are pronouncing sentence of death on the weakest
-section of the community.”
-
-In the silence that followed I turned from O’Rane’s tortured eyes to the
-apostle of “bolshevism”. This was certainly my first, though not my
-last, meeting with the organizer and leader of “Griffiths’ Heroes”. I
-had expected a figure cast in the heroic mould, for there was a touch of
-the genius in the originality of his ideas and a hint of the commander
-in the obedience which he secured in carrying them out. Most strongly
-marked, however, was the fanatic; and his blended passion and cruelty
-made him something less than human. In thinking of him after all these
-months I am always reminded of an angry ferret. He was very small, very
-hirsute, very quick; though his eyes were brown, they seemed to shine
-red; and, as he looked scornfully round O’Rane’s warm library, I felt
-that his little teeth were seeking a hand to bite.
-
-“There’d be less talk of bolshevism, if people knew what they were
-talking about,” he announced with a bluntness that was in painful
-contrast to the bishop’s courtly patience. “The government says it
-doesn’t know what to do; let’s see if any one else does. When folk are
-starving, they know what to do.”
-
-There was a threat in his tone; but he did not explain it, as Sonia came
-in at this moment and motioned me into the corner by the tea-table.
-Griffiths, to the credit of his consistency, refused tea: the men whom
-he represented had been out of work for eleven months; he lived as they
-lived and, if need be, would starve as they starved.
-
-“We’re first on the list for looting, when the revolution comes,” she
-whispered cheerfully, while he examined her clothes as though he would
-have liked to strip her. Then, for a moment, she forgot to think of
-herself. “Oh, George! Babs has just telephoned for you. I’m so sorry,
-I’m afraid there’s bad news. Your uncle . . .” I stood up; but she
-pulled me back, as the deputation filed out. “She’s sending the car
-here; she thinks you ought to go to him at once. If there’s anything we
-can do . . .”
-
-I shook my head. At Bertrand’s age, there was little that any one could
-do.
-
-“Have you told Raney?,” I asked.
-
-“I hadn’t a chance. This deputation . . . Oh, David, what did you tell
-them?”
-
-O’Rane dropped into a chair and pressed his fists against his temples:
-
-“I said . . . I’d think the thing over. It was really out of politeness
-to the poor old bishop. Nothing can make any difference.”. . .
-
-“Even when everybody tells you you’re wrong? People simply won’t believe
-it. I had four reporters within half-an-hour.”
-
-“I don’t know what they want to worry us for,” he broke out. “What did
-you tell them?”
-
-Sonia weighed each word of her answer before launching it:
-
-“I said you hadn’t made up your mind. If you want to shew that you care
-for me . . .”
-
-O’Rane walked to her with his hands outstretched in an attitude of
-entreaty:
-
-“If this accursed money had never come to me, you couldn’t have said
-that.”
-
-The attitude of entreaty won no hint of yielding.
-
-“Of course, if you _won’t_ be warned . . .” Sonia muttered, as she
-walked with me to the door.
-
- 4
-
-As I got into the car, I was first frightened and then touched to find
-Barbara sitting half-hidden in her corner.
-
-“I’m afraid he’s very bad,” she whispered. “It’s not a stroke this time;
-but something’s broken inside him and he’s had terrible hæmorrhages. If
-he has another . . . I’m so sorry, George.”
-
-“It was good of you to come.”
-
-In the darkness I heard a sigh; and Barbara laid her hand on mine:
-
-“We’ve always been good friends, even if we _have_ made rather a mess of
-our lives.” . . .
-
-I could not hear what she said after that, for I had been caught
-unprepared by Sonia and was realizing now for the first time that it was
-a toss-up whether I saw Bertrand alive. My uncle was a man of almost
-fifty when I was born. For ten years I was frightened out of my wits by
-his huge stature and bellowing voice; for another ten I was humiliated
-by his brutal jests and blasting disparagement; then, as a young man, I
-rose in exasperation and trounced him till he roared with delight at my
-beating. From that unlikely beginning sprang a friendship in which
-Bertrand played the part of father, elder brother, political mentor and
-fellow-conspirator in my most impressionable years.
-
-“I . . simply can’t imagine life without Bertrand,” I told Barbara.
-
-“If you want me . . .”, she whispered.
-
-Did even she know how the sentence would have ended? I was stunned by
-the thought of losing Bertrand; I clutched at any one who would take his
-place, clutching literally with both my hands about Barbara’s wrists.
-And she, for the first time in my acquaintance, was frightened.
-
-“Does this mean . . .?,” I began.
-
-“I won’t come into his room, of course,” she continued, in a superb
-recovery. “If you want me to fetch some one for a second opinion . . .”
-
-“Does this mean that we’re going to make a new start?,” I persisted.
-
-“I’ll do all I _can_ . . .”
-
-Though it was Bertrand’s imminent death that broke my self-control, I
-forgot him and forgot that we were driving to his death-bed:
-
-“The only good you can do is to tell me this ghastly farce is played
-out! Two years!”
-
-“We all make mistakes,” she answered with composure, though she had
-winced at that word “farce”. “I can’t help you _much_. In these two
-years I’ve grown used to doing without love. I’ve lost everything,
-thrown everything away.” The silence that followed seemed to daunt her;
-and I felt my hand being pressed. “You know as well as I do all you’ve
-done for me. I’ll be your wife, I’ll bear you children if I can; but I
-can’t give you a love I don’t feel.”
-
-As though I had stepped aside, I saw myself lurching forward to demand
-satisfaction for the unuttered reproaches and contemptuous suspicions
-that had masqueraded so long as patience.
-
-“Did you ever feel it?,” I heard myself asking. “Have you _ever_ loved
-_any one_? You’ve been curious about many people; but it’s always been
-in your head and not in your heart.”
-
-“I don’t let _myself_ off!,” she moaned.
-
-“I wonder! You have tragic scenes; but, when other people are broken,
-you survive. If your heart had been brought into the play . . .”
-
-I broke off in stark horror. Never before had we held such language; and
-we were almost within earshot of Bertrand. Barbara was dumbfoundered at
-first; then she rallied and threw herself into the duel as though I were
-at last giving her an opportunity of which she had been unfairly
-deprived ever since our marriage.
-
-“I never pretended to be in love with you,” she taunted me.
-
-“You’ve never been in love with any one. If you’d ever known the meaning
-of the word, you wouldn’t have married me on those terms.”
-
-Barbara turned away and covered her face with her hands.
-
-“That’s the way Eric said good-bye to me!,” she gasped. “George, I asked
-you to divorce me two years ago.”
-
-“And I wanted to make sure, for your sake. Well, let’s face reality for
-once! Imagine me to be dead.” . . .
-
-With another unexpected turn, Barbara clung to me convulsively and laid
-her hand over my mouth:
-
-“Don’t talk of death!,” she whispered. “I’m so frightened of it! And
-it’s very near at hand now. I’ve been ill so often, I’ve had to fight it
-so often. My dear, my dear, if I ever heard you were ill, it would bring
-back all my love: I’d nurse you; I’d shew you I _could_ sacrifice
-myself. Never say that again!,” she cried hysterically.
-
-My fit of bitterness passed as quickly as it had come; and I tried to
-apologize. Then it returned; and I asked myself whether this talk of
-“sacrifice” meant more than that Barbara was living, as ever, in a world
-of emotional romance. Then the car stopped; and I stumbled up the steps
-of my uncle’s house.
-
-In the hall Violet Loring told me there had been no further hæmorrhages.
-Only a few more hours of life could be expected, however; and this
-Bertrand realized.
-
-“I didn’t bother you before,” he began in his normal voice, “because I
-didn’t know whether I was going to live or die. I’m going to die, it
-seems; and I can tell you, George, it’s the most interesting experience
-I’ve ever had.”
-
-His grim chuckles rumbled till the vast Victorian brass-bed creaked.
-Involuntarily Violet shivered; but I felt that the last and least
-service I could do was to make my mood chime with my uncle’s.
-
-“I’m glad I’m in time to thank you, Bertrand,” I said. “You’ve been my
-best friend ever since we first set up house here together, nearly
-twenty years ago.”
-
-Though I knew the room of old, I was struck for the first time by the
-uncouth masculinity of a vanished era.
-
-“Odd business,” he grunted. “I always dropped a generation. I’m your
-_great_-uncle; but I always put you in your father’s place. You’ve kept
-me young. . . . And now this is the end, the moment we wait for all our
-lives. The heart’s weak, thank goodness, so I shan’t make a fight; but I
-swear to you I expect to wake up again to-morrow morning! I’m not afraid
-of going out, but I can’t believe it. That’s why people persist in
-fabricating a future life. I’ll tell you one thing, George, that’ll
-comfort you: death’s only a terrible thing if it comes before you’re
-ready, and you’re only ready when you’re worn out. That was the terrible
-part of the war.” The leonine head turned with an effort that left him
-breathless. “Violet my dear, I bow humbly at the thought of boys like
-Jim who were killed before they had time to find the grasshopper a
-burden. I can’t believe I shan’t wake up to-morrow, but I don’t want to
-. . . here or anywhere. A silly old woman of a parson came here
-yesterday. . . . It cost me a hæmorrhage to get rid of him. Good God,
-I’ve outgrown _that_ phase! Life eternal. . . . I’m much more interested
-in the brief life that is our portion here. I’ve had nigh on a century
-of it; and I know less about it than I did when I was born.”
-
-He paused as the nurse came in to say that O’Rane was waiting
-downstairs.
-
-“Good of the boy,” he murmured. “Ask him to come up.” Then his eyes
-shone with their last gleam of mischief:
-
-“‘_Never seen death yet, Dickie? . . . Well, now is your time to
-learn!_’”
-
- 5
-
-The fit of coughing that followed caused my uncle to examine himself for
-injuries. The nurse made signs to Violet, who slipped noiselessly from
-the room; O’Rane came in, and I guided him to the bedside. Bertrand
-shook hands with difficulty; and his heavy eyes lightened.
-
-“You’re another of them,” he panted. “Always think of your father when I
-see you. I wonder what he’d have made of it all if he’d lived. . . .
-George there?”
-
-“I’m here,” I answered, as I pulled a chair to the bedside.
-
-“I’ve been thinking over what you said the other day about our
-prototypes in history. Triskett’s great-grandfather firing on the
-Versailles mob just to see what would happen. . . . I’ve known a good
-few historic figures: O’Connell; Mazzini; Lassalle. The great
-unspeakables. I believe I went to them for fear of being told by boys
-like you that I and my spiritual forefathers had been on the wrong side.
-Dam’ conceit! I hope I’ve outgrown that phase now; but, when that ass
-Crawleigh spluttered about rounding up conscientious objectors in the
-war, I felt that his ancestors had burnt heretics. Your friend Maitland
-sentenced a man to the cat the other day: he said it was the only remedy
-for crimes of violence. I asked him why he didn’t break the fellow on a
-wheel, as his forebears had done. Damn it, I gave up shooting for fear
-of finding myself in the same dock as the old cock-fighters. Conceit, if
-you like. I’ve been a radical because I couldn’t let posterity charge me
-with the savagery and intolerance which we throw up against our
-conservative predecessors. Time was on my side. I recorded my protest.
-What _good_ it’s done . . .? That’s why you’d better keep the paper on,
-George. It’ll shew the next generation how superior you were to this.”
-
-The advice was rounded with a cynical, deep chuckle; and he lay long
-without speaking.
-
-“The world’s a gentler place than when you were a boy, sir,” O’Rane put
-in.
-
-Bertrand looked at him in silence for a moment and then shook his head
-slowly:
-
-“You say that, with your experience of the late war? _Does_ human nature
-change? . . . We shan’t have that dinner, George, but I wasn’t far out
-in my date. The present government is falling to pieces.”
-
-“And what’s going to take its place?,” I asked.
-
-Bertrand ruminated in silence for some time; then his face lighted for
-the last time in a reflective smile:
-
-“A restoration government! We’ve given a million men and heaven knows
-how many thousand million pounds to keep things . . . _just as they
-were_. Nurse says we’re shipping troops again to the Straits: to defend
-the graves we’ve already filled there, I suppose. In ten years the great
-powers will be balanced as they were ten years ago; there’ll be the same
-competition in armaments, the same scares, ultimately the same universal
-war . . . on a vastly different scale. At home we’ve fallen back into
-our old social and financial grooves.” Bertrand’s eyes turned fixedly to
-the ceiling in a strained effort of concentration. He was speaking very
-slowly now and studying his articulation. “We’re . . . going on . . .
-from 1914 . . . without break of thought . . . or mend of heart.”
-
-As he paused, O’Rane stood up and walked cautiously to the bed.
-
-“I’ll leave you now, sir, unless you want me,” he said. “I expect you’d
-like to talk to George. I . . . want to thank you.” . . .
-
-“You’ve nothing to thank me for. Don’t go unless I’m depressing you.”
-
-“It’s not encouraging,” O’Rane laughed. “You remember Anatole France’s
-story of the woman who tried to save her lover in the Terror? She gave
-herself to one of the judges and was told afterwards that she had . . .
-rather misunderstood his assurances. _On fera le nécessaire_, yes; but
-what then? ‘_Je t’ai dit, citoyenne, qu’on ferait le nécessaire,
-c’est-à-dire qu’on appliquerait la loi, rien de plus, rien de moins_.’
-Most unfortunate misunderstanding! ‘_Elle sentit aussitôt_’,” he quoted
-slowly, “‘_qu’elle avait fait_ . . . _un sacrifice inutile_’.”
-
-As Bertrand looked from O’Rane’s scarred hands to his sightless eyes, I
-saw that he had no answer ready. I do not know what answer either of us
-could have given such a man at such a moment.
-
-Until the nurse came in with the doctor, my uncle lay silent and, I
-think, half-asleep. Towards midnight he roused with a start and seemed
-at a loss to explain why we were there. Then he remembered that he was
-dying; and, with the slow effort of failing strength, one hand was
-dragged painfully from under the bed-clothes. I led O’Rane to him and
-then shook hands myself.
-
-“That place of yours . . .” he muttered.
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“Lake House. I heard you were selling it. Don’t . . . unless you must. I
-was brought up there. Your grandfather and I . . . You’re too young to
-remember the orangery . . . When I was twenty, our nearest neighbour was
-a girl called Cathleen Nolan . . .” He paused for breath, and I tried to
-find out if he wanted to send her a message. “She’s been dead for more
-than sixty years,” said Bertrand with a twisted smile.
-
-If that was his romance, he could tell me no more of it; and the smile
-gave place to a quick contortion of pain. I sent O’Rane for the nurse;
-but, before he reached the door, my uncle gave one long sigh and the
-slight movement of his breathing ended.
-
-O’Rane carried the news to Barbara and with it a note to say that I
-should stay at Princes Gardens until the funeral. On the heels of the
-first letter I sent a second to beg her forgiveness for my mad words in
-the car. She replied that she had forgotten everything.
-
-
-
-
- PART THREE
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
-
-
- TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW . . .
-
-
- . . . In the dark there careers—
- As if Death astride came
- To numb all with his knock—
- A horse at mad rate
- Over rut and stone.
-
- No figure appears,
- No call of my name,
- No sound but “Tic-toc”
- Without check. Past the gate
- It clatters—is gone. . . .
-
- Maybe that “More Tears!—
- More Famine and Flame—
- More Severance and Shock!”
- Is the order from Fate
- That the Rider speeds on
- To pale Europe; and tiredly the pines intone.
-
- THOMAS HARDY: _A New Year’s Eve in War Time._
-
- 1
-
-The days that followed my uncle’s death stand out in my memory as a
-vivid and wholly disconnected dream between two normal periods of
-waking-life. At one moment I was living in the midst of vast,
-conflicting noises; there followed complete calm, during which I was
-indeed as busy as ever—as busy as one seems to be in a dream—; then
-the tumult broke out afresh. Though nothing had in fact been suspended,
-though nothing had greatly progressed in my short spell of
-unconsciousness, I felt at the time that I had two personalities, one on
-either bank of the dividing stream.
-
- 2
-
-I believe Bertrand’s death saved my life or at least my reason. I
-remember feeling almost bitterly that I could not support his illness in
-addition to my work for our paper, the hourly exasperation of my life at
-home and the storm of calamities that were bursting on us from the four
-corners of heaven at the same moment. The shock of losing him gave me
-the break I needed. When I awoke in an unfamiliar bed, I recalled that
-we were overshadowed by a new war, that a general election was imminent
-and that unemployment was a problem which we could not solve “by pulling
-long faces”. Then I recollected the venomous, red-eyed author of that
-phrase; and the scene in O’Rane’s library was flashed on my brain like a
-scene in a film. I remembered Sonia’s jejune sympathy. I remembered
-finding Barbara in the car. I wondered dully how we stood after that
-bitter, mad outpouring; and, despite her note, I was thankful that we
-should not meet for a few days. Then I realized that for a few days I
-should have a respite enforced: from the paper, from war and
-unemployment, from everything that seemed at the moment more than I
-could bear.
-
-My first duty was to arrange for the memorial service at St. Margaret’s;
-and, as I watched the congregation arriving, I felt that the respite was
-extending, for an hour, to all of us. The obituary notices, the memoir
-which I was writing for one of the quarterly reviews, most of all this
-solemn tribute to a man, perhaps great, of an undeniably great past
-turned our thoughts backward to a time when France lived under a
-citizen-king and disunited Germany declaimed ineffectually at Frankfurt.
-Of the two former prime ministers who attended the service, both were
-hardly more than boys when my uncle first entered the House; the oldest
-head of a foreign mission had found “old Bertrand Oakleigh” an
-established institution when he was first accredited to the Court of St.
-James; and the journalists, the lawyers, the men of business, the bees
-and butterflies of society who moved sombrely to their places could not
-remember a time when the truculent Johnsonian figure had not been one of
-the familiar sights of London.
-
-“A great landmark gone,” whispered Dainton, as I waited for Barbara to
-arrive with the Crawleighs. “I didn’t always agree with him. Indeed, if
-you took a poll of the people here he _hadn’t_ quarrelled with . . .”
-
-I turned to watch the cars emptying and the new arrivals dodging or
-seeking out the reporters. My mother had come over from Cannes; my
-sister and her husband, Violet Loring and Laurence represented the
-family; and, if we had all tingled from the old man’s lash, that was
-long ago and inextricably in the part he chose to play. The older
-generation in the House of Commons and the younger generation in Fleet
-Street—men who won his respect by standing squarely up to him—came
-unurged to prove their regard for his fighting qualities and his
-generosity.
-
-“I deplore his politics,” said Crawleigh, “but he was a great public
-servant.”
-
-At such a time I refrained from suggesting that Crawleigh’s father had
-deplored the politics of Bright and Cobden. It is one curse of the
-party-system that an opponent must be dead before we admit that he may
-possibly not be damned. I was brought up to regard Lord Salisbury as a
-monster wherewith to frighten naughty children; my father, if he had
-been required to expose the Antichrist, would have pointed his finger
-unhesitatingly at Lord Beacons field.
-
-I thought over Crawleigh’s belated tribute as I took Barbara to our
-places. This imminent election might purge the House of those to whom
-the war—as Saltash told me frankly—had come as a god-send; but, if the
-adventurers into public life were not sent back to their counting-houses
-and newspaper-offices and bucket-shops, I feared that, with Bertrand,
-there would die an unparalleled tradition of integrity and devotion. My
-uncle had prepared himself for politics by half a lifetime of study, as
-Gladstone and Salisbury, Morley and Rosebery prepared themselves; of the
-men under thirty who entered the House with me in 1906, hardly one had
-not tried to equip himself by travel, by settlement-work, by experience
-in business or by the management of an estate. There seemed to be fewer
-servants of the public in 1918.
-
-“If he had scoffed less,” said Lady Dainton, “he would have done more.”
-
-I agreed privately, though I think his cynicism covered a disappointment
-of soul: he had come to England, as a brilliant, ambitious and sanguine
-boy, to reform the world; and the sluggish-witted, slow-speaking English
-had worn him down. To begin as an O’Connell and to end as “a great
-public servant” would have roused him to savage merriment.
-
-“How he would have despised all this!,” I whispered to Barbara, as the
-people whom he would not admit to his house hurried importantly into the
-more prominent seats.
-
-Ministers of the present and past, divines and pressmen, authors and
-diplomats poured in till every place seemed to be taken. A crowd began
-to collect at the doors; there was rather more noise than I thought
-seemly; and I was glad when the organ began to play.
-
-Sixty years of public life. I was trying to remember whether Bertrand
-had known Westminster before the new Houses of Parliament were built,
-when Spence-Atkins, who was acting as an usher, touched my arm and asked
-if we had room in our pew for two more. I made way for Sonia, who
-crushed past me with scarlet cheeks, and for O’Rane, who allowed himself
-to be guided by a verger. His face, I thought, was white and set, with a
-suppressed anger which I had seen more often at school than in later
-years. I asked if anything was amiss; but he would only reply
-“Afterwards.” Then I relapsed into the past and forgot my surroundings
-until the last notes of the Dead March throbbed into silence.
-
-Outside I was surrounded by sympathetic friends; but, in the complete
-detachment of my anæsthesia, I was thinking only that I had time to see
-my solicitors before luncheon, when I found Sonia the centre of an
-agitated little group which O’Rane was trying alternately to soothe and
-to disperse.
-
-“No, I insist on telling George,” she proclaimed. “Did you hear what
-happened when we arrived? I don’t like being called a murderer!”
-
-The word—and, still more, the tone in which it was uttered—disturbed
-my dream of past days.
-
-“Who . . .?” I began.
-
-Then O’Rane, with mounting irritation as some queer sense warned him
-that a crowd was collecting, felt for my arm and led me away.
-
-“We don’t want a scene,” he whispered. “I’m sorry, George: I wouldn’t
-have come if I’d thought for a moment. . . . Our excellent friendship
-the Bishop of Poplar is unintentionally at the bottom of this. You
-remember his saying something about my condemning innocent people to
-death if I stopped the money I’ve been giving him the last few years?
-Well, that’s been taken up by Griffiths’ gang. We’ve had sandwichmen
-patrolling The Sanctuary all this week: O’RANE’S SENTENCE OF DEATH or
-something of the kind. I didn’t care; I wasn’t going to be blackmailed.
-Then, to-day, one of the reporters at the door asked my name; and
-somebody in the crowd overheard it. A few idiots thought it would be
-amusing to shout ‘murderer’. . . . Where’s Sonia? It’s time we got
-back.”
-
-As I led him to his wife, I observed that her cheeks were no longer
-flushed; she looked, indeed, unpleasantly scared, and her eyes were
-fixed on the avenue of loiterers between whom she must pass on her way
-home.
-
-“We’ll drop you,” Barbara suggested, with a quick movement towards the
-car.
-
-Sonia hurried gratefully to her side.
-
-“Thanks, Babs, I’ll walk,” said O’Rane obstinately.
-
-“Then I’ll walk with you,” I said. “This business is frightening your
-wife,” I added when we were alone. “Why don’t you tell the police to
-clear these sandwichmen away?”
-
-“I really haven’t had time. This is going to be the worst winter of all,
-George; we must raise every penny we can.” His lip curled contemptuously
-at the booing which greeted us in Palace Yard. “I’m free to beg now; if
-people want to know what I’m doing myself, I can say I’m giving every
-last shilling I can spare and they must do the same. We’re _all_
-responsible for relieving this distress; it’s part of the war, and we
-must volunteer as freely as we volunteered in ’14. And, if that doesn’t
-bring the money, we must try other means. The smug, secure people were
-glad enough to have conscription of men. Their money’s less than a man’s
-life; we must have conscription of wealth if they won’t volunteer. If it
-amuses the people I’m working for to call me murderer . . . Will you
-come in?” he asked, as we reached The Sanctuary.
-
-“I’m already overdue at my solicitors’,” I answered, though I made time
-to call at the Admiralty on my way to the City.
-
-I thought that Philip Hornbeck, who amassed “intelligence” of all kinds,
-should have a first-hand account of this ugly little scene; and I wanted
-to hear his opinion of Griffiths. Though he promised to keep on eye open
-for the O’Ranes, he clearly considered the temper of the country less
-dangerous than in the big strikes after the war. The unemployed were
-numerous enough, but they were kept scattered; Griffiths had the ability
-and the will to make mischief, but he was disowned by the official
-labour-leaders.
-
-“The people of this country have no experience in revolutions,” said
-Hornbeck. “When you have a riot, it’s always the rioters who need
-police-protection.”
-
- 3
-
-The tumult, which had seemed to be so mysteriously suspended, broke out
-anew on the day when I sent my memoir of Bertrand to the printers and
-walked out of Princes Gardens into the traffic of Knightsbridge.
-Clamorous contents-bills at the street-corners reminded me that I was
-come back to a world where new wars were imminent; the Guards had sailed
-for Chanak; a general election could no longer be averted.
-
-My ultimate duty to Bertrand was fulfilled when I persuaded my staff to
-carry out his last wishes for _Peace_. Though he mocked the empty
-conceits of recording protests and demonstrating moral superiority, he
-was not scheming to stand well with enlightened posterity when he lay
-murmuring: “_Un sacrifice inutile? Un sacrifice inutile?_” O’Rane’s
-question was an affront to him; he was wishing himself fifty years
-younger, to make an answer that would satisfy him; and we must take up
-the burden which his hands could no longer hold.
-
-As soon as I had their promise of support, I left my colleagues and set
-out for Berkeley Square to learn the secret history of the
-long-threatened conservative revolt.
-
-This menace of war had done what the grotesque treaty of Versailles, the
-organized anarchy in Ireland, the paralysis of government in every limb
-had so far failed to do. Others, besides my butler, were saying that the
-long record of misrule was beyond a joke; and the party-managers, in
-concert with the independent wire-pullers who were now an established
-part of our public life, had decided to wreck the coalition. ‘Blob’
-Wister had already spoken; and Saltash told me that Woburn and the Press
-Combine would speak next day.
-
-I found my father-in-law engaged on a letter to _The Times_, protesting
-against the exclusion of peers from the Carlton Club meeting; and for a
-long spell he reiterated like a sulky child that he could tell me
-nothing because he was allowed to know nothing. Then he relaxed and
-informed me that the fight was taking place over foreign policy in
-general and, in particular, over the prime minister’s dictatorial habit
-of conducting his foreign relationships through his own secretariat over
-the head of the Foreign Office.
-
-“If I’d been Curzon, I’d have thrown the whole thing up years ago,” said
-Crawleigh with that eagerness for resignation so often exhibited by men
-who have not been invited to hold cabinet office.
-
-“He may feel he’s more useful as a brake on the prime minister,” I
-suggested.
-
-“If the prime minister goes, the foreign secretary must follow . . .
-unless he precedes him, when he sees how the cat’s jumping,” said
-Crawleigh with ill-concealed malice. “Well, it’s quite simple;
-Chamberlain has pledged himself to support the coalition; Birkenhead and
-Horne are with him; and the rump is meeting to see if it can overthrow
-Chamberlain.”
-
-“Who’s to be put in Chamberlain’s place?,” I asked.
-
-“No one knows yet. No one has the least idea how the meeting will turn
-out. If I were in the confidence of my party . . . Nowadays the unhappy
-accident of being a peer . . .”
-
-Feeling that I should hear no more, I drifted to the Turf and Stage,
-where Frank Jellaby thickened the mist in which Crawleigh had enveloped
-the Carlton Club. After a denunciation of the coalition-liberals which
-reminded me of Cato’s punctual fulminations against Carthage, he
-explained that the new crisis had been engineered by ‘Blob’ Wister and
-that its outcome depended on Wister’s success in finding a leader:
-
-“He had no difficulty in persuading people like Dean and Lingfield to
-come out for an all-tory government when his papers were marching ahead
-to cover their advance. If he can get Bonar Law to stampede the meeting
-. . .”
-
-“I hear Lingfield and the rest of George’s tory ministers are swearing
-allegiance to him with one hand,” I said, “and writing him letters of
-resignation with the other.”
-
-“_They_ don’t know anything . . . except that some of them will be badly
-left.”
-
-“But no one,” I encouraged him, “will be left quite so completely as
-your coalition-liberal friends.”
-
-Jellaby’s face darkened:
-
-“They sold the pass in ’16, they’ve had their reward; if there were
-another pass to sell, they’d sell it; and they mustn’t complain if they
-can’t find one.”
-
-“You won’t join forces,” I asked, “to keep the tories out?”
-
-“After 1916 I could never trust a coaly-lib again,” he answered. “Now,
-if your paper would help us into a position where we could hold the
-balance . . .”
-
-“That,” I said, “is simply overturning one coalition to make way for
-another. And you’ve no more programme to-day than you had in 1918, when
-you let Ll-G.’s mad promises pass without a protest. We’re paying for
-your silence to-day, at Chanak and wherever the French can hit us.”
-
-Before Jellaby had time to answer, we were hurried one stage farther
-along the ever unfinished road of contemporary politics. Lord Saltash,
-whom I had observed moving from table to table with the manner of a
-conspirator rather far gone in wine, raised his eyebrows suddenly as
-‘Blob’ Wister hacked his way across the dancing-floor. There was a quick
-nod; and Saltash lurched towards the telephone-boxes, only pausing to
-whisper thickly in my ear:
-
-“He’s going! Bonar, I mean. Meeting to-morrow.”
-
-“Are you betting on the result?” I asked.
-
-“He’s not coming back politics sake being losing side,” Saltash answered
-telegraphically, laying a squat index-finger against one side of his
-nose. “Last kick dying lion. Wash-out George. Number up.”
-
-Jellaby was silent for a few minutes; then he smiled as one who had
-waited patiently by the mills of the gods.
-
-“Had Zimri peace, who slew his master?,” he demanded at large.
-
-“This is the end of the liberal party for a generation,” I said; which
-was not the answer expected of me.
-
-And then I stood up to say good-by. There is little difference of age
-between Jellaby and myself; but he has been nurtured more strictly on
-the official hatreds of a whips’ office. I was born and bred a liberal,
-whereas Jellaby embraced that faith as he embraced agnosticism, the
-poetry of Arthur Hugh Clough, the painting of Manet, the æsthetics of
-Pater and, for a time, total abstinence. They were all fashionable among
-the members of one coterie at Balliol in his day.
-
-“For some years . . .” he conceded with regretful solemnity.
-
-“And,” I pursued, “what happens to liberalism, which is more important
-to me than the liberal party?”
-
-Jellaby had no answer ready; and, if he had not been my host, I should
-have asked him whether a liberal whips’ office cared for these things.
-
-Next day the conservative wing of the coalition seceded, after a brief
-debate, on the strength of a single, brief speech. The prime minister
-resigned; and the king invited Mr. Bonar Law to form a government. As
-soon as the conservative party had accepted its new leader, the date of
-the election was announced. Those of my friends who were nursing
-constituencies became, of a sudden, very important and excited; I
-received invitations to speak from people who must have forgotten, if
-they ever knew, how bad a speaker I am; wagers were offered freely; and
-all parties predicted confidently that they would return with increased
-numbers.
-
-I spent much time at the Eclectic Club in these days, wondering what
-line my paper should follow in the election. No new policy was being put
-forward; and, if the old policy stood condemned, I did not understand
-why ministers who were responsible for it were kept in office. Nor, at a
-season when everybody speculated how long the patience of the unemployed
-would endure, did I understand why the order of the county was entrusted
-to a man who had preached the sacred right of rebellion so few years
-before in Ulster. I wondered, too, what would happen to the floating
-wreckage of the coalition; and, more bitterly than ever before, I missed
-old Bertrand’s caustic humour in the hours when he sat with me here in a
-window of the smoking-room, defaming the passers-by and pretending that
-we were studying trends of opinion and “the great movement of men”.
-
-He it was who said that politics were desocialized when Mr. Asquith left
-Downing Street. For six years the political stage had been occupied by
-statesmen, demagogues, shy scholars, blatant adventurers,
-advertising-agents, unemployed millionaires, newspaper-proprietors,
-dukes, international Jews and merchant-princes. Cabinet control had been
-replaced by the personal domination of one man who miraculously held
-this heterogeneous company together; considered policy had yielded to a
-succession of brilliant and incongruous improvisations. On no day could
-an outsider foretell who next would pull a wire; and, as I looked round
-the crowded rooms of the Eclectic, I wondered what all these long-faced,
-out-of-work pressmen and financiers, these confidential secretaries and
-hangers-on would now do for a living or a career.
-
-Then, as the ministry was completed and the first election-addresses
-appeared, I recalled Bertrand’s last verdict.
-
-“_Without break of thought or mend of heart . . ._”
-
-_Were_ we going on from 1914? Had the war, in which most of my
-generation perished, really achieved nothing?
-
- 4
-
-As we slid noiselessly into the least passionate general election of my
-experience, I wondered whether we were going on from anything so good
-even as 1914. If the German peril was at an end, no man could say what
-new trouble might come out of the east, when demoralized Russia and
-Austria joined hands with resentful Turkey and Prussia. The mark had
-collapsed; and, unless it could be rehabilitated, the trade of central
-Europe must come to a standstill.
-
-After that, it was a toss-up whether famine or revolution came first.
-Against this tidal wave of hunger, disease and the reckless savagery of
-hopeless millions, the only powers with strength and means to build a
-rampart were France, America and Great Britain.
-
-If Lucien de Grammont and Clifford van Oss fairly represented the first
-two, the simple faith of the French—embodied in M. Clemenceau—was
-being betrayed by every one else at the very moment when M. Clemenceau
-was betraying the simple faith of President Wilson. Recalling that the
-world was to have been made safe for democracy, I wondered if another
-war must be fought before democracy was made safe for the world.
-According to one or other of us, it was the greed and bad faith of Great
-Britain, America and France which was wholly and solely responsible for
-our present perils.
-
-In these days of misgiving the most persistent optimist of my
-acquaintance was my father-in-law. To him—in common with most of my
-conservative friends—public life had been a bad dream from the moment
-when Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman and his _sansculottes_ usurped power.
-Crawleigh was genuinely convinced that all electors, at all times and in
-all places, were conservative born and bred; and, to him, a liberal
-victory could only come by low cunning. Now that the spell had been
-broken, he looked forward to “going on from 1906”; and, in listening to
-him, I understood, as Saltash had never made me understand, the
-all-conservative movement in the late coalition, the Carlton Club
-meeting and the loathing of the party for those who still tried to keep
-it in bondage to its old associates. So a Bourbon might have felt
-towards a legitimist who took office under Napoleon.
-
-Sir Roger Dainton, when I dined with him on the night after the polling,
-was even more outspoken. Some one had taught him the word “impeachment”;
-and he was for impeaching the fallen members of the old cabinet as
-light-heartedly as his wife, in other days, had consigned “agitators” to
-the nearest firing-party.
-
-“You think there are further depths they can still reach?,” I asked. The
-brush of a professional moralist would be needed to paint the difference
-between this election and the last, between the power of a prime
-minister in being and that of the member for Carnarvon Boroughs. “Come
-and see the results.”
-
-By its rules the Eclectic Club is constituted a “place of social
-intercourse for officers and gentlemen, irrespective of politics”. Any
-demonstration, other than occasional groans when a labour victory was
-announced, would have been ill-received; but I was struck chiefly by the
-absence of all desire to demonstrate except when objects of personal
-venom appeared at the bottom of the poll. Dainton thumped my back with
-furtive violence when two rich and rather questionable private
-secretaries, from his own party, were at last “put out of harm’s way”,
-as he expressed it; and Jellaby became almost hysterical as one
-coalition-liberal after another was edged into the cold; but it was left
-to my father-in-law to express the rapture of his associates in a series
-of satisfied grunts. Without looking at the board, I could recognize a
-conservative gain by Crawleigh’s long “A-a-ah!”
-
-“The entry of the first French troops into their recovered provinces,” I
-murmured to Jellaby.
-
-“And yet . . . they don’t seem as much pleased about it as I should have
-expected.”
-
-“Perhaps these fellows feel that it’s the same board, the same problem,
-and that it becomes no easier by a shuffle of the pieces. Perhaps
-they’re wondering what more they can do than the coalition to prevent a
-world-revolution or a new world-war.”
-
-Jellaby looked contemptuously at the lengthening tale of ministerial
-successes:
-
-“Perhaps they realize that these results don’t represent the true
-strength of parties.”
-
-“You mean it’s a moral victory for you?,” I asked. “I said the same
-thing to you when I was beaten at Cranborne in 1910. With respect I
-think the feeling of the country is admirably represented in this club
-to-night: nobody cares.”
-
-With that I left him. Seven men, I think, said good-night to me as I
-crossed the hall; six of them added: “Well, thank God _that’s_ over.”
-
-There was a further spasm of excitement as the new parliament met; and
-for me, though I was preoccupied with Barbara’s return, a stab of regret
-when the liberal party had to surrender its historic claim to lead the
-opposition. Then one of the shortest sessions on record opened and
-closed; the foreign secretary set out for Lausanne to find an escape
-from the threatened war in the near east; and the country gave its
-undivided attention to the most popular murder-trial of the year.
-
-Save for a moment after Bertrand’s memorial service, I had not been
-alone with Barbara since our scene in the car. I fancied that she was
-hardly less embarrassed than I was, though she talked easily enough of
-her plans for being painted by Edmund Wace and of my work on Bertrand’s
-papers. We both felt that nothing could be quite the same after that
-explosion; but I at least had no idea what she wanted.
-
-“There was a touch of brutality about your uncle,” she said after dinner
-the first night, in criticism of my sketch. “I’m not sure that you bring
-it out. Any one who disagreed with him was treated with such obvious
-contempt.”
-
-“Unless he happened to like the person,” I said. “I can’t imagine a
-single point on which he agreed with you or Violet or Amy, but he was
-devoted to you all. On the other hand, I’ve heard him trouncing poor
-Sonia for holding exactly the same views, simply because he thought her
-second-rate.”
-
-“He thought all women second-rate. So do you, George,” she rejoined
-without malice.
-
-So sweeping a misstatement I could not allow to pass unchallenged.
-
-“I’ll leave you out for fear of embarrassing you . . .,” I began.
-
-Barbara laughed sadly and turned, with a shrug, to the fire:
-
-“No, my dear, you’re leaving me out because you despise me. Not
-_cruelly_, but just in the Oakleigh way: as a tolerant Turk would
-despise me. In your eyes, we’ve never grown up; and sometimes you shew
-us the tenderness you’d shew to a child. You think we’re creatures
-who’ve failed to be men; you don’t imagine that we’ve never tried to be
-men. . . . You smile benignly on our little foibles and follies and
-frailties just as I smile at a kitten chasing its own tail. ‘Kittens
-will be kittens,’ I say; ‘women will be women,’ you murmur to yourself.”
-
-“The trouble is that you speak the same language . . .”
-
-“But we don’t think the same thoughts. D’you remember my telling you I’d
-forgotten certain things you’d said?”
-
-As her eyes turned slowly to meet mine, I thought I could see a gentle
-new light of friendship.
-
-“I wished at the time you’d said you had forgiven them,” I answered.
-
-“There was nothing to forgive. You were right, from your point of view.
-May I speak of it?”
-
-“If it will help us.”
-
-Barbara turned once more to the fire and sat with her cheek resting
-against her hand:
-
-“It’s just two years since Eric died. You think I’m not in love with him
-and never was. Well, I’m not now, but I was once; and the _whole_ of my
-heart went into it, George. Do men ever realize that women can be in
-love with them and yet know all the time that it’s a mistake? When he
-left me, Eric thought I’d been taking all his love for my own selfish,
-greedy enjoyment. I hadn’t. I took it because I couldn’t help myself;
-but I always knew it would be a mistake for us to marry. We were too
-much alike, too highly-strung. If you can imagine two great musicians
-marrying . . . If only I’d been strong enough to refuse his love! I
-couldn’t help myself . . . It was wrong of me, by any standard, to do
-what I did at Croxton. If I’d told you at the time . . .”
-
-“I should have thought nothing of it, I hope.”
-
-Barbara laughed mirthlessly and crossed to my chair, where she seated
-herself on the arm.
-
-“That’s what I feared,” she whispered. “I knew I was wrong, I knew it
-would have been hell for us all if Eric had agreed, I’d had the worst
-rebuff that can come to a woman, I was still in love with him. All that,
-you’d have said, was nothing. A perfect Oakleighism! . . . Yet I wish
-now I _had_ told you. Eric’s letter must have been a cruel shock.”
-
-Her hand stole timidly to mine; and I raised it to my lips:
-
-“That’s all over now; but, Babs, I did _not_ spend twelve days wondering
-whether you would run away with any one else. What hurt was that you’d
-pretended to love me when you didn’t.”
-
-“And that’s what you’ve been urging me to do for the last two years.”
-
-Silence fell between us. Then I said:
-
-“I’ve been hoping that you could love me without pretending. I forgot
-those twelve days the moment I set eyes on you.”
-
-“Yes. You were as much in love with me as I was with Eric. But love
-didn’t give you much understanding, dear. For two years you’ve been
-waiting for me to confess that I did something very wrong: you’d then be
-able to commit another Oakleighism by forgiving me. You’ve been waiting
-for me to say I’ve outgrown my love for Eric, so that you could tell
-me—Oakleigh-fashion—that you’d always known time would cure all
-things. Well, I _was_ wrong; and I _have_ outgrown my love. Does it help
-you to know that? The difficulty is, George, that I don’t want to be
-forgiven. I’m not a child, I’m not an unsuccessful attempt to be a man;
-I’m a woman.”
-
-“And being a woman . . .”
-
-Barbara laid her hand over my lips:
-
-“Shall I say it for you? ‘Being a woman, you don’t know what you _do_
-want.’ It’s quite true, even though all the Oakleighs in history have
-said it. I know you so much better than you know me.”
-
-“And better than you know yourself?”
-
-“I know myself better than I can explain myself. Women feel so much more
-and express so much less than men. Words are clumsy. When a man frames a
-sentence, he imagines he is shewing a thought to the world; a woman
-feels that the thought is being imprisoned, perhaps mutilated.” . . .
-
-“Do you know why you married me?,” I asked.
-
-Before she could answer, Barbara stared long at the fire.
-
-“Yes. But I’ve never put it in words. I couldn’t now. I wasn’t in love
-with you, but you gave me something that I needed. . . . Women marry
-sometimes because they’re frightened of themselves. Sonia did. And I
-remember how my beloved aunts gloated over Jack Waring, as the one man
-who could keep me in order. Strange to say, I didn’t want to be kept in
-order; and I wasn’t frightened of myself. I’m only frightened of death
-and of waste: a wasted life, with all the love and the beauty left out
-of it. You gave me the feeling that you had something I needed to keep
-my life from being wasted.”
-
-“And do you feel that no longer?”
-
-“Have I needed you these last two years? I’ve ceased to look for
-happiness.”
-
-“And you’re not yet thirty!,” I groaned.
-
-Barbara glanced at her watch and stood up:
-
-“It’s time for me to go to bed. I’m afraid I’ve talked a great deal
-about myself. It was thinking about Bertrand that started it. The world
-is divided into men, women and Oakleighs.”
-
-“I believe you’ll find, as you go on, that every husband begins as a man
-and ends as an Oakleigh. That is one of the major tragedies of life.”
-
-For the first time in eighteen months, Barbara bent to kiss my cheek.
-
-“To marry an Oakleigh and find him a man would be the greatest romance
-life could offer,” she laughed.
-
-“Then I’m afraid you must look elsewhere for your romance,” I sighed.
-“You can only give out what’s in you. I’m sorry our marriage has been a
-failure. I’ve honestly done my best.” . . .
-
-Turning at the door, Barbara came slowly back and kissed me again:
-
-“I know you have. And I’ll do mine. I told you the day poor old Bertrand
-died that I’d be your wife, I’d bear you children if I could . . .”
-
-In spite of her kisses, in spite of the strange new light in her eyes, I
-had to be told in words that our two years’ tragedy was over:
-
-“My dear one, you said we should be dishonoured if we put anything in
-the place of love . . .”
-
-I waited to hear that terrible verdict reversed. Barbara looked at me in
-amazement and then gave a single tearless sob. She regained her
-composure immediately and walked again to the door.
-
-“You have a good memory, George,” she threw back. “Have you saved that
-up for two years? Do you want me to say that I’ve suddenly found you
-irresistible? The Oakleighs are very true to their own type.”
-
- 5
-
-As the door closed, I saw my last chance being shut from me. The house
-was in darkness when I went into the hall; there was no answer when I
-called to Barbara, though I could see a light in her room. I came
-downstairs again to brood of men, women and Oakleighs.
-
-I tried next day to explain, but Barbara refused with cold courtesy to
-understand what I was trying to explain. I had been patient, too
-patient; in her turn she was trying to meet me. She was ready to give
-anything I asked, if she had it to give; and the false sweetness of her
-complaisance was a deadlier bar than any refusal.
-
-“I feel I was ungracious,” I said.
-
-“Ungracious? You?,” she mocked. “I must go now, or I shall be late for
-Mr. Wace.”
-
-“Shall I see you after the opening of parliament?”
-
-“But of course! For another eternity! Good-bye.”
-
-The rest of that morning I spent in Fetter Lane, reviewing the
-achievements of the peace-administration. The only visible traces of the
-war, when I walked down to Westminster, were the cenotaph in Whitehall
-and the long army of unemployed that was trying to get past it to the
-precincts of parliament. While I waited for the crowd to disperse, I
-heard a familiar voice asking my neighbour what was happening.
-
-“Raney! Here, you’d better let me see you home,” I said. “There’s an
-appalling mob everywhere.”
-
-“Thanks, I’ve had to acquire a sixth sense,” he answered. “What are you
-doing here?”
-
-“Looking on and thinking of that week-end in August when the
-Anti-Intervention people pursued me down to Loring Castle. I’ve been
-wondering if we shouldn’t have done better to keep out of the war at all
-costs.”
-
-“We should have been dishonoured if we’d let Belgium down,” he answered.
-
-“If we’d told the Germans we would stop the moment Belgium was
-evacuated, the war would have been over in ’14. And we shouldn’t have an
-unemployed army marching through London to-day,” I added savagely.
-
-We squeezed our way forward till a sudden thinning of the crowd enabled
-us to escape into the park.
-
-“I think we’re individually the better for the sacrifices we all of us
-made,” he answered slowly. “For one moment there was a real spirit of
-fraternity; and, when the reaction has run its course, I hope to see
-that again. I’m recruiting people now, with quite fair success:
-reminding them what they did once and asking them to give up everything
-for one month or six or a year for the service of their country. I’m
-only asking them to do what I’ve done myself. I tell them, as I tell
-you, _that’s_ the new idea that we must capture from the war. Fraternity
-. . .”
-
-“Your new idea is at least as old as Christ and Buddha,” I objected.
-“Will you succeed where they failed?”
-
-“Had they ever such a chance as we have? We’ve seen the quality of
-modern war. We know that, if there’s another, it will bury civilization
-under a sea of lava. Men, women, sheep, cattle, the very blades of
-grass. Another war is synonymous with the end of the world.”
-
-“But how does one set about being fraternal?,” I asked.
-
-O’Rane walked for some distance without answering; and I thought he had
-not heard my question. Then he laughed and gave my arm a squeeze:
-
-“By realizing the alternative, as every one’s had every chance of doing
-in this war. By seeing that, if we trample on people weaker than
-ourselves, there’ll be people stronger than ourselves to trample on us.
-When I first saw ‘fraternity’ shining in front of me like Constantine’s
-Cross, I was a very small, very young, very miserable boy. I went
-through hell till I learnt how to defend myself. And then . . . many
-years afterwards . . . I began to think . . . about the poor devils who
-couldn’t defend _themselves_. I saw that we must make a world in which
-man wasn’t always measuring his strength. Yes, I admit Christ had made
-the discovery before me,” he ended with another laugh.
-
-I forebore to ask whether the second discovery was likely to change the
-hearts of men more than the first. The rule of force, I pointed out, had
-to be repudiated by every one at the same time:
-
-“If we’d been fraternal when the Germans were marching on Calais . . .”
-
-“If we’d been fraternal rather earlier, perhaps they’d never have
-marched there. Some one has to make a beginning. That’s one reason I had
-to give up this money. Fraternity can’t exist side by side with vast
-differences of wealth, among nations or individuals. It’s our sense of
-possession, George, that stands between us and our souls.”
-
-“Unfortunately, ever since man appeared on this planet, it’s been the
-instinct that keeps soul and body together. Will you be the first to
-strip for the plunge?”
-
-“_I’m_ ready.”
-
-“If you take that dive, Raney, your wife and children won’t follow. They
-also are a part of humanity, which I think you sometimes forget.”
-
-“‘Who is my mother?’,” he murmured. . . .
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
-
-
- THE TEST
-
-
- _King Henry_:
-
- The sum of all our answer is but this:
- We would not seek a battle, as we are;
- Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it . . .
-
- SHAKESPEARE: _King Henry V._
-
- 1
-
-Since the first tragedy cast its shadow on the first man, philosophers
-have taught, in the jargon of their choice, that the past is
-unalterable, that it is no use crying over spilt milk and that it is a
-waste of time to job backwards. Unphilosophic man has then returned to
-the twilit dreamland of might-have-beens.
-
-Daily, since the tragedy that darkened my life in the last weeks of
-1922, I have asked myself whether I could have done anything to prevent
-it. I am sane enough to realize that I contributed nothing by what I
-did; the philosopher blandly assures me that questioning comes too late;
-and, in spite of all, I continue to wonder what would have happened if I
-had made a firm stand here or a graceful surrender there. If only, as I
-walked with O’Rane to The Sanctuary after the opening of parliament, I
-had thrown my weight into one scale or the other . . . If only, at any
-time subsequently, I had shewn myself to be what nature failed to make
-me, a man of action, strong and silent, rapping out decisions like
-Napoleon disposing an army . . .
-
- 2
-
-I had not intended to come into The Sanctuary, but O’Rane insisted that
-Sonia would be disappointed if I turned back at the door. We found her
-in the nursery, playing with her elder boy, while the baby was packed
-protesting to bed in the next room. I had not often been privileged to
-catch Sonia in a domestic attitude and was ill-prepared for her
-efficiency. This child in her lap was a beautiful creature, in radiant
-health and exuberant spirits, with his mother’s brown hair and eyes.
-There was a lusty crow of delight when O’Rane came into the room; and,
-as I shook hands with Sonia, the child demanded shrilly that the
-interrupted tale of the day before should be resumed.
-
-“Will you say good-night to David junior?,” she asked me, as Daniel
-surrendered to the spell of O’Rane’s story.
-
-“If he’s not asleep,” I said; and she conducted me into the presence of
-a wide-awake and fierce Japanese doll, who gripped two of my fingers and
-demanded truculently what I was doing in his nursery.
-
-At three years old, the child had his father’s flashing black eyes and
-imperious manner. Sonia added that he had also more than his father’s
-indomitable obstinacy.
-
-“Is he equally fearless?,” I asked.
-
-For answer she pointed from a green bruise on the child’s forehead to a
-padlocked grille over the window:
-
-“David had a fire-escape fitted the other day. He went down it himself
-just to learn the way; and this infant must needs follow. He’d never
-been on a ladder in his life, but he climbed cheerfully out of the
-window . . .”
-
-“Trusting to the special providence that looks after all O’Ranes,” I put
-in.
-
-“By the mercy of heaven a policeman caught him; but if he behaves like
-that now . . .”
-
-“He looks like keeping you fully occupied.”
-
-“I can do what I like with him at present,” she answered, “because he
-realizes I’m only a woman, and I can get on the soft side of him. When
-he’s old enough to see that women can be more easily bullied than men,
-more easily hurt . . . I don’t envy his wife. I don’t envy any wife.”
-
-“Yet if all marriages were dissolved by act of parliament . . .,” I
-began, as she led me downstairs.
-
-“Should I take David on again? I wonder! He’s the only man I’ve ever
-loved. . . . What fools we women are! And what fools men are! They don’t
-want a woman to have a will of her own; and, when she echoes their will,
-they find her insipid. And what a fool I’ve always been! Once I thought
-it would be wonderful to run away . . . as I did. But that was only a
-wonderful fit of bad temper,” she added with the candour that she always
-employed in discussing herself.
-
-“And one that you’ll never repeat.”
-
-“No. In those days I was so hungry for children that I thought myself
-quite immodest: if I’d had my first one earlier, we should never have
-had our great tragedy. Now that I’ve got two, you need never be afraid I
-shall run away again even if David ties me to the bed and beats me. I
-honestly, honestly don’t think of myself any longer except through them.
-I want them to have the best chance in life: all that you and Jim and my
-brothers had. They must go to the best schools, the best universities;
-they must never be driven down the wrong road like so many boys because
-they haven’t the money to go by the right one. They must be _secure_.”
-. . . Her face darkened; and she turned to the fire. “David won’t
-promise me that. My father can’t afford it.” . . .
-
-I believe that, if her husband could have seen Sonia at that moment as I
-saw her, he would have compromised with his insurgent conscience. Once
-before, when he came back from France, I had seen her, as now, on her
-knees; pleading, as now, for the privilege of serving him and, as now,
-wholly forgetful of her too insistent self.
-
-“He’s not easy to move when he’s made up his mind,” I said, with
-memories of our conversation earlier in the afternoon.
-
-Sonia shook her head ruefully:
-
-“Don’t I know that? You remember when that unemployment deputation came
-to see him? We’ve had about three a day ever since. Does that influence
-him? The press camps on our doorstep. He’s besieged in his office. This
-afternoon that man Griffiths came here again.”
-
-“What did you do with him?”
-
-Her patience suddenly deserted her:
-
-“I sent him to Hampstead. This _is_ a private house, when all’s said and
-done. I don’t suppose he got any satisfaction there, but I thought the
-walk would be good for him. Odious little creature!”
-
-It was now that I feel I might have done some good by speaking strongly.
-Neither Griffiths nor any other grown man deserved to be sent on a
-fool’s errand; in cooler moments Sonia would have been ashamed to play
-such a trick. Her answer, I suppose, would have been that Griffiths and
-her husband were too much for any one’s coolness; and I feared—no
-doubt, weakly—that I should lose my slight influence over her if I
-sided with her husband. When he came down from the nursery, she was
-still indignant enough to retail Griffiths’ visit and to ask O’Rane
-whether the deputation had reached Hampstead in time to find him.
-
-“I had to say I could do nothing for them,” he answered a little
-wearily. “I’ve given all I can spare of my own money; and I’ve collected
-as much as I can from other people. If they come again, you might tell
-them that.”
-
-“You must tell them yourself,” Sonia replied stiffly. “_I’m_ not going
-to make myself responsible.”
-
-“I only wanted you to save them a useless journey. When you sent them to
-me, you gave them some sort of hope; and that makes it so much harder
-when I have to turn them down.”
-
-“Perhaps in time you’ll find it so hard . . .” she muttered.
-
-“I can’t go back on what I’ve said. It’s only unkind to give them a long
-walk for nothing. Promise me you won’t do it again, Sonia.”
-
-“Let’s hope they won’t come again. If they do, I shall _again_ send them
-to you.” Then, without disguise, her temper broke. “I’m not consulted
-about what you do with this money, so I wash my hands of it. This is not
-your office; and you can’t blame me if you refuse to give them anything
-for their trouble.”
-
-“I can only repeat that you make my task more difficult,” O’Rane
-answered patiently.
-
-“Before I’ve done, I hope to make it impossible,” Sonia retorted
-defiantly, as she hurried out of the library and up the stairs.
-
-I had a second opportunity of speaking strongly, this time to O’Rane;
-and I failed to press it. The papers that night gave long accounts of
-the opening of parliament and longer, less hackneyed descriptions of the
-demonstration by the unemployed. I detected for the first time a note of
-uneasiness as, for the first time, unemployment passed out of the realm
-of abstract statistics and incarnated itself in ragged armies of hungry
-men. I remembered Philip Hornbeck’s blithe assurance that Griffiths
-could do little harm so long as the armies were scattered; well, their
-banners shewed that they were scattered no longer. One nervous
-leader-writer compared this march with the advance of the Marseillais on
-Paris and asked angrily how the police had allowed it; another, more
-valiant, rehearsed the history of the Fascismo movement in Italy and
-warned the proletariat at large—without considering whether the
-proletariat was likely to read such a paper—that England would never
-yield to mob-violence. A third, mentioning O’Rane by name, exhumed the
-controversy of the summer and enquired whether those who had voluntarily
-undertaken a national responsibility could abandon it at such a time in
-satisfaction of a “doctrinaire whim”. In less blunt terms than the
-sandwichman had displayed, O’Rane’s ‘sentence of death’ was brought up
-against him; and it was with some muddled, premonitory feeling of an
-isolated conflict between Griffiths and the O’Ranes that I uttered my
-warning.
-
-“Suspend your sentence,” I said, “until the new government has declared
-its unemployment policy.”
-
-O’Rane replied with the entirely logical and utterly irrelevant thesis
-that unemployment was a consequence of the war, that the community had
-called the tune and must pay the piper, that one government had imposed
-conscription of men’s lives and that another could impose conscription
-of their wealth. The state had turned prosperous civilians into
-soldiers; the state must turn these soldiers back into prosperous
-civilians.
-
-His cold reasoning and neat phrasing reminded me of a speech at some
-undergraduate debating-society.
-
-“I can only hope,” I said, “that you won’t have to say ‘no’ again.”
-
-Hungry men had no time for debating-society arguments. I hoped, too,
-that Sonia would not be forced to say ‘no’ again. Hungry men had no
-taste for being ordered to walk from Westminster to Hampstead as a move
-in the game with her husband. I said no more. And, amid my
-self-reproaches, I find a barren comfort in the knowledge that neither
-Sonia nor her husband would have listened, though one rose from the dead
-to warn them.
-
- 3
-
-Thereafter, like every one else, I waited to see the policy of the
-government proclaimed. The debate on the address gave rise to some
-acrimonious passages between the two front benches; a programme of
-rather remote public-relief work was fluttered in the face of the labour
-party; and the prime minister ostentatiously reestablished departmental
-responsibility and dissociated himself from the improvisations of his
-predecessor by refusing to receive a deputation of the unemployed.
-
-Then the interest of the public sought a new stimulus.
-
-I am inclined to think that modern journalism, with its craving for
-daily excitement and its acquiescence in the superficial, has
-incapacitated us for patient study. Few subjects unconnected with sex or
-bloodshed can hold the attention of a newspaper-reader for more than
-three days; and, when the men with schemes for employment had been
-photographed as they walked to Downing Street and when a popular
-novelist had protested passionately that the unemployed were not really
-bolshevists, the eyes of the nation were allured by pictures of Lord
-Curzon entering his train for the Lausanne conference, and
-controversialists with uncertain memories enquired rhetorically the name
-of the last woman to be hanged in England for complicity in murder. Like
-the peace negotiations, like the war, like the domestic and
-international unrest before the war, like the Irish problem, this
-unemployment business became a bore: the public was accustomed to the
-variety of a “continuous performance” in its cinematograph theatres, it
-expected a “new programme weekly” for its political stage.
-
-I myself was compelled for professional reasons to study problems of
-public policy even after they had ceased to be fashionable. The only
-excuse for continuing our paper was to be found in my uncle’s warning
-that, after four years of peace, we were in at least no better position
-than at the outbreak of war; at his death, we had cut our last
-party-ties and were standing behind the government as friendly critic.
-If the new administration shewed no improvement on the old, we should
-have to consider—as I told my colleagues—whether we were to throw in
-our lot with labour, whether we should lay our paper in its overdue
-grave or whether we must extend to our own country the verdict of
-revolutionary Russia that the old machine of national and international
-government had broken down.
-
-That verdict was pronounced in my private hearing by Griffiths himself,
-with a warning that he would repeat it publicly if the government failed
-to give him instant satisfaction. Our second interview was no more of my
-seeking than the first. When the House rose without curing unemployment
-then and there, he made it known—first of all at a mass-meeting in
-Trafalgar Square and then in handbills which were distributed about the
-streets—that he would instruct ministers in the meaning of unemployment
-by confronting them with the unemployed. This, in the vague phrase which
-he favoured, would “put things to the test”. The demonstrations at the
-opening of parliament had been hardly more than a parade. “Hunger
-marches” were now to be organized in every part of the country,
-converging on London at the same moment. After that . . .? I noticed
-that Griffiths carefully refrained from saying what would happen when
-fifty, or a hundred, thousand disappointed men found themselves
-empty-handed, empty-bellied, foot-sore and resentful at the closed door
-of an impotent office. And I pointed out this sinister omission in the
-next number of _Peace_.
-
-There was nothing, Hornbeck told me at this time, in the speech or the
-manifesto to justify police interference; but any one who remembered
-Griffiths’ share in organizing the land-grabbing campaign could imagine
-how this new demonstration would be conducted and how it was likely to
-end. I went farther than most of my _confrères_ and denounced the
-manifesto as deliberately provocative. Griffiths called to inform me
-that, if I chose to print lies, he could not stop me, but that, if I was
-interested in the truth, I might perhaps be not too proud to hear it
-from him.
-
-I professed a prompt eagerness for truth in any form, though I was more
-interested to know what amusement or instruction he derived from so
-painfully academic a journal as _Peace_. I wondered how he came to
-associate me with its direction and why he visited me in Seymour Street
-rather than in Fetter Lane. My curiosity on this last point was
-satisfied when he ran a practised eye over the dimensions of the house
-and asked me how many the establishment comprised.
-
-“You? And your wife? And six servants?,” he recapitulated. “No kids? A
-car and a man to drive it? Four meals a day? You don’t call _that_
-provocative?”
-
-“If we had fewer servants, you’d have more unemployed,” I pointed out.
-
-“It takes three men and four women to keep the two of you alive. The
-house is half empty. You waste more food in a day than my people eat in
-a week. You drive about in your jewels and fine clothes among people
-who’ve been cold and hungry for months. And then you tell me not to be
-. . . ‘provocative’!”
-
-I reminded him that we were supposed to be discussing unemployment.
-
-“I shan’t remedy that by going about in rags,” I said, “or by shutting
-up half the house.”
-
-“If you were in Germany, you wouldn’t be allowed to have empty rooms.
-And, if you were in Russia, you wouldn’t be allowed twenty coats when
-the next man has nothing but a shirt between him and the rain.”
-
-I reminded him that we were in England and that he had called to
-demonstrate how little provocation his manifesto contained.
-
-“If the government orders me to find accommodation for people without
-homes,” I said, “if I have to clothe them and feed them, I’ll do it to
-the best of my ability. I put obedience to the law above all things.”
-The little red eyes glowed in anticipation of an attack. “My criticism
-of you is the criticism I’ve brought before now against the people who
-preach a general strike for political objects. That’s not the way to
-proceed in a constitutional country. There’s no end to it short of
-revolution. You object to the word ‘provocative’. . .”
-
-“Did you _read_ what I said?,” he interrupted.
-
-“Every word. It was admirably phrased. A single letter more would have
-had you prosecuted. You’re careful not to provoke anybody in words; but
-I tell you that you’re inciting people to violence by your actions. You
-know their temper far better than I do. You know what you’ve taught them
-to regard as the minimum standard of housing, feeding, wages and
-out-of-work pay. Do you believe you’ll get it by bringing a hundred
-thousand men to London?”
-
-Griffiths hesitated perceptibly. If he said “no”, he condemned himself
-for inflating his followers with false hopes; if he said “yes”, he was
-confessing himself the prophet of intimidation in its crudest form.
-
-“In time,” he answered at length.
-
-“Do your men realize that they’ll have to wait?” He hesitated again for
-fear of admitting that he had taught them too well or not well enough.
-“No government in the world can submit to the dictation of a
-mass-meeting. You know that. If it surrendered to-morrow, you’d have
-another mass-meeting the day after. I think you know that too.”
-
-“And still they wouldn’t have all they’re entitled to,” he murmured.
-
-“That’s another question. My charge is that you’re bringing thousands of
-men to London on false pretences. They’re probably not in the sweetest
-of moods; and small blame to them. They won’t get what you’re promising
-them; and they’ll turn on you.”
-
-The red eyes flashed defiantly:
-
-“I can look after myself.”
-
-So far, we had kept fairly free from personal attacks, but something in
-Griffiths’ manner or voice exasperated me. I had not admitted him in
-order to be lectured about the number of servants who were needed to
-keep me alive; the angry, ferret’s eyes gave me a curious feeling that I
-must bite before I was bitten; and, seeing him—perhaps quite
-unjustifiably as a vindictive, treacherous little animal, I fixed a
-quality of untrustworthiness on the man.
-
-“You will look after yourself,” I prophesied, “by putting the blame on
-the government and rousing your people against law and order instead of
-telling them there was never a hope of their getting any of the things
-you promised.”
-
-Though my antagonist betrayed his feelings in an angry flush, he
-affected to dismiss my prediction as something unworthy of his notice:
-
-“They said that at Woolhampton,” he answered, “when we seized the Town
-Hall. I’m always stirring people up, it seems . . . Provocative . . .
-because I put the blame where the blame should go! You haven’t called me
-a paid agitator yet.”
-
-“I’ve no intention of doing so. I say to your face, as I said in print,
-that you’re provoking something which may end in a revolution. I take
-the purity of your motives for granted. You’ve volunteered to tell me
-the truth and to shew that you’re not organizing constructive
-revolution.” . . .
-
-Despite the dislike which I could not help feeling, there was no
-doubting the man’s passionate sincerity. He felt for the people he
-championed the same frenzied protectiveness and lust for revenge that I
-should have felt if my sister had been hacked to pieces before my eyes.
-Argument was out of the question; warnings were idle. I reconsidered the
-phrase I had used in likening him to a spiteful ferret, for he was
-touched with the greatness that is inseparable from fanaticism.
-Self-advancement and self-advertising had no place in his thoughts,
-though he was arrogantly confident of his authority as a popular leader
-and of his power to cut knots that had baffled every other hand. In a
-conversation that extended over two hours I learned nothing of his
-private history; at the end I realized no better than at the beginning
-why he had singled me out for his aggressive apologia. The resonant
-blows of our blunt swords echoed emptily on our impenetrable harness;
-and, when I saw him to the door, I was saying for the fiftieth time:
-“You’re trying to stir up a revolution”; and for the fiftieth time he
-was retorting: “If your precious government can’t do anything, some one
-else had better have a try.”
-
-As we crossed swords for the last time, Barbara drove up to the door.
-She had been giving another sitting to Wace; and her appearance, in an
-ermine coat and a diamond star, was not wasted on Griffiths, who bowed
-ironically and looked her up and down as though he were assessing her in
-terms of daily meat-meals.
-
-“Well, I must be off,” he said; and I know he was recapitulating again:
-“_You. And your wife. And six servants . . ._”
-
-“I’m glad to have had this talk,” I said, “even though we’ve not
-convinced each other. If you think I’ve misrepresented you, I can only
-offer you equal space in our columns to put yourself right with our
-readers.”
-
-“I shan’t have time,” he answered.
-
-“You can do it in two lines. If you’ll answer my charge that you’re
-working, consciously or unconsciously, for a revolution . . .”
-
-“I’m answering it now,” he interrupted. “From here I go to King’s Cross
-and from King’s Cross to the north. Putting things to the test. I shall
-be back again in just the time that it takes us to walk here.”
-
-As he disappeared from sight, Barbara commented admiringly on his exit:
-
-“For a third curtain, it was unsurpassed. I _do_ want to know what’s
-going to happen in the last act.”
-
- 4
-
-If I did not know then, I had a strength of conviction that amounted
-almost to knowledge. There was going to be public excitement; there was
-going to be loose speaking; there was going to be bad blood. And, after
-that, there might well be rioting.
-
-I have replayed the game a hundred times since that day and asked myself
-what I could have done to change the issue. Before the war I should have
-talked to Bertrand; and, if he had shared my apprehensions, he would
-have spoken a word to the responsible ministers. With this new
-government of men unknown to me, with this new House no longer even in
-session, there was no one I could approach. During the war, when we
-broke down most of the interdepartmental walls, a telephone message from
-the Admiralty would have stirred sympathetic chords in Scotland Yard or
-the Home Office. Now I had long severed my connection with the public
-service; Philip Hornbeck was my one remaining link; and, if I bothered
-him again, I ran the risk of being told that Griffiths was become a bee
-in my bonnet.
-
-This notwithstanding, I did ask Barbara to arrange a dinner; and I am
-only sorry that I did not make the invitation more urgent.
-
-“Is anything the matter?,” she asked in some surprise, for Hornbeck had
-dined with us only two or three nights before.
-
-“Not at the moment; but there may be trouble if some one doesn’t spike
-that fellow Griffiths’ guns. In his way, the man’s right: as the
-government _has_ no remedy, you can’t find an answer to people who say
-they’ll take the remedy into their own hands. But the common sense of
-the world won’t allow that. Griffiths will be refused a hearing; the mob
-may break a few windows; and then the police will clear the streets.
-It’s not worth marching an army three hundred miles to learn that old
-lesson.”
-
-“Until they’ve learnt it, they’ll go on believing in men like
-Griffiths,” said Barbara.
-
-“But it will be a more costly lesson than they realize. With the best
-intentions in the world, he’s marching them into a trap. I want Hornbeck
-to stop the march and break up the units before they can collect in
-force.”
-
-We telephoned to the Admiralty; but Hornbeck had left. When I got in
-touch with him next day, he was engaged for several nights ahead. Rather
-shamefacedly, I told him my fears; and he promised to enquire what steps
-were being taken, though I felt I had wholly failed to communicate my
-dread of the wasted little fanatic Griffiths. In the middle of the
-following week I read that the great “hunger-march” had begun; and, when
-Hornbeck dined with us, he explained that Griffiths was being given
-enough rope to hang himself, but no more. One army had reached
-Nottingham, a second was on the outskirts of Coventry and a third was
-halting on the east side of Newbury; but they would not be allowed to
-reach London. Since my interview with him, the leader and spokesman had
-abandoned his former caution; and Hornbeck told me that the police were
-waiting to prosecute him for inciting to crime.
-
-“It’s a pity to wait,” I said.
-
-“What else can one do?,” asked Hornbeck.
-
-Perhaps my memory is biased by the events of the following week, perhaps
-my instinct was right in warning me that Griffiths was one of the most
-dangerous firebrands that I had ever met. He haunted me, as the shadow
-of Marat must have haunted the well-to-do citizens of Paris; and I felt
-an equal, unreasoning impatience with the departments that ignored him
-and with the papers that advertised him. For two or three days the great
-march was reported mile by mile, with a list of the victories won by
-“Griffiths’ armies” over the powerless custodians of such county halls,
-municipal libraries and public baths as they occupied on their way. For
-the same period the government maintained a calm and dignified silence.
-Then new interests demanded attention and space.
-
-By the time that the various units joined forces in the open country
-beyond Neasden, hunger-marching commanded no price in the ever-changing
-tariff of news-items. London was shopping for Christmas; the Lausanne
-conference was becoming every day more firm and ineffectual; Signor
-Mussolini was in England; Germany had defaulted again; and the prime
-ministers of the late allies were discussing with their financial
-experts new and final methods of settling the problem of reparations.
-
-I only learned that the army was at hand when I read that the government
-policy for combating unemployment had been fully explained and that, in
-the opinion of one private secretary, “_no useful purpose would be
-served by a meeting between the Minister and the leaders of the
-unemployed now collected in Wembley Park_.”
-
-“This is the moment I’ve been dreading,” I told Barbara. “Griffiths has
-made fools of these people; and he can only recover his authority by
-fighting the government.”
-
-I read next day that the leaders of the unemployed insisted upon sending
-a deputation to the minister of labour. A public demonstration was
-announced later; and from an evening paper I learned that, while the
-police would not interfere with an orderly march through the streets, it
-must not be conducted in the neighbourhood of Westminster. As I walked
-home that night, I was given a handbill in which I read, over the
-signature of Griffiths, that the hunger-march would be resumed next
-morning and would be directed first to Buckingham Palace, then—as a
-concession to constitutionalism—to the Home Office and finally—for a
-reason I could not guess, since parliament was no longer sitting—to the
-House of Commons. It was not for Scotland Yard to say who might or might
-not have access to the king or his responsible ministers; and the
-problem that chiefly vexed the spirit of Griffiths was to discover who
-in fact was responsible.
-
-“Now,” I told my colleagues when I reached Fetter Lane through a double
-line of police, “there’s going to be trouble. The only thing that can
-stop it will be a downpour of rain.”
-
-“And there is in fact a hard frost,” yawned Triskett.
-
-“This fog may do as well,” said Jefferson Wright.
-
-“It’s pretty serious,” we all agreed.
-
-Did any of us believe in the warnings and predictions which we uttered?
-I cannot say. Everything that happened in these days is coloured by the
-memory of what happened afterwards. I may conceivably take credit for
-explaining before other people that these demonstrations were on a
-different plane from the coal strikes and railway strikes that aroused
-our uneasiness after the war; on the other hand, I may only have been
-suffering from disordered nerves. It was the end of the year; I wanted a
-holiday; and the self-control which I had to exercise at home sometimes
-deserted me when I was at my office. Accordingly I claim no praise and
-feel no shame in saying that I was nervous. The long lines of
-police-pickets had not been stationed about the streets without some
-purpose; and the news that trickled in throughout the morning was not of
-a kind to allay anxiety.
-
-Philip Hornbeck did indeed repeat by telephone his customary assurance
-that Griffiths could be discounted. When the marchers entered Regent’s
-Park, they were warned that they would not be allowed to approach
-Downing Street; and, as Hornbeck walked to the Admiralty, he passed
-half-a-dozen columns of dejected, leaderless men who were standing easy
-or trudging slowly under banners of ineffectual protest. Even the bands,
-he said, were dispirited. After one glance, the passers-by paid no heed
-to a sight that was now wearisomely familiar; and, in Hornbeck’s eyes,
-the gaunt, ragged army found its best friends among the constables who
-tramped in a protective and restraining cordon.
-
-“Did these fellows seem disappointed?,” I asked.
-
-“I think they were too tired, poor devils, to feel anything. If it
-hadn’t been for the bobbies, you might have thought it was another
-retreat from Moscow. I believe there _was_ some plain speaking when they
-found their Napoleon had left them, but I hear he’s only gone to see
-about billets. The police are helping him all they can. That’s the way
-we stop revolutions in England,” he chuckled.
-
-I was reminded again of the day now long distant when O’Rane and I had
-stood in a crowd of many thousands to watch the body of Terence McSwiney
-drawing through the respectfully silent streets of London. The English,
-I felt, behaved sometimes like characters in a comic opera: consistent
-only in their inconsistency, they could not rise to a revolution. With a
-longer leap into the past, my memory fastened on a moment in O’Rane’s
-first year at Melton, when he watched a half-hearted attempt at a May
-Day demonstration and, in disgust at the apathy of the demonstrators,
-instructed them in the Marseillaise. I wondered if he recalled that day,
-which was also nearly his last as a scholar of Melton. I wondered if he
-and Hornbeck were right in discounting this threat of revolution.
-
-Then I thought of the weary crowds that were pouring into London.
-
-“If you’d put a spoke in his wheel at the beginning . . .,” I began.
-
-“You can’t stop peaceful pedestrians from walking along the king’s
-highway,” Hornbeck rejoined, “and Griffiths arranged that the armies
-should only _become_ armies when they were too big to turn back.”
-
- 5
-
-I had intended to lunch at the Eclectic in the hopes of hearing what
-steps the government was taking to house and feed the hunger-marchers,
-but, when I was halfway to St. James’ Street, I turned north and walked
-home with a vague feeling that I must see how Barbara was getting on.
-
-When Spence-Atkins asked me point-blank if I thought there would be any
-outbreak, I had replied with conviction that I did not. That, however,
-was in the office; and, as I walked west, I was disquieted by the sight
-of these silent columns, marching aimlessly, halting and dissolving into
-little knots of stragglers too weary to march longer. In Waterloo Place
-and Regent Street, the police imposed an order which the men themselves
-had been unable to maintain; but from Hanover Square to Park Lane the
-army split into its elements. Through the settling fog I saw men sitting
-on the kerbs and clustering on the island-refuges; they dropped in a
-shapeless heap on the first convenient doorstep; and the good-humoured
-constables who said “Now then, you must move along” found themselves
-addressing ears that were already deaf with sleep.
-
-“Half of them are no more than boys, sir,” one policeman pointed out to
-me. “Tired out, that’s what they are. They don’t mean no harm.”
-
-By a damnable irony, the men had chosen for their collapse a moment when
-Brook Street offered a tantalizing blend of warm, savoury smells. I, who
-had never known the meaning of hunger, found my appetite quickening.
-
-“They’re tired out and _hungry_,” I said. So far as I am a judge of
-accents, some of these boys had come from the Black Country, others from
-Lancashire, others again from Northumberland. “I live near here. Is it
-any good trying to raise some soup . . .?”
-
-The constable shrugged his shoulders and waited while an old man, who
-had fainted, was lifted on to an ambulance.
-
-“If once you begin, sir, you’ll have the whole lot of them at your door.
-It’s more than one man can tackle.”
-
-I walked on to Seymour Street with a growing sense of despair. All this
-had been prophesied to Griffiths in forcible language ten days before;
-but my meagre powers of imagination and description never came within
-miles of actuality. I had not realized the dishonour to humanity which a
-man commits when he no longer hides a broken spirit; I had forgotten the
-disfigurements of starvation and the sickly stench of neglect. The
-policeman was entirely right: half these fellows were only boys; and I
-felt the blood mounting to my head when I thought of the way they were
-victimized and their ignorance exploited. During the war I had seen them
-and their elder brothers trotting obediently to the slaughter-house and
-bemusedly offering their lives for a cause that was never explained and
-for objects that they never understood. Now, no less obediently, they
-trotted in answer to a voice that promised them a quick millennium.
-
-I should have caught some hope, for all my denunciation of violence, if
-they had torn Griffiths limb from limb; but the patient credulity that
-collected them under his leadership accepted uncomplainingly the fate to
-which he led them. Griffiths, as he had boasted to me, could look after
-himself; providence, the police or the devil might look after his
-followers, who sprawled about the misty streets like slumbering cattle.
-
-If I had expected to find Barbara sharing my own anxiety, I might have
-known better than to expect any sign of it. She greeted me with faint
-surprise because I had not warned her that I should be lunching at home;
-then the surprise turned to relief as she recollected that she was a man
-short.
-
-“It’s a family party,” she explained. “Father and mother and Charles. I
-asked the O’Ranes; but David can’t get away, so you must take his
-place. . . . You’re not ill or anything are you, George?”
-
-“Oh, no, thanks. _Depressed_, if you like. London’s a horrible sight
-with all these hunger-marchers dropping down on every side from sheer
-exhaustion. I don’t know what’s to be done about them. I only hope there
-won’t be a scrap.”
-
-Barbara looked out of window; but the fog was now so thick that she
-could not see across the street.
-
-“Was that why you came back?,” she asked with her head averted.
-
-“I wanted to see that you were all right.”
-
-“Thank you.” . . . As though afraid that I might take advantage of her
-curt gratitude, she broke into a laugh. “Some one—I think it was
-Jim—once said that, when the revolution came, there’d be keen
-competition between Sonia and me for a place in the first tumbril. If it
-begins to-day, we shall be able to drive down together. I suppose we
-_are_ two of the most useless human beings in creation. . . . I hope the
-mob doesn’t break in while father’s here: I know he’d struggle with the
-executioner, and I think it’s unfair to hinder a man who’s simply trying
-to do his duty.”
-
-“I feel Robson would probably save us,” I answered. “He’d tell the mob,
-very patiently, that it was out of the question for them to have a
-revolution in Seymour Street.” . . .
-
-“You don’t really expect any trouble, do you?”
-
-As I believed Barbara to be entirely fearless, I did not mind speaking
-frankly:
-
-“It all turns on what’s likely to happen in the next few hours. The men
-are too tired at present even to feel hungry. When they wake up, they’ll
-be like ravening wolves.”
-
-On Crawleigh’s arrival, I was distantly comforted to find that he shared
-my own view and had indeed spent an hour trying to get it accepted in
-Downing Street. During his viceroyalty he had been ultimately
-responsible for the relief-works in two famines; and, for once, I found
-him pregnant with constructive proposals. Three or four of the biggest
-catering-firms, he urged, should set up kitchens in the London parks;
-every public hall should be turned into a dormitory; and, if supplies
-ran short in the shops, there must be a house-to-house visitation to
-collect bread and blankets.
-
-“I’d punish the ring-leaders without mercy,” he added, “but we must do
-one thing at a time. This is December, these men are starving; and for
-the next forty-eight hours we must simply suspend our ordinary laws. Why
-the government ever _allowed_ such madness . . .”
-
-We were still discussing emergency measures when Sonia came in very late
-and apologetic. Every approach to Westminster, she reported, was barred
-with lines of mounted police; St. James’ Park was closed, Whitehall and
-Victoria Street were barricaded. She herself had crossed the river at
-Lambeth and come by tube from Waterloo.
-
-“Are things still quiet?,” Lady Crawleigh enquired nervously.
-
-“I should think so; but the fog’s so thick that you can’t tell. . . .
-Did David find you?,” Sonia asked me. “He wanted to talk to you about
-soup-kitchens or something.”
-
-“He hadn’t come when I left the office,” I answered.
-
-As we went in to luncheon, Charles Neave, who had come up from the
-country the day before, contributed some first-hand observations on the
-march from Cumberland. It had been peaceful and orderly from the moment
-when the marchers convinced their potential antagonists that they meant
-to have what they wanted. Private property was scrupulously respected;
-but, on the principle that churches and public buildings belonged to the
-community, Griffiths’ ‘armies’ took possession of them as lodgings for a
-night. I was given to understand that there had been one or two sharp
-conflicts; but Crawleigh was expressing more than his own opinion when
-he reminded us that this was December and that the men were starving.
-Barns and warehouses were offered voluntarily as soon as their owners
-were satisfied that they would not be damaged.
-
-“How did they manage for food?,” I asked.
-
-“The workhouse people did what they could. I think the rest was voted by
-the different town-councils. There wasn’t enough to go round anywhere,
-but a whole lot was given privately.”
-
-“Were there any speeches or demonstrations?,” asked Crawleigh.
-
-“I didn’t hear any. Everybody seemed to be on the side of the marchers.
-They felt it was jolly hard lines and something ought to be done. Any
-ass who calls it bolshevism doesn’t know what he’s talking about.”
-
-“If we can only get them back as quietly as they’ve come . . .”
-Crawleigh began and left his sentence unfinished.
-
-I wondered whether he too was reflecting that the most dangerous
-revolution is the one in which popular sympathy goes out to the
-revolutionaries. In the last years of the eighteenth century the history
-of the world would have been changed if Louis had not forbidden the
-Swiss Guard to fire from the windows of the Tuileries; it was in fact
-changed—and revolution died in giving birth to Bonapartism—when
-Napoleon cleared the streets of Paris with a whiff of grapeshot. I would
-more readily have turned a machine-gun on my own dining-room than have
-harassed the spent men whom I saw collapsing on the doorsteps of Brook
-Street; but I wondered how far the sympathy of the onlookers and the
-kindliness of the police would paralyse vigorous action if the spent men
-rose and had to be coerced.
-
-“Is anybody in _fact_ taking any steps?,” I asked Crawleigh. “We’ve food
-in the house, we can buy more.” . . .
-
-“They’re collecting food and money as it is,” added Sonia. “Just before
-I came here, that little red-eyed Welshman called to see David . . .”
-
-“D’you mean Griffiths?,” I asked in surprise.
-
-“Yes. That’s another reason why I was so late. He wouldn’t go. I told
-him I’d nothing to give him.”
-
-“Did he come alone?”
-
-“Oh, no! There was a queue stretching farther than I could see. He told
-me he was sure Mr. O’Rane wouldn’t refuse to help when he realized what
-these men had been through to bring their grievances before the
-government.” Sonia’s expression grew suddenly hard. “I told him we
-weren’t the government; and I should be very glad if he’d take his army
-to Hampstead and let me get to my taxi.”
-
-Before I had time to warn her against such trifling, I was called to the
-telephone and informed that O’Rane himself was in Fetter Lane and wished
-to see me at once.
-
-“Hullo? This is a private wire, isn’t it?,” he began. “Good! I came to
-see you on quite other business. Then one of your people came in with
-the latest news, and I felt I should have to borrow your eyes for the
-afternoon. I’m afraid Griffiths’ people are getting out of hand. There’s
-a certain amount of damage being done . . .”
-
-“Whereabouts?,” I interrupted.
-
-“In Hampstead. I’ve warned the police; and, of course, Hampstead is a
-big place; but I couldn’t help wondering if they’d taken it into their
-heads to loot my office. I’m afraid they won’t find more than about five
-pounds in the till; but there are a lot of young clerks there, and I
-don’t want them to have a scare. If you could pick me up here and come
-to inspect the field of battle . . .”
-
-“I’ll be with you as soon as I can get across London,” I answered.
-
- 6
-
-As I hung up the receiver, I saw Barbara standing in the doorway. One
-hand gripped the moulding of the frame; the other was pressed to her
-side. I jumped up in sudden alarm and helped her to a chair, for her
-lips were moving without giving forth any sound.
-
-“Babs! Darling heart, what’s the matter?,” I asked.
-
-“That’s what I came to find out,” she answered with an effort that
-almost choked her. “George, you’re not going!”
-
-“Not till you’re all right,” I promised. “Are you feeling faint? I shall
-have to go out for a bit: a man who’s waiting to see me at the office
-. . .”
-
-“But you’re not going!,” she repeated frantically.
-
-“It’ll only be for an hour or so . . .”
-
-“It’ll be for all eternity! George, if you go, you won’t come back!
-Can’t you _feel_ it? I know when death’s at hand! Have I ever been
-wrong? Uncle Bertrand. Eric . . . Oh, before the war! Jack Summertown
-and the other boys in Jim’s last party! I know, I _know_! You think I’m
-mad . . .”
-
-“But, my dear, who’s going to kill me?,” I asked. “I’ve been in too many
-London fogs to fear them much; and, if you’re thinking of the
-hunger-marchers, I’m afraid the poor devils couldn’t do any mischief
-even if they wanted to. I made an appointment with a man . . .”
-
-“With David. You put him before me?”
-
-I was at a loss to think of anything that would calm her.
-
-“He is my best and oldest friend,” I said.
-
-“You always _have_ put him before me,” she cried.
-
-“My dear, you speak as if you were jealous! It’s absurd . . .”
-
-“I heard what you said to him.”
-
-“Then you couldn’t have heard more than about six words. I said I’d be
-with him . . .”
-
-“And wasn’t that enough? Wasn’t it enough when I knew he wanted you? I’m
-not jealous; I’m terrified! Don’t I know what he said to you? He’s in
-trouble and he wants to drag you into it. But he shan’t, he shan’t!”
-
-I sat down by Barbara’s side and told her, so far as I could remember,
-word for word all that O’Rane had said to me.
-
-“You know what Fleet Street rumours are,” I ended, though I felt it was
-unfortunate that this rumour of rioting in Hampstead had followed so
-disquieting soon on Sonia’s jaunty account of her meeting with
-Griffiths.
-
-“If there weren’t danger, you wouldn’t think it necessary to go. It’s no
-good lying to me, George. I’ve lived with you too long not to know
-something about you. I ask you to stay.”
-
-“If Raney could see for himself . . .,” I began.
-
-“Let some one _else_ go!”
-
-Though I could not tell Barbara, I remembered vividly the night when I
-had sat alone in that room, begging O’Rane to come and keep me company.
-I remembered, too, his characteristic promise that he would see me
-through to the grave and beyond.
-
-“He’s never asked me to do anything for him before. I’ve promised; and
-I’m afraid I can’t go back on it.”
-
-Barbara stood up as though she were going to rejoin her guests.
-Physically she was in control of herself and could walk without
-difficulty or apparent pain; mentally she seemed to be on the verge of a
-collapse.
-
-“Four and a half,” she muttered at the door.
-
-“Four and a half what?,” I asked.
-
-“Four and a half years since _you_ made certain promises to _me_. Four
-and a half years since we were married. David has only to raise his
-little finger . . .”
-
-“This is hardly the time to hold a _post mortem_ on our marriage,” I
-said.
-
-“And I’m hardly the person?,” she taunted.
-
-“I didn’t say that.”
-
-“You wouldn’t! You made up your mind to be patient with me at all costs.
-You just _wouldn’t_ lose your temper! Dear God, why didn’t you, George?
-I deserved it. We could have been friends if you’d dropped your hateful
-superiority for a moment, if you’d ever become human! You _can_ be! You
-were marvellously sympathetic when all was going well; but, after the
-crash, you behaved like a stone god. I was wrong. I _told_ you I was
-wrong. You didn’t blame me. You know I’m jealous through and through,
-but you wouldn’t punish me by falling in love with some one else. You
-didn’t even complain of this ghastly two years’ imprisonment. Won’t you
-ever meet me half way? I told you my love for Eric was dead; you know I
-never loved any one else. What more do you want? Must I apologize? I
-will! I’m sorry. I love you, I need you! I wouldn’t say it the other
-night, because I was trying to hold together the rags of my pride. Isn’t
-that enough? If you’ll stay, I’ll make up for all my wickedness and
-cruelty. You’re all I have in the world. I didn’t know it before; but
-now I can feel death hovering over you like some great black bird. If
-you go . . . If you go . . .”
-
-Suddenly turning, she clung to me, laughing and crying. I stood without
-speaking because her intensity of feeling overwhelmed me. I remember
-stroking her hands. I believe I told her that I should be back before
-she had time to miss me.
-
-“But you’re not going _now_?,” she cried.
-
-“Darling, I must. I shan’t be in any more danger than I am now; but, if
-it were a question of bombs and machine-guns, you wouldn’t ask me to let
-Raney down. He wouldn’t have asked me if he didn’t need me.”
-
-Barbara’s hands disengaged themselves from mine and rose to draw me into
-her embrace. As our lips met, I felt that she belonged to me, at last,
-heart and soul; but, when I looked into her eyes, I read her frantic
-certainty that we should never kiss again.
-
-“I’m coming back, sweetheart,” I promised her.
-
-“Good-bye,” she whispered. Then, still gripping my shoulders, she looked
-wildly about the room as though to face and drive away this black
-presence of death that was haunting her. “It’s . . . come too late.
-Good-bye . . . and forgive me.”
-
-“I’m coming back,” I told her again; but Barbara was now kneeling with
-eyes closed and folded hands.
-
-If she heard me, she made no sign; I fancy she heard nothing but her own
-passionate prayers. As I stumbled into the choking fog, the door slammed
-behind me; and for the first time in these bewildering five minutes I
-realized that I was awake.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
-
-
- TWO IN THE FIELD
-
-
- “The one shall be taken, and the other left.”
-
- _S. Matthew_: XXIV, 40.
-
- 1
-
-In Seymour Street I could not distinguish the houses on the far side of
-the road; at the Marble Arch I was unable to see from the one side of
-the pavement to the other; and I made my cautious way to the tube
-station chiefly by sense of touch.
-
-A London fog can be the completest insulator in the world. Paralysing
-sight and muffling sound, it separates the individual from his fellows
-in the densest part of a crowded street. As I walked up Great Cumberland
-Place, there was no sound but my own faint footsteps; the whole city
-belonged to me.
-
-“‘_Dear God, the very houses seem asleep_’;” I murmured involuntarily:
-
-“‘_And all that mighty heart is lying still._’”
-
-Then, I am not ashamed to confess, I felt suddenly frightened, for I
-knew that the mighty heart was beating, the houses which seemed asleep
-were full of people peering into the darkness of the street as I peered
-through the darkness at their windows. The street was full; at any
-moment I might trample on the unseen; and the unseen that watched and
-listened for my faint footsteps might spring out on me. I walked on
-tiptoe . . . and could have sworn that some one or something laughed at
-my futile caution.
-
-At an unattainable distance, a haze of dirty-lemon light smeared the
-darkness. I hurried forward six paces and bruised my knees against a
-lamp-post. Pausing to pick up my hat, I saw a knot of motionless bodies
-tangled on the doorstep at my feet. There was no word, no more laughter;
-perhaps I had imagined that earlier laugh. The fog insulated me again as
-though I had been thrust under an airless bell-glass with a pile of
-dead. I dared not move for fear of treading on one of them. The lemon
-light grew dim, as a thicker wave of fog floated silently from the
-unplumbed reservoir in the park. I felt my fingers tightening round my
-stick. Then one of the crumpled bodies moved in its sleep and broke the
-spell. I walked on—slowly, because I was out of breath—and steadied my
-nerves by speaking to the policeman on duty at the corner.
-
-He too, I found, was insulated by the fog. Some one should have relieved
-him hours ago; but every man in the force was required to regulate the
-traffic and to shepherd the hunger-marchers. What had happened to them
-he could not tell me. Whenever the fog lifted, he saw groups of them
-drifting aimlessly about or camping wearily in the first resting-place
-that they could find. As armies, they had either ceased to exist or had
-transferred themselves to another part of London. I asked whether he had
-heard of any trouble.
-
-“Haven’t heard nothing, sir,” he answered. “Wish I had. No, there won’t
-be no trouble. These chaps are too tired; and they’re all of them
-strange to London.”
-
- 2
-
-When I reached the light and warmth of the tube, I could analyse calmly
-my curious surrender to panic on my way up Great Cumberland Place. A
-London fog, as I had told Barbara, was no new phenomenon to me; apart
-from its dirt, I rather enjoyed one for its mystery and romance. If the
-order of interrogation had been reversed, I should have assured the
-policeman that I anticipated no trouble and that the hunger-marchers
-were too tired, too ill-acquainted with London to provoke a riot. I
-believed every word that I had said to my wife; I am not more nervous
-than most short-sighted and unadventurous men of forty; and yet for a
-moment I had entirely lost my head. Was this due to Barbara’s sudden
-collapse? Were my own nerves cracking?
-
-In the familiar long car, staring up at the well-known advertisements, I
-was myself again. I could dismiss all thoughts of imminent death,
-hanging over the house like a bird of doom, as lightly as they would
-have been dismissed by my stolid neighbours in the train. Barbara, for
-some reason, was overexcited. In my uncle’s last illness she had
-felt—or said she felt—the presence of death; she added then, with
-something of the same terror, that, if she ever heard my life was in
-danger, she would be dragged out of her indifference. We had been
-talking, throughout luncheon, of possible riots; I had arrived
-unexpectedly because I was anxious for her safety; a cell in her
-unconscious mind might well have retained our conversation as I drove to
-my uncle’s death-bed. Was it necessary to probe deeper than that?
-
-What mattered, what I could not yet begin to realize was that Barbara
-and I were at last one flesh and spirit. When I returned to her . . .
-
-I wondered whether I had done wisely in leaving her. When I remembered
-the last poignant attitude in which I had seen her, kneeling upright
-with closed eyes and praying distractedly, I felt unforgivably callous.
-
-“For a casual promise to a friend,” I told myself indignantly; “when
-I’ve assured her he’s in no danger . . .”
-
-As the train ran in to Oxford Circus, I rose from my seat. Then I sat
-down again; rose again; sat down again . . . till the conductor called
-sharply:
-
-“Now, make up your mind, sir.”
-
-I made up my mind and went on to Chancery Lane. I must keep my word to
-O’Rane. Had I wished to break it, I could not; and, with this sense of
-impotence, something of my old anxiety returned. Raney would not have
-summoned me for a trifle; if he needed me, there was danger; yet I had
-told Barbara that I should be as safe with him as if I stayed in Seymour
-Street. . . .
-
-From Chancery Lane I stumbled to my office at a pace that left no time
-for morbid fancies. O’Rane was in my room, sitting by the fire and
-slapping a stick lazily against his boot. I have never seen any one less
-like a figure of destiny, urging me to an unknown doom. At the vaguest
-hint, he would have insisted on my going back to Barbara.
-
-“Is there any more news?,” I asked. “I came as soon as I could.”
-
-“It’s very good of you. No, I’ve heard nothing since that first rumour,”
-he answered. “If I had, I wouldn’t have bothered you; but I’ve been
-trying for two hours to get through to my secretary, and the girl at the
-exchange tells me every time that there’s no answer. I expect the
-hunger-march has disorganized everything; and I can smell a pretty thick
-fog even if I can’t see it. . . . Shall we start, or is there anything
-you want to do here first?”
-
-As we set out, I realized that in the darkness of night or the greater
-darkness of a fog the blind man has an advantage over those who are
-guided by their eyes. With a murmured “Chancery Lane Tube; and then
-change at Tottenham Court Road”, O’Rane piloted me more surely and far
-more quickly than I could have found my way unaided. The contents-bills
-outside the station proclaimed—rather superfluously—“_Fog-Pall over
-London_”; but, beyond one or two collisions and an accident with a
-runaway horse on the Embankment, I could find no news. “_Griffiths’
-Armies_” were given a headline of no more than medium size; and their
-progress had been followed less far than Philip Hornbeck had carried it
-that morning. The peaceful encounter with the police in Regent’s Park
-was briefly described; but of the barricades which Sonia had seen at
-Westminster there was no mention.
-
-“By the way, you know Griffiths has turned up again?,” I said. “Your
-wife was lunching with us; and I gathered that he’d called on you at The
-Sanctuary. That was just before lunch.”
-
-“What’s happened to him?,” O’Rane asked.
-
-“Sonia told him you weren’t at home.”
-
-“Did she send him to the office?”
-
-“I believe she did.”
-
-O’Rane’s face grew grave; but he only muttered a hope that he would be
-in time to meet the deputation.
-
-“This is a moment for desperate remedies,” he explained. “That’s why I
-came to see you in the first place. Most of these fellows will starve,
-and a fair number will go berserk if we don’t do something for them.
-I’ve had leave to turn Millbank Gardens into a canteen; so we can look
-after any one who comes to The Sanctuary. Only a few, though, will
-penetrate into the heart of London; the main armies are still in the
-suburbs; and if we can set up relief-camps at Wimbledon, Hounslow,
-Hampstead, Epping . . . I wanted you to help me with the plans . . . Are
-we nearly there yet?,” he enquired with sudden impatience.
-
-“It’s the next station,” I answered.
-
-On the high ground of Hampstead, the fog lay whiter, with a tantalizing
-promise that it would clear at any moment. As we came out of the lift, I
-could read without difficulty the shop-signs on the opposite side of the
-street, though the higher ground of the Heath alternated patches of
-afternoon light with pockets of mist as impenetrable as anything I had
-seen at the Marble Arch. Of hunger-marchers I could find no trace; but
-here, as everywhere in London, the police seemed to have been multiplied
-a hundredfold.
-
-“Take my arm,” O’Rane ordered. “I can shew you a short cut.”
-
-Leaving the main road, I followed him through devious alleys until a
-sense of open spaces hinted that we must be near the Heath. After the
-noise of the train, the silence of these empty lanes was unearthly;
-after the thronged street by the station, we seemed to be alone in the
-world.
-
-“This reminds me of a raid-night in the war,” I said, as we plunged into
-a belt of fog. “Pitch-dark. Deserted. And all the time you feel there
-are thousands of people within touching-distance of you.”
-
-Before he could answer, we had come again into a broad street and were
-within touching-distance of a crowd that seemed to number thousands,
-though I could only see the first three or four ranks.
-
-“Is this one of the armies?,” O’Rane asked, as he turned, almost without
-checking, down a footway between two villas.
-
-“Spectators, I think. It was more like a football crowd than a
-demonstration.”
-
-“What the devil’s a crowd doing here?,” he asked with the first note of
-anxiety that I had heard in his voice. “There’s nothing to see, except
-my office. . . . Hold on a minute while I find the key. I’m going to
-take you in the back way.”
-
-As we halted, I observed that the footway had brought us to a high brick
-wall with a wooden door in the middle. O’Rane was fitting the key into
-the lock when the door opened from the inside and a constable flashed
-his bull’s-eye into our faces.
-
-“Now then, what are you up to?,” he demanded truculently.
-
-“This is my office,” O’Rane answered.
-
-“Sorry, sir. My orders are not to let any one in.”
-
-“But you can’t keep me out of my own house. Where’s the inspector?”
-
-The constable levelled the beam of his lamp on us again, this time with
-marked indecision. O’Rane’s voice had a ring of authority; and the key
-which he held was superficial evidence of good faith.
-
-“Are you Mr. O’Rane, sir?,” asked the constable. “The inspector’s been
-trying to get hold of you. Maybe . . . you haven’t heard, sir?”
-
-“Haven’t heard what?”
-
-“The place has been smashed about, sir. Them hunger-marchers . . .”
-
-“Any one hurt?”
-
-“None of your people, sir; but we had to take our truncheons to the
-others. If you’ll see the inspector, sir . . .”
-
-O’Rane bent his head and passed through the doorway, dragging me behind
-him by the wrist. Our path lay through an overgrown clump of evergreens;
-and, when we came into the open, on a strip of blighted lawn, it was my
-turn to catch O’Rane’s wrist while I surveyed the damage. So far as I
-could see in the uncertain light, there was not one whole pane of glass
-in the place; a door, torn from its hinges, lay athwart one of the
-trampled flower-beds; and under the boarding of the penthouse that did
-duty for a waiting-room there trickled a thin stream of black water. The
-lawn was carpeted with files and ledgers; the doorways were blocked with
-broken chairs; and the air was heavy with the smell of wet ashes.
-
-“The place is wrecked?,” O’Rane broke in on my description. “That’s
-enough for the present. Find me the man in charge.”
-
-In a corner of the main office we came upon a group of three constables,
-one inspector and two unexplained men in plain-clothes. They were
-talking in undertones round a table on which O’Rane’s secretary lay in a
-dead faint. Another clerk, white-faced and tremulous, sat in another
-corner with a telephone; a third wandered distractedly about the room,
-tidying books into place and sobbing gently to herself.
-
-“This is Mr. O’Rane,” I told the inspector. “We understand no one’s been
-killed. That’s all we know.”
-
-“It’s not the fault of those others that some one _wasn’t_ killed.
-Excuse me, sir, she’s coming to,” he added in an undertone. “Don’t hurry
-her! Stand back there and give her room.”
-
- 3
-
-Five minutes later we began to build up a composite explanation from the
-inspector’s report and the evidence of the three eye-witnesses. Shortly
-after one o’clock a man had called to see Mr. O’Rane; he gave no name,
-but said that he had been sent to the office from Westminster. On
-hearing that Mr. O’Rane was not yet arrived, he explained that he was
-spokesman of a deputation and would like to wait for an interview. The
-one clerk who was on duty during the luncheon-hour then tried to make an
-appointment for the next morning on the ground that Mr. O’Rane had said
-he would not be at the office until late, if indeed he came at all that
-day. The spokesman of the deputation replied that he had heard that
-story before and enquired sarcastically if he should lead his men back
-to Westminster.
-
-“He said he’d come all the way from the north,” interposed O’Rane’s
-secretary. “I guessed then he was one of the hunger-marchers; and I
-. . . didn’t like the way he spoke. So, when he turned to call the
-others, I gave him a push and slammed the door behind him. Then . . .
-then . . . then . . .”
-
-O’Rane patted the girl’s hand while the inspector resumed his narrative.
-Barred from one entrance, the rioters attacked the other and succeeded
-in wrenching the door down. Inside, their conduct at first was orderly:
-some stretched themselves on the floor, others collected round the
-fires; when the police arrived, however, one or two got out of hand:
-tables were overturned, drawers ransacked and the safe bombarded,
-ineffectually enough, with sticks and stones. Then two arrests were
-made; and the crowd settled down to fight in earnest. Those who were
-outside shattered the windows with every missile that came to hand;
-those within overturned the furniture, flung the books from their
-shelves and kicked burning coals into the midst of the wreckage. When
-the truncheons came into place, the attack collapsed; but, with
-half-a-dozen exceptions, the invaders had made good their escape.
-
-“Which way did they go?,” asked O’Rane.
-
-“Every way, sir, as far as we could see. They were lost in the fog
-before they were out of the garden.”
-
-“I understand. Well, they’re not likely to come back, but I suppose
-you’ll leave some one to look after the place. I shall be here first
-thing to-morrow morning, but I’ve rather a lot to do now. Can you
-arrange for some one to take these ladies home? I don’t like them to
-wander about unprotected. George, I want you.”
-
-As I followed him into the ruins of his private office, he asked me if
-Sonia had mentioned where she was going that afternoon.
-
-“I imagine, to The Sanctuary,” I answered. “She had tickets for a
-private view, but I heard her say it was too dark to do anything except
-go to bed.”
-
-“And the best place too. Will you get hold of the other telephone and
-tell her to bar the door and put the shutters up in the library? All the
-ground-floor rooms without shutters must be locked on the outside. She’s
-not to go to the door on any pretext; and there must be no lights in any
-window. If I want to get in, I’ll use the fire-escape; so she must leave
-the nursery-window open. Tell her—without frightening her, if
-possible—that I’m asking the police to draft some additional men into
-the neighbourhood . . .”
-
-“You think this gang has gone back?,” I interrupted.
-
-This was the first time that I had engaged in any adventure with O’Rane;
-and I began to appreciate some of his qualities of leadership. Always
-knowing what he wanted, he made his followers want it with equal
-intensity; fearless himself, he subdued fear in others. I felt that he
-would stand back to back with me against an army corps; and it was only
-natural that I should wish to stand back to back with him.
-
-“It’s more than likely. They’re out for blood now . . . thanks to
-Sonia’s damned folly in sending them here when I told her I shouldn’t be
-near the place. I should want somebody’s blood myself if I’d had a trick
-like that played on me.”
-
-I sent O’Rane’s message in his own words, not caring greatly whether I
-frightened Sonia so long as she obeyed to the letter. Then I telephoned
-to Seymour Street to give a similar warning. I would not speak to
-Barbara for fear she should try to argue; but I instructed Robson to put
-the house in preparation for a siege. Griffiths had honoured me with one
-call; in his mind I was intimately associated with O’Rane; I did not
-want him to call a second time until I had prepared a suitable reception
-for him.
-
-“Tell her ladyship that there’s a certain amount of rioting,” I said,
-“and it is my urgent wish that she shall not go out of doors. Mr.
-O’Rane’s office has been damaged, though—fortunately—no one has been
-injured. I’m going with him to his house in Westminster, just to see
-that everything’s all right there. Then I shall come straight home.”
-
-As I finished speaking, O’Rane came into the room and asked if I had
-sent his message.
-
-“Then I needn’t keep you, old man,” he added. “It was good of you to see
-me through. One’s sometimes extraordinarily helpless without one’s
-eyes.”
-
-“I’m coming back with you,” I said.
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because . . . one is sometimes extraordinarily helpless without one’s
-eyes.”
-
-“But this isn’t your show. Sonia set the match to the fire; and I must
-put it out.”
-
-“I may be able to lend a hand.”
-
-O’Rane stood silent for a moment. Then he shook his head and turned to
-the door:
-
-“I’m not going to let you in for this. You have . . . other
-responsibilities.”
-
-“It’s as bad as that?”
-
-“It may be. You’ve never seen a mob out of temper.” . . .
-
-“If you’re right, I may see one to-day. I’m not going to let you go
-alone, Raney.”
-
-“It’s . . . good of you; but I think you’re a fool.”
-
-“Well, that’s as may be,” I answered. “Come on.”
-
- 4
-
-As we hurried to the station, I told O’Rane that the approaches to
-Westminster had been barricaded earlier in the day and suggested that we
-should make for The Sanctuary by way of Waterloo and Lambeth. He nodded
-without speaking; and, after that, I left him undisturbed. I am not, I
-never have been, anything that could be called “a man of action”; I did
-not know whether we were hastening into the vortex of a revolution; and,
-if I had known, I should have had no idea what to do.
-
-“I’m simply waiting for your orders,” I reminded him, as we struggled
-out of the lift.
-
-“And I’m waiting for you to tell me what’s happening. How’s the fog?”
-
-“I really believe it’s thicker than ever.”
-
-“Good. Take my arm and come for all you’re worth. There’s no difference
-to me between night and day or fog and sunshine; but there’s all the
-difference in the world to these other fellows. I figure out that
-Griffiths’ gang ought to be arriving just about now, if they’ve come on
-foot. And if they’ve come at all. The police ought to be there before
-them, with luck. We’ve no idea of numbers on either side; but one
-policeman, attacking or defending, is a match for quite a few people who
-haven’t made up their minds how far they want to go. And it’s a trained
-against an untrained force. On the other hand, the police can’t go to
-extremes until they’re driven.”
-
-“And in pitch darkness,” I added, “numbers and training and the majesty
-of the law don’t count for much.”
-
-“I’m banking on that. This may be a one-man show. Me. The fog’s still
-holding everywhere? Good again. We’re all blind for this evening, but
-I’ve had more than seven years’ start of the others. I haven’t bumped
-you once so far? I can _feel_ when people are near. And I’m coming to
-know London like my own bedroom. There’s a crossing here, with rather a
-high kerb. Left incline to the refuge! There’s a lorry feeling his way
-along . . . and getting tied up with a south-bound tram. We can go on
-now. People aren’t frightened of a fog nearly as much as I should have
-expected. When I remember the agony of fear I went through when I was
-blinded . . . The helplessness . . . Here’s Westminster Bridge, but I
-don’t think it’s the least use trying that.”
-
-We hurried along the south bank of the river and only crossed when we
-were safely in the rear of all possible pickets.
-
-“What happens if we get separated?,” I asked.
-
-“Look after yourself as best you can, but don’t call me by name. D’you
-know _Lilliburlero_? Well, pretend you’re Uncle Toby and whistle that
-when you get a chance, just to shew me where you are. If you want help,
-whistle _John Peel_. I’ll get to you if I can . . . Of course, we _may_
-find everything as peaceful as the grave. If we do, I think I shall
-still take the precaution of moving Sonia and the boys to some other
-part of London.”
-
-“Bring them to Seymour Street,” I suggested.
-
-“I will, thankfully. If we find there’s a scrap in progress, we must
-arrange a retreat. There’ll be nobody on the west side of the house,
-because there are no windows for any one to break on the ground floor;
-and there’s a fairly high wall round the stable-yard. If you’ll keep
-_cavé_, I’ll slip in there and go up the fire-escape. I’ll give you the
-first line of _The Campbells Are Coming_ to know if the coast’s clear;
-if you’ll reply with _Over the Hills and Far Away_, I shall know I can
-unlock the door. From there, the way is by Smith Square, Great College
-Street and Dean’s Yard. The gates will be shut against us; but the
-police will open them. . . . Are you feeling at all nervous?”
-
-“A bit keyed-up. This damned fog . . .”
-
-“You may live to bless it. If for any reason we don’t both get through,
-we’ll say good-bye now. Slow down a bit; we can’t be more than fifty
-yards from the corner.”
-
-Though I fancied we were still half a mile away, I discovered—by the
-abrupt change from stucco to brick—that we had indeed reached the south
-side of the house. So far as I could see or hear, the neighbourhood was
-deserted; but a single distant thud, followed by a sharp tinkle, told me
-that some one on the other side of the house had broken a window and
-that the missile had been stopped by a shutter. I heard hurried
-footsteps and pulled up within an inch of colliding with a young
-policeman. His truncheon was drawn; and he had lost his helmet.
-
-“You gentlemen had best keep out of this,” he warned us.
-
-“What’s happening?,” I asked. “Are these the hunger-marchers?”
-
-“I reckon so. And they’re out for mischief. If you could see them, it
-wouldn’t be so bad . . .”
-
-He broke off as a fusillade of stones rattled against the house. A
-hollow ‘plump’, like the sound of a weight dropped into water, indicated
-another broken window; and in the moment’s silence that followed we
-heard another tinkle of glass.
-
-“The house will stand a good deal of that,” O’Rane murmured. “They’ve
-had no luck with the door?”
-
-“Two or three got in by the area window,” stated the constable. “Now
-they can’t get out again. There are two men waiting for them.”
-
-O’Rane broke into an unexpected laugh:
-
-“I’m afraid they’ll have a long wait. That’s the cellar; and the door’s
-sure to be locked. I hope they’ll find the wine to their taste.”
-
-“Is this your house, sir?,” asked the policeman. “You’d best not let
-them see you, then. They’re after you.”
-
-“So it seems,” O’Rane answered, as a new volley of stones rattled on to
-the pavement and a series of short scuffles gave place to the sound of
-running feet.
-
-The battle, we were told, had been raging for half-an-hour. At first the
-assailants had concentrated on the front door; when that refused to
-yield, they began to break every window within reach until the police
-scattered them. Then the attack was transferred to a distance. On the
-Embankment twenty yards away, where the road was under repair, lay
-miscellaneous heaps of stones and granite blocks. By these the
-hunger-marchers collected and bombarded both the house and the newly
-formed cordon. It was a difficult attack to meet at any time, but the
-fog made it impossible. When the police charged, the assailants slipped
-between and round them, to reassemble in flank and to continue their
-bombardment of the house at close-quarters; when the police charged
-back, the hunger-marchers returned to their ammunition-dump and reopened
-a long-range fire. The present lull in the fighting was due to a change
-of tactics: half the police were stationed in open order round the
-house, while the other half encircled the granite piles to cut off
-supplies. Their numbers, however, were insufficient to hold either
-position effectively; and, though further reinforcements were reported
-to be on their way, there were enough stones lying loose about the house
-for a long spell of irregular practice.
-
-“Is that fellow Griffiths in charge?,” asked O’Rane.
-
-“I’ve heard so,” answered the constable.
-
-“I want to get hold of him. This must be stopped, but it’s no good
-breaking heads and putting people under arrest. We must stop it before
-the reinforcements come up and the whole thing starts again. There’s a
-lot to be said for these fellows: they’re hungry, to begin with, and
-they’ve been fooled by everybody, Griffiths most of all. The first thing
-they need is a meal; and I’m going to promise them that, if they’ll stop
-this stone-throwing business. And after that we must find ’em a place
-for the night; but I must promise them there’ll be no arrests. Where’s
-the inspector?”
-
-“He’s guarding the area window, sir.”
-
-“I hope to God I can make my voice heard,” O’Rane muttered, as he
-vanished from my side to be swallowed up in the fog.
-
-I waited with the constable because I had been given no orders. He had
-been on duty for little more than half-an-hour and could tell me nothing
-of the battle’s beginning. On the other hand, he told me much about the
-rest of London: my premonition of a duel between Griffiths and the
-O’Ranes had come true; in every other part, the hunger-marchers were
-being peacefully conducted to makeshift kitchens and dormitories;
-Hampstead was quiet again; and this brawl, between unknown numbers on
-either side, was the nearest approach—as Philip Hornbeck might have
-said—to barricade-fighting.
-
-Only a brawl, but an unpleasant brawl. I do not remember feeling
-unusually frightened, though I was more than usually helpless. From time
-to time a stone hurtled over my head or skated along the pavement at my
-feet; of all futile precautions, I pulled my hat over my eyes and turned
-up my coat-collar; also, I heard a sustained cursing of this Egyptian
-darkness and was surprised to recognize my own voice behind it. I could
-not see my watch; I have no idea how long it was before the next
-fusillade was followed by the now inevitable scuffling rush. Then came
-the sound of O’Rane’s voice from the front of the house. He called
-several times for Griffiths; and, when no answer came, he began to talk
-to the crowd and at their leader in the same breath.
-
-Only once before had I heard O’Rane address a mass-meeting: that was in
-the early days of the war, when he came to gather recruits and wagered
-light-heartedly that he would stampede the meeting in five minutes. He
-won his bet; but then he had been able to see his audience, and his
-audience yielded to the double hypnotism of his voice and eyes. Now he
-was talking to a blind tent of darkness. I could not watch the effect; I
-could not tell how many heard him nor how many were present to hear. It
-was something that they listened in silence; but, until the speech was
-over, neither he nor I could tell for certain whether any one was in
-earshot.
-
-There was little more in what he said now than in what he had rehearsed
-to me. After telling the crowd his name—which was received in
-silence—, he explained that, when the deputation called earlier in the
-day and at the moment when it was marching on his office in Hampstead,
-he had been taking steps to procure food for men whose only fault at
-that time was that they had listened to promises which could not be
-kept. If they did not know that, Griffiths did; the government had
-stated a dozen times that it would not receive their leaders; and the
-sympathy which the hunger-marchers had aroused on their way to London
-would vanish in a moment if they destroyed houses and helped themselves
-to private property. Though it was too late to undo the harm already
-done, it could be overlooked. If the rioting stopped instantly, no steps
-would be taken against the rioters, with the exception of Griffiths
-himself, against whom the police already held a warrant for inciting to
-crime. Further, immediate steps would be taken to provide shelter and
-food; but the stone-throwing must stop. Those who came forward
-empty-handed would be marshalled and led to Millbank Gardens, where
-supplies had already been collected.
-
-The speech was over in three minutes; but twice that time passed before
-any answer came. I moved round to the front of the house, but the place
-from which O’Rane’s voice had issued was occupied by a single policeman.
-There was no more stone-throwing, but I could see nothing of the
-besieging army. Once I whistled a few bars of _Lilliburlero_, but they
-passed unacknowledged. Then I walked in a wider compass towards the
-battlefield on the Embankment. Everything was silent, every one was
-still; and each man suspected his neighbour. I could see neither
-policemen nor rioters until I was within a yard of them; then a face
-would leap at me out of the grey fog. Usually it was frightened,
-sometimes it was angry; always it seemed thin, hopeless and bewildered.
-The stench was oppressive; the sense of silent numbers suffocating.
-
-As I turned back towards the house, I felt a slight tremor among the men
-who surrounded me. Perhaps my own aimless movement had given them the
-lead they were awaiting. Those ahead of us were pushed forward; those
-behind hurried to catch up. Suspicion seemed to die down; and I heard a
-hoarse murmur of conversation. Finding myself alone, I tried
-_Lilliburlero_ again; and with an answering whistle O’Rane slipped like
-a snake through the intervening ranks and stationed himself at my side.
-
-“You all right?,” he whispered.
-
-“Yes, thanks. It’s over, Raney. What d’you want me to do now?”
-
-“Let’s be sure first that it _is_ over. . . . I don’t like the sound of
-_that_.”
-
-Taking my arm, he led me in the direction of a voice that seemed to be
-answering his own speech. I could not hear the words; and, if I
-suspected the voice to be Griffiths’, that was only because a curious
-snarl, passed from lip to lip, was taken up as a cry.
-
-“They’re saying it’s a trap,” I told O’Rane.
-
-“Trap . . . Trap . . . Trap . . .” came the snarl; and those who were
-nearest the house turned headlong till we were almost swept off our
-feet.
-
-“Trap be damned,” shouted a voice; and in place of the mutters and
-snarls came the roar of two opposing armies.
-
- 5
-
-It was very much as I had foreseen; very much as I had predicted to
-Griffiths himself. His men were turning against him.
-
-When hunger first became unbearable, they soothed their anger with a
-dose of wholesale destruction. If Griffiths had not urged them to it, I
-have never heard any one suggest that he tried to restrain them; I
-should be sceptical if any one told me that he had marched them from
-Hampstead to Westminster with another thought than to offer them a
-further dose of the same sedative. By this time, however, the men were
-realizing that broken windows brought satisfaction to no one but the
-fortunate two or three who had dug themselves into the wine-cellar. I
-hoped they would remain there. In a lull between two bursts of shouting
-I heard a subterranean bellowing; one or two bottles were flung up and
-promptly smashed by the inspector of police. I did not want our
-complications to be increased by the madness that comes to starving men
-who have inflamed their aching stomachs with strong liquor. O’Rane, if
-he aimed at dividing the enemy, could not have chosen a happier moment
-for exposing Griffiths to his followers. Their resentment of that day’s
-leadership became lost in a greater resentment of the leadership that
-had dragged them to London. Fear sharpened the antagonism of those who
-had heard a moment before that they were being incited by Griffiths to
-crime; the police were still very near; and O’Rane had promised an
-amnesty to all who threw down their missiles and came forward
-peacefully.
-
-Amnesty and immediate food. The collective cry of hunger was less than
-human; but, as I had predicted, the disappointed mob had vengeance to
-wreak on the author of its misfortunes before it could eat in comfort of
-mind. As though a barrier had fallen, there was a rush towards the
-corner of the street where an excited voice could still be heard
-haranguing of ‘traps’.
-
-“That fellow will be lynched if we don’t get him away!,” O’Rane cried.
-
-“You’ll be lynched yourself,” I answered, “if you get mixed up with his
-gang.”
-
-Even as I spoke, the tide hung and turned. As I might have foreseen, as
-Griffiths himself had told me, he could look after himself. Again I
-could not hear his words; for part of the time I fancy he was speaking
-in Welsh; and he held his audience. The opposing clamour dwindled and
-died away. The hoarse cheers of his supporters spread until they were
-taken up all round us. There was a pause of perfect stillness, like the
-moment when a gigantic wave gathers before breaking; then the mob turned
-as one man upon the house.
-
-Griffiths had won that round.
-
-“I imagine this must be something like the storming of the Bastille,”
-O’Rane murmured coolly.
-
-“They’re absolutely out of hand. The police are using their truncheons,
-too,” I added, as the sickening smack of hard wood on human flesh and
-bone was followed by yelps of rage and whimpering moans.
-
-“I haven’t heard anything of our precious reinforcement . . . There’s a
-most awful reek of whisky.”
-
-“They’re looting the cellar. Once _that_ begins . . .”
-
-“If they’ll get drunk quietly, it will be the best thing in the world
-for everybody. . . . D’you smell burning?”
-
-I sniffed; but my duller senses told me nothing till I saw a distant
-orange glow fainter than the reflection of a winter sunset.
-
-“They’ve started a fire. I can’t see where.”
-
-“Is it making any difference to the fog?”
-
-“No, but I believe the fog’s lifting. I can see . . . oh, ten yards.
-Come out of the way: I think the police are going to charge again.”
-
-Though I dragged at his arm, O’Rane stayed motionless.
-
-“If the fog’s lifting . . .,” he murmured slowly. Then, for the second
-time that evening, he gripped my hand. “We must go while the going’s
-good. The stable-door. And afterwards by Smith Square and Great College
-Street.”
-
-I found myself suddenly alone. The fog was certainly lifting, for I
-could see the concerted rush of the police, though I was not in time to
-get out of their way. It was a truncheon, I think, and not a stray stone
-that brought me down. I remember excruciating pain at the side of my
-head; I remember my knees giving slowly beneath me; and then, for a
-time, I remember nothing more.
-
- 6
-
-When I came to, the fire was invisible; but the battle was still raging.
-My glasses were gone; my head ached savagely; and an ungentle foot had
-trodden my left hand to a bleeding pulp. I felt overpoweringly sick; and
-I wanted to crawl away from all this din till I had recovered my nerve.
-I did not know why I was there at all.
-
-Then I remembered O’Rane and the stable-door.
-
-During the war, I was told by many of my friends that, in the first
-moments after being slightly wounded, they became wholly demoralized:
-they might have been facing intensive fire for several hours on end
-without undue discomfort, but, when once they had been hit, they dodged
-and cowered their way back to the clearing-station as though the heavens
-were raining shrapnel upon them. My own demoralization, as I slunk away
-and made for the stable-door by the other side of the house, was more
-complete than I care to remember: I ducked, I sidestepped, I ran, I hid,
-everywhere pursued by the reek and roar of struggling humanity,
-convinced against all reason that I alone was visible in the darkness
-and that every missile was deliberately aimed at me.
-
-The stable-door was locked; I could see no one near it; and I sank to
-the ground till I should faint again or be trampled to death. There was
-some challenge, some pass-word for me to remember; but, when I heard a
-whistle, I forgot my orders and called out: “Here I am! All clear.”
-
-There was a precautionary pause before the door was opened. Then O’Rane
-pushed a small, muffled figure towards me and stepped into the road with
-a second figure, slightly larger and equally muffled, in his arms.
-
-“Shut the door quietly and follow me,” he whispered. “It locks itself.”
-
-“Where’s Sonia?,” I asked.
-
-“I must go back for her. She’s rather rattled.”
-
-I cannot say whether my recovery was the natural result of time or
-whether I was infected by O’Rane’s unruffled calm. His companionship
-meant much; his air of authority more; and, if I was still frightened, I
-hope at least that I did not shew it. A very few steps, moreover,
-brought us into comparative quiet; and I could forget the red-hot pain
-in my head.
-
-“The fog _is_ lifting,” I told O’Rane.
-
-“The deuce it is!” He stopped suddenly and lowered his burden to the
-ground. “You must take Daniel as well, while I go back. Sonia wouldn’t
-face the fire-escape; and I must carry her down. There’s no time to
-lose, because these fellows have been filling up on neat spirit; and I
-came across a dud incendiary-bomb . . . which doesn’t look like clean
-fighting. You’re in Smith Square now. Feel your way round the church
-railings, then straight ahead, then to the left as far as you can go.
-Knock up any of the Abbey people and say these children must be taken
-in. Give them _your_ address and beat it for home. We shall join you as
-soon as we can. Go carefully,” he added in a whisper. “There’s some one
-coming. Oh, it’s only a woman. _She_ won’t hurt you.”
-
-As he turned back to The Sanctuary, I gave Daniel my undamaged hand
-while I hoisted little David half on to my shoulder. I had heard no
-footsteps, but somewhere in this bewildering darkness I heard a woman’s
-light cough. Then a voice said:
-
-“Don’t look round! I’ll take the baby as soon as we’re safe, but I want
-to keep my hands free just in case . . .”
-
-Then we came into a narrow circle of lamp-light and I saw Barbara in
-tweed jacket and trousers. She had tidied her hair away under one of my
-hats; and the fingers of her right hand gripped a service revolver.
-
-“When you didn’t come . . .” she began.
-
-“You’ve no right to be here,” I exclaimed in horror.
-
-“Just as much right as you, darling. I drove the car here in case any
-one was . . . hurt. It’s in that street by the Church House.”
-
-“Then will you shew me the way and take these infants to Seymour Street?
-Raney will follow as soon as he can bring Sonia down.”
-
-“And you?”
-
-“I’m going back to give him a hand.”
-
-“Must you?”
-
-“There may be other people in the house. Servants.”
-
-Barbara lifted the child off my shoulders into her arms and hurried down
-a side street. The fog was lifting rapidly, too rapidly; I could see
-across the street and I wondered how much could be seen on the
-battlefield outside The Sanctuary.
-
-“If you _must_ . . .” Barbara murmured. “George, I told Robson I was
-coming to see if I could help you; but . . . I brought the car to take
-back your dead body.”
-
-“I’ve no intention of being killed,” I said, “but we can’t leave people
-to be burnt alive.”
-
-“Well, . . . take the revolver,” said Barbara helplessly.
-
-When we had put the children inside the car, I went back at a run down
-Great College Street to Smith Square. The fog lay in pockets so that I
-could see thirty yards at one moment and less than three at another. I
-fancied, as I neared The Sanctuary, that the noise had diminished; I
-could see neither fire nor smoke; and, though my own road was deserted,
-I thought I could hear the patter of running feet. It was more than time
-for the reinforcements to have arrived; it was more than a likelihood
-that, with the increasing light, experience and discipline were
-favouring the police. I was halfway through Smith Square when I heard a
-sound of crying and saw a woman’s figure cowering against the railings.
-As I went forward, I was greeted with a scream of terror; the figure
-turned to run, and I recognized Sonia.
-
-Calling her by name, I started in pursuit and brought her back from the
-scene of riot for which she was blindly heading. Her nerve was gone; and
-I had dragged and carried her halfway to the car before she could speak
-coherently. Then I learned that the battle was over, the fire out and
-Griffiths’ army in full flight; but all this was nothing to the
-unforgettable agony of the bombardment, and she sobbed hysterically as
-she tried to describe her own sufferings from the moment when she
-received my message from Hampstead to the moment when her husband
-climbed through the nursery-window.
-
-“Where _is_ Raney?,” I asked.
-
-“He’s following. He said it was dangerous for us to go together; and I
-should get along quicker without him. Oh, George, it was so awful! I
-believe I’m going to faint.” . . .
-
-Though I tried to comfort her, I should have had an easier task if she
-had composed herself wholly or wholly collapsed. Though I had not shared
-her ordeal, I felt that Sonia was making rather a pitiful exhibition of
-herself. She was frightened, but so was I; so—under his Gasconnade—was
-O’Rane; so—without disguise—had Barbara been. When, however, an
-emergency wrested the direction of her daily life from her own hands,
-Barbara behaved as tradition and inherited instinct taught her. Though
-her body might play her false, the dauntless strength of breeding came
-out in her spirit; she might break down in private; but, once on the
-public scaffold, she shewed an Elizabethan daring and feared death less
-than the ague which might make her enemies think she feared death. Alone
-of us four, Sonia was more concerned for her personal alarms than for
-the dignity of the order in which we had been brought up.
-
-“It’s only a few yards to the car,” I told her. “Barbara will look after
-you. And you’ll find the children quite safe. . . . D’you know which way
-David was coming?”
-
-“No. . . . I just ran for my life. He said he’d follow.” . . .
-
-I handed her over to my wife’s keeping with no more comment than that
-she was badly shaken in nerve. There might have been a noticeable
-contraction of sympathy if Barbara, who had superfluously ventured into
-this maelstrom through loyalty to me, heard that Sonia had run for her
-life and left her blind husband to extricate herself from the danger in
-which she had involved him.
-
-“I’m just going to meet Raney,” I said. “He’s expecting us either in
-Dean’s Yard or Seymour Street.”
-
-“If we’ve gone before you come back, it’ll mean that he’s found us
-first,” said Barbara. “Then you’ll come home independently. Take care of
-yourself.”
-
-“It’s all over now. Even the fog’s almost gone.”
-
- 7
-
-As I returned to The Sanctuary for the last time, I could see—even
-without my glasses—from one lamp-post to the next. The narrow streets
-north of Smith Square were almost empty; and I could hardly blame a
-routed enemy for shying from such sinister avenues of escape. There were
-more and more people as I drew nearer to the Embankment, all of them
-rather dazed and many wounded. I saw no dead, though stretchers were
-being hurried up as I came in sight of The Sanctuary; and of the battle
-there was no other sound than a rapid scurry of feet towards Westminster
-Bridge and Vauxhall.
-
-At the corner of Sanctuary Road I was challenged and stopped by a
-policeman.
-
-“I’m looking for the gentleman whose house has been attacked,” I
-explained. “I’ve got his family in a car near by; but he’s unfortunately
-blind, and I don’t want him to miss them.”
-
-I was allowed through; and, a moment later, I stood in the midst of one
-of the strangest scenes that I have witnessed. To see, to smell and to
-touch, it was a blend of shambles and distillery under the combined
-influence of earthquake and fire. The ground was in places waist-deep
-with stones; for twenty feet round the house I heard the glass crackling
-as I walked. More than once I slipped in an ominous pool of blood; and
-the air was sickly with the smell of whisky and singed clothing.
-
-I whistled and called O’Rane’s name, but there was no answer. Every
-approach was now guarded by police; and on either side of the cordon I
-heard scuffling as the last unyielding attackers were put under arrest.
-In the middle of the open square, the wounded were laid out to await the
-ambulances. I borrowed a lantern and flashed it down the lines, but
-there was no one remotely resembling Raney.
-
-“I’m going to try the house now,” I told the policeman nearest the
-stables. “If you’ll give me a leg up, I can get over the wall and up the
-fire escape.”
-
-There was no one in the yard, no one in the house. As a last hope, I
-interrogated two or three of the constables; but, if any of them had
-found time to notice anything my description did not help to identify
-one half-seen figure in a surging crowd of many thousands.
-
-“Well, if he turns up,” I said to the inspector, “will you tell him that
-all’s well and that his family has gone to Mr. Oakleigh’s house?”
-
-Then, handing him a card, I bent my steps in the direction of the Church
-House.
-
-The fog had lifted; and only a faint haze remained. For the first time
-in many hours I looked at my watch to explain what seemed to be stars.
-It was nine o’clock; and I became suddenly conscious of great hunger,
-great fatigue and almost unbearable pain in my head and hand. At the
-same moment I began to see the events of the afternoon in their
-perspective.
-
-Nothing quite of this kind had happened for a hundred years. Barbara had
-confirmed what the policeman told me: this outbreak was isolated and
-unique. Within the next day or two I was to meet men who had driven
-unsuspectingly across the battlefield from luncheon-parties an hour
-before the battle; I was to meet others who drove across the same ground
-an hour after the surrender and only imagined that the road was under
-repair. It was local, it was brief; but it was new. Had I seen the
-beginning or the end? Sardou, I remember, makes one of his characters
-say: “_An_ émeute _is when the mob is conquered; then they are all_
-canaille; _a revolution is when they are victorious; then they are all
-heroes_.” The _émeute_ of to-day, however, becomes not infrequently the
-revolution of to-morrow. I felt that, in history, this outbreak might
-mark a turning-point: it would be the first active step towards a social
-revolution, or it would be the last demonstration of turbulence before a
-great and orderly people, with a genius for self-government, adjusted
-itself slowly, pragmatically and irrationally to the new conditions.
-
-I know now, I knew next day, that the collision which loomed so large to
-me would escape the notice of the most vigilant historian. The average
-headline in the average paper said no more than: =Disorderly scenes
-in westminster. Feared loss of life.= Then and now I felt and feel
-that what I witnessed was more than a “disorderly scene”. Little more
-than eight years had passed since the threat of a European war shook us
-to the foundations of our being. The ardent among us had vowed that, if
-we won, we would have an order of civilization for which any man would
-be proud to die. After eight years, the danger of a new war lowered more
-menacingly than in the summer months of 1914. And the civilization which
-we had set up to commemorate the war was to be judged on that
-afternoon’s encounter. Had the association of one human being with
-another, in his national and international grouping, grown so complex
-that no one could control it? Had the world become like the Roman Empire
-in its last days, when—for no reason that a statesman of the day or an
-historian of later days could enunciate—the mighty machine ceased to
-revolve? If the aim of government was to secure the life and liberty of
-the governed and to lead them towards prosperity and happiness,
-government had palpably failed in victorious England and France, in
-defeated Germany, in revolutionary Russia. My uncle warned me on his
-death-bed that we were back in 1914; had he been with me now, I must
-have told him that we were sunk to something incredibly lower than 1914.
-After the events of this afternoon I did not believe that even O’Rane
-would dispute that.
-
-Of all the ironies that had chequered his life, I knew of none greater
-than that his should be the house to be attacked by the most downtrodden
-and hopeless section of the community. If their salvation could have
-been helped by his death, he would have given his life for them as
-lightly as another man might toss a coin to a beggar. Now, if any one
-had indeed been killed, he would be held indirectly responsible.
-
-I had come to a halt till the pain which every step sent shooting
-through my head should abate. Looking again at my watch, I saw that I
-must hasten. By Great College Street, O’Rane had told me, and then into
-Dean’s Yard. As I turned the corner, I had to step aside to avoid an
-obstacle. Glancing back, I saw that it was a man. He lay stretched on
-his back, with his arms flung out, midway between two lamp-posts; and I
-could not be sure whether he was wounded or drunk. I called out to find
-if he wanted help; but there was no answer. Then I struck a match.
-
-As it flared, I saw what—in some way that I shall never understand—I
-had been expecting to see. It was this that had sent me back to his side
-again and again; this, maybe, that had brought Barbara with her car;
-this, for all I know, that appeared to her in the semblance of black
-wings beating a prophetic message over the house. O’Rane’s hands were
-cold as ice; the back of his head was brutally smashed. His black eyes
-stared up to heaven in mild perplexity at the insoluble enigma of death
-and the eternal paradox of life.
-
-He looked a boy of twenty.
-
-I covered his face and mounted guard over my last and best friend. . . .
-
- WALTHAM ST. LAWRENCE,
- Berkshire, 1923.
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER NOTES
-
-
-Mis-spelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where multiple
-spellings occur, majority use has been employed.
-
-Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer errors
-occur.
-
-Page numbers have been removed due to a non-page layout.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW ***
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the
-United States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away--you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere 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 will have to check the laws of the country where
- you are located before using this eBook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that:
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation's website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without
-widespread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/69589-0.zip b/old/69589-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index d61ab3b..0000000
--- a/old/69589-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69589-h.zip b/old/69589-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 2407808..0000000
--- a/old/69589-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/69589-h/69589-h.htm b/old/69589-h/69589-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index f8f6624..0000000
--- a/old/69589-h/69589-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,14743 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
- "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
- <head>
- <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
- <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of To-morrow and To-morrow . . . by Stephen McKenna</title>
- <link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg"/>
- <meta name="cover" content="images/cover.jpg" />
-
- <style type="text/css">
- body { margin-left:8%;margin-right:10%; }
- .it { font-style:italic; }
- .bold { font-weight:bold; }
- .sc { font-variant:small-caps; }
- p { text-indent:0; margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em;
- text-align: justify; }
- div.lgc { }
- div.lgl { }
- div.lgc p { text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
- div.lgl p { text-indent: -17px; margin-left:17px; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
- div.lgp { }
-
- div.lgp p {
- text-align:left; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0;
- }
-
- .poetry-container {
- display:block; text-align:left; margin-left:2em;
- }
-
- .stanza-inner {
- display:inline-block;
- }
-
- .stanza-outer {
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- }
-
- .stanza-inner .line0 {
- display:inline-block;
- }
- .stanza-outer .line0 {
- display:block;
- }
-
- h1 {
- text-align:center;
- font-weight:normal;
- page-break-before: always;
- font-size:1.2em; margin:2em auto 1em auto
- }
-
- h3 {
- text-align:center;
- font-weight:normal;
- font-size:1.0em;
- margin:1em auto 0.5em auto;
- page-break-after:avoid;
- }
-
- hr.tbk { border:none; border-bottom:1px solid black; width:30%; margin-left:35%; margin-right:35%; }
- hr.pbk { border:none; border-bottom:1px solid silver; width:100%; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em }
- .figcenter {
- text-align:center;
- margin:1em auto;
- page-break-inside: avoid;
- }
-
- div.blockquote { margin:1em 2em; text-align:justify; }
- p.line { text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; }
- div.lgp p.line0 { text-indent:-3em; margin:0 auto 0 3em; }
- table { page-break-inside: avoid; }
- table.center { margin:0.5em auto; border-collapse: collapse; padding:3px; }
- table.flushleft { margin:0.5em 0em; border-collapse: collapse; padding:3px; }
- table.left { margin:0.5em 1.2em; border-collapse: collapse; padding:3px; }
- .tab1c1 { }
- .tab1c2 { }
- .tab1c1-col2 { border-right: 0px solid black; }
- .tdStyle0 {
- padding: 2px 5px; text-align:center; vertical-align:top;
- }
- .tdStyle1 {
- padding: 2px 5px; text-align:right; vertical-align:top;
- }
- .tdStyle2 {
- padding: 2px 5px; text-align:left; vertical-align:top;padding-left:29px; text-indent:-24px;
- }
- .pindent { margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-indent:1.5em; }
- .noindent { margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-indent:0; }
- .hang { padding-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em; }
- .literal-container { text-align:center; margin:0 0; }
- .literal { display:inline-block; text-align:left; }
- </style>
- <style type="text/css">
- .poetry-container { margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em }
- .pindent {margin-top: 0.25em; margin-bottom: 0.5em;}
- .literal-container { margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em }
- div.lgc { margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em }
- hr.tbk { border:none; border-bottom:1px solid white;
- width:30%; margin-left:35%; margin-right:35%;
- margin-top: 1.0em; margin-bottom: 1.0em; }
- p { margin-top:0em; margin-bottom:0em; }
- .index1 .line0, .index2 .line0 {
- text-align: left;
- text-indent:-2em;
- margin:0 auto 0 2em;
- }
- </style>
- </head>
- <body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of To-morrow and to-morrow, by Stephen McKenna</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: To-morrow and to-morrow</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>A novel</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Stephen McKenna</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: December 20, 2022 [eBook #69589]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Al Haines, John Routh &amp; the online Distributed Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW ***</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:500px;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;'><span class='sc'>By</span> STEPHEN McKENNA</p>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:left;margin-left:1em;'><span class='it'>NOVELS</span>:</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>To-Morrow and To-Morrow</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Vindication</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>The Commandment of Moses</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Soliloquy</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>The Confessions of a Well-Meaning Woman</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>The Sensationalists:</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;I <span class='it'>Lady Lilith</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;II <span class='it'>The Education of Eric Lane</span></p>
-<p class='line0'>III <span class='it'>The Secret Victory</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Sonia Married</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Midas and Son</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Ninety-Six Hours’ Leave</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Sonia</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>The Sixth Sense</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Sheila Intervenes</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>The Reluctant Lover</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<hr class='tbk'/>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>By Intervention of Providence</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>While I Remember</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Tex: A Chapter in the Life of Alexander Teixeira de Mattos</span></p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:3em;'> <!-- rend=';sb:3;sa:3;' -->
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:3em;'>TO-MORROW AND</p>
-<p class='line0' style='font-size:3em;'>TO-MORROW .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>A NOVEL</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>BY</p>
-<p class='line0'>STEPHEN McKENNA</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:7em;margin-bottom:1em;'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>BOSTON</p>
-<p class='line0'>LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY</p>
-<p class='line0'>1924</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:3em;'> <!-- rend=';sb:3;sa:3;' -->
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Copyright, 1924</span>,</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>By Stephen McKenna</span>.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>All rights reserved</span></p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Published, October, 1924</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='margin-top:7em;margin-bottom:1em;'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Printed in the United States of America</span></p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:3em;'> <!-- rend=';sb:3;sa:3;' -->
-<p class='line0'>TO</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0'>MARION</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>Three years ago, <span class='it'>The Secret Victory</span> brought to an end
-the trilogy which I called <span class='it'>The Sensationalists</span>. This book
-and the antecedent volumes—<span class='it'>Lady Lilith</span> and <span class='it'>The Education
-of Eric Lane</span>—described the fortunes of certain men
-and women who constituted part of the larger groups which
-I had approached in <span class='it'>Sonia, Midas and Son</span> and <span class='it'>Sonia
-Married</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the accident of birth, fortune or talent, “these our
-actors” were made to fill a position—before, during and
-after the war—which attracted to them more attention than
-was warranted by their historical importance. My defence—if
-I must defend myself—is that the butterfly in every
-age has claimed more notice than the bee. The social scene,
-to change my metaphor, presented by so single-minded a
-writer as Mr. Greville has to find room for the D’Orsays,
-the Egremonts, the Sidney Smiths and the Madame de
-Lievens, who throng his stage in act after act, as well as
-for the Peels, Wellingtons and Melbournes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Is a defence still necessary for continuing the life of a
-character from one novel to another? Mr. Disraeli, in his
-splendid progress through a part of Mr. Greville’s period,
-refused to cut the thread of an imaginary existence at the
-moment when his last page was bound into its cover; and
-the novel-sequence which aims to describe a social and political
-scene must, no less than succeeding volumes of memoirs,
-call back to the stage the same leaders and the same camp-followers.
-If this present series have any artistic or historical
-value, I should like it to be found in the completed
-picture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I attempted, in <span class='it'>Sonia</span>, to trace the adolescence of the
-generation that grew to manhood in time to meet the shock
-of the war. That war ends in the first line of the present
-volume; and, before the last page, the government that was
-charged to bring peace back to the sparse survivors has
-itself passed away. One phase in history has been concluded;
-and this series, which aimed at describing a single
-English scene in the life of a single generation, ends with
-the end of that phase.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I ask no one to share any regret which I may feel in
-taking leave of characters that have been my constant companions
-for more than eight years. If they are no more
-likable than the men and women we meet in daily life, I
-have at least never allowed parental affection to cover up
-their shortcomings. I present them to you as a small mark
-of a deep devotion.</p>
-
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Stephen McKenna.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style='margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:3em;'><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';sb:3;sa:3;' -->
-<p class='line0'>“All our yesterdays have lighted fools</p>
-<p class='line0'>The way to dusty death.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Shakespeare</span>: <span class='it'>Macbeth</span>.</p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 3.5em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 29em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>CONTENTS</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>PART ONE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>CHAPTER</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>I</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap01'><span class='sc'>Truce</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>II</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap02'><span class='sc'>Retrospect</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>III</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap03'><span class='sc'>The Dawning of Morn</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>IV</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap04'><span class='sc'>After the Deluge</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>V</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap05'><span class='sc'>The Red Account</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>PART TWO</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>I</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap06'><span class='sc'>The Nakedness of the Land</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>II</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap07'><span class='sc'>That Which Remained</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>III</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap08'><span class='sc'>As You Sow</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>IV</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap09'><span class='sc'>In a Gilded Cage</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>V</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap10'>“<span class='sc'>Un Sacrifice Inutile</span>”</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'>PART THREE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>I</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap11'><span class='sc'>To-morrow and To-morrow</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>II</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap12'><span class='sc'>The Test</span></a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'>III</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'><a href='#chap13'><span class='sc'>Two in the Field</span></a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h3>PART ONE</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap01'>CHAPTER ONE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>TRUCE</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“ ‘Rise up, rise up, thou Dives, and take again thy gold,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And thy women and thy housen as they were to thee of old.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;It may be grace hath found thee</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;In the furnace where We bound thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And that thou shalt bring the peace My Son foretold.’ ”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Rudyard Kipling</span>: <span class='it'>The Peace of Dives</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>The eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh
-month</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though the departmental order was marked “secret”,
-I did not hesitate to give my wife a hint of its contents.
-All the world—if the armistice were accepted—could
-read the news next morning. And the armistice would
-be accepted. Silence hung over town and country
-throughout the misty, long hours of Sunday: it was, I
-felt, as though all England were at prayer. Faint restlessness
-muttered throughout the lagging, cold hours of
-Sunday night: it was as though all England were keeping
-vigil.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You <span class='it'>can’t</span> doubt,” I told Barbara, as we parted at the
-door of the Admiralty. “With any luck, the news is
-waiting for me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t <span class='it'>believe</span>,” she answered. “Four years and
-three months. Nearly a fifth of my whole life. I’m used
-to the war .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. almost. I don’t see why it should ever
-stop.”</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was my turn for late duty; but, when I reached my
-room, I found a message:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Captain Hornbeck’s compliments; and it will not be
-necessary for Commander Oakleigh to stay unless he
-wishes.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Peace was not yet come, then, or Philip Hornbeck
-would have told me; it would come that night, or he
-would not have granted me leave of absence. The Admiralty,
-meanwhile, could not have been more silent if
-the old world had died in giving birth to the new.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You got my chit?,” Hornbeck asked in an undertone,
-when I went to report. “Unless you <span class='it'>want</span> to hang about
-here .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My taste for bureaucracy,” I answered, with a glance
-of loathing at his “IN”, “OUT” and “PENDING”
-trays, “has been cured.” How long did Barbara say the
-war had lasted? Since 1914? Yes, four years and three
-months had passed since I began to masquerade unconvincingly
-as an officer of the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve.
-With the actors, artists, barristers and stockbrokers
-who combined to make up my section of the
-intelligence department, I had talked a hundred times of
-the day when we should have taken our last undeserved
-salute and laid aside the latest of our comic-opera uniforms.
-Now it was come. “As I’m here, I may as well
-lend a hand. I suppose they’re bound to sign?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hornbeck unlocked a row of japanned boxes and
-glanced perfunctorily at his secret files before plunging
-them in the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It won’t come through in time for the morning
-papers, so I’m getting rid of the evidence before I’m told
-not to,” he chuckled. “ ‘<span class='it'>The eleventh hour .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of the</span>
-<span class='it'>eleventh day .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. of the eleventh month.</span>’ Sounds as if
-a journalist had had something to do with that!” One
-file slipped to the floor; and I read on the faded docket
-“<span class='it'>Goeben and Breslau, 1914</span>”. It had been a very long
-war. “Lord! These papers are a satire on the vanity
-of human wishes!,” he drawled. “You can give all your
-people leave for the day. They won’t be in a fit state to
-work .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. even if you had any work to give them. And
-I suppose you won’t have. It .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. takes you some time
-to grasp that it’s all over,” he added, checking half way
-to the fire and staring bemusedly at the papers in his
-hands. Looking at him, I needed time to recall that he
-had been a young man when war broke out. “What are
-you and Lady Barbara going to do with yourselves?,” he
-asked after a pause.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Get away to the sun,” I answered with the grim determination
-of a man whose vitality was spent for lack
-of rest and good food.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wonder .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. what will happen .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to <span class='it'>us</span>,” Hornbeck
-pondered, punctuating his words with abrupt shrieks
-of rending paper. “No more wars; .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. no more navies
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. or armies.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, you of all men are entitled to a holiday,” I said.
-Four years of Whitehall had made him short-sighted and
-round-shouldered; his square, wooden face was pallid;
-and his slow speech argued a tired brain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Everything will seem a bit flat now,” muttered one of
-the most powerful men in England, who within the next
-few days or hours would be as inconsequential as myself.
-Beyond a narrow circle described round the Treasury Exchange,
-the name of Captain Hornbeck was unknown;
-the weight and cunning of his hand, however, had been
-felt for more than four years in Mexican revolutions,
-Greek <span class='it'>coups d’état</span> and Russian counter-revolutions. The
-papers which he was destroying ranged from reports on
-South American credit-transfers to track-charts of North
-Atlantic commerce-raiders. “This is what the N.O. has
-been training for, ever since the old Britannia days,” he
-went on. “Now that we’ve finished it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Wiping the sweat from his forehead, he threw open the
-window. From force of habit, he switched off the lights
-before pulling up the blind; then, as the last night of the
-war engulfed him in a grey eddy of fog, he laughed at
-his own forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s still a fair-sized mess to clean up,” I reminded
-him, as he raked with irresolute fingers the memoranda
-that constituted the Admiralty’s suggestions for
-the peace conference.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, I must leave that to you politicians,” he laughed.
-“And I don’t envy you the job. A world without
-war .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It’s a thing we’ve never seen, George. And
-when you consider that we’re all of us demoralized and
-most of us bankrupt .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I suppose friend Woodrow
-knows what he wants, but I don’t believe any one else
-does.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Doctor feller once told me that, when a
-baby’s born, it comes into the world with its fists clenched.
-I sometimes wonder if war isn’t a natural instinct.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Self-preservation is the first natural instinct,” I answered;
-“but it’s not consistent with modern methods of
-fighting.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I know. This war will be a friendly scrap by
-comparison with the next.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s stopping,” I said, “just when we were beginning
-to learn something of mass-production, mass-enlistment,
-mass-mobilization of resources, mass-destruction.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hornbeck strolled to a vast wall-map of the world and
-stared at it, with his hands dug deep into his pockets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the next war, we shan’t attempt to distinguish between
-combatants and non-combatants,” he predicted.
-“The air-raids and the blockade have caught the civilian.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And no country will be allowed to remain neutral,” I
-added, “any more than Luxemburg and Greece in this
-war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Until, at the end, when the human population of the
-earth has been destroyed with typhoid-germs and poison-gas,
-you’ll be left with two submersible flying-tanks chasing
-each other among the ice of the North Pole.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He stirred the fire to a blaze and began once more to
-feed it with the papers from his private safe. I might
-have helped him; but this news of approaching peace
-seemed to relax all my muscles. For the first time in
-more than four years I could look beyond the work of
-the moment and see myself as an individual. When I
-was less tired, I could go back to the old life; and, for a
-man with a competence, life in England had been more
-than tolerable until the fourth of August, 1914.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t let’s talk about the <span class='it'>next</span> war,” I said. “Unless
-we can find a substitute .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“People talked like that after Waterloo,” Hornbeck
-murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I expect they talked like that after the siege of Troy;
-but they always sowed their peace with the seeds of the
-next war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The night air was chilling the room; and Hornbeck
-interrupted his task of destruction to shut the window.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, what kind of peace do you want now?,” he
-asked, with a smile half mocking, half wistful playing
-over his tired face. “This war followed inevitably on
-the war of ’70, which followed inevitably on the nationalist
-wars, which followed inevitably on Napoleon’s conquests.
-Will you divide the world now according to
-nationalities? I’m afraid you’ll have new wars in Poland,
-Alsace-Lorraine, Austria, Turkey; not to mention Egypt
-and India. People talk about a United States of the
-World; but, when you’ve been getting the last ounce out
-of national spirit for all these years, you won’t persuade
-white men to take their orders from an international
-committee of dagos.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turned from the wall-map to the official estimates of
-casualties in all countries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When people remember what a bloody business war
-is .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We had South Africa and Japan to warn <span class='it'>us</span>!” he
-interrupted. “The next generation .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. George, I
-promise you that, unless you get your new heaven and
-your new earth functioning at once, you’ll drift back to
-the only kind of life a nation knows. Fear and arrogance;
-insane hatred and colossal stupidity. Periodically
-the world will panic into war, which is the only final solution
-known to history.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The only one we’ve tried; and it’s a solution of nothing,”
-I answered. “My God, if I didn’t believe this was
-really a war to end war .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I paused as Hornbeck was called to the telephone. He
-listened for a moment, nodded to me and took down his
-coat and cap. Even he could work no longer; and, as I
-walked home alone, I tried to understand that the “war
-to end war” had itself ended. In four years I had forgotten
-how London looked before the lamps were
-shrouded and the hoardings placarded with patriotic appeals.
-Their purpose was accomplished; a uniform would
-soon be as rare as civilian clothes were now; the hospitals
-would empty; the blue coats and red ties of the
-convalescents would disappear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The city was very silent; but at eleven o’clock, I imagined,
-there would be such a silence as would make men
-think that the earth was halting in her course. Out there,
-over the water, some would adventure amicably into the
-enemy’s lines; some would drift back to their base; most
-would wait dumbly for orders; and one man would be
-the last to die in the Great War.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the top of Waterloo Place I found a policeman flashing
-his lantern on the doors and shutters of the shops.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think you’d like to know that the Germans have
-accepted the armistice,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you, sir,” he answered with a salute.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A taxi crawled westward across Piccadilly Circus; and
-I told the driver.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They ’ave, ’ave they?,” he muttered in perplexity.
-“Oh, they <span class='it'>’ave</span>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hesitated long before reckoning the number of those
-for whom peace came too late. In ’14 my generation was
-of an age to be called for the hottest and the longest of
-the fighting. Sam Dainton had escaped with a flesh
-wound, Jack Waring with a split head and a broken
-nerve, David O’Rane with the loss of his sight; these,
-with the five or six who had failed to pass the doctors
-or had been tied to a mission abroad, were all
-that remained of the friends who had said good-bye
-to their schools in the last years of the nineteenth
-century.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A lifetime had passed since we all talked of what we
-would do “on the day peace is signed”; and yet, when
-we spoke of “last summer”, we always meant “the summer
-before the war”. It was, at the same time, an
-eternity and an episode.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So,” I reflected at the door of my house in Seymour
-Street, “one school of political thought in France looked
-upon the Revolution and the Empire.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From force of habit, I headed for the hot milk in my
-dressing-room and rang to have my bath prepared. Then
-I recollected that I need never again work by night and
-sleep by day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll breakfast first,” I told Barbara’s maid. “And I
-shan’t go to bed this morning. The armistice has been
-signed.” The girl tried to speak, but could only turn
-away with a sob that sounded like “dad”. “Has her
-ladyship been called?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Still unable to speak, the girl shook her head and
-nodded in the direction of a breakfast-tray.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara was asleep, with a light burning by her side
-and an open book face-downwards on the bed. At last,
-I told myself, I could see something of my wife. I should
-be able to read the new poets and novelists who overflowed
-her cases. At last we could entertain our friends
-again. At last, after eight months, we could have our
-honeymoon. Barbara looked dangerously fragile. As I
-watched her, one hand was drawn slowly up the sheet;
-and the fingers were almost transparent. Her head turned
-restlessly from side to side; and I knew that she was
-dreaming. There was a whispered sigh; and I felt that
-her dreams were unhappy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“George! Oh, it’s you!,” she exclaimed with a throb
-of relief; and, as she brushed the cloudy hair back from
-her face, I saw that her big, deep-set eyes were black
-and anguished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who else should it be?,” I asked, as I draped a shawl
-over her thin shoulders and kissed her flushed cheeks.
-“They’ve signed, Babs. It’s all over.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. all .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. over?,” she repeated dreamily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. I telephoned to your mother from the Admiralty.
-They’re safe: Neave and Charlie.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Silence fell between us until Barbara covered her face
-and murmured: “Thank God!” Then she sat up and
-stared round the shadowy room:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. what are we going to do now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Within an hour I felt that most people would be asking
-themselves that question:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know. For this morning Phil Hornbeck suggested
-that I should invite a few friends to my room in
-case there’s anything to see. Afterwards .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Afterwards you must take me away!,” she cried.
-“You’re quite sure there’s been no mistake?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Quite sure!,” I answered, as I sat down by the telephone
-and tried to remember which of our friends we
-should both care to have with us at the moment when
-peace dawned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A change had overtaken London by the time that I set
-out to collect my party. As on August bank-holiday four
-years earlier, when I drove about Gloucestershire, with
-Loring and O’Rane, waiting for news, the city had an air
-of suspended animation. Of the twenty strangers who
-interrogated me on my way across the park, not one had
-more doubt that the terms would be accepted than that
-the sun would rise on the morrow. And yet, so nicely
-balanced were hope and fear, I should have been surprised
-if any one had laid me long odds on peace. Like
-Barbara, they were grown used to the war. As I spread
-the news from house to house, every one said: ‘What
-time is it now?’; and it seemed as if the eleventh hour
-of the eleventh day would never come. There was a
-muddle-headed point of honour, too, that no one should
-betray even impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, yes, I’ll look in, if I have nothing better to do.
-You might have called here instead of bringing me to
-this infernal contraption,” growled my uncle Bertrand,
-who always visited his hatred of the telephone on the
-heads of those who addressed him by it. “That all you
-have to say? Filson! Filson!,” I heard him calling to
-his man. “They’ve signed!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Dainton, whom I invited for the sake of old associations,
-murmured: “Thank you so much. I know
-Roger will be interested,” as though I had announced a
-minor change in the cabinet. Raymond Stornaway said:
-“I trust this doesn’t mean a general holiday: I’ve the very
-devil of a day’s work ahead of me.” My sister Beryl
-hoped that I had not gone to the expense of buying that
-new uniform.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had already warned old Lady Loring by telephone;
-and, when I reached Curzon Street, I found my cousin
-Violet dressed to go out and playing in the hall with her
-boy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m waiting to be told what to do next,” was her
-greeting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though she had worn her deep mourning for more
-than three years, her little white face looked pathetically
-young and helpless. I wondered what kind of life she
-could expect from the armistice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re all in the same boat,” I answered. “I called
-to suggest that you should bring Sandy to the Admiralty.
-My father could just remember the Famine; my mother
-remembers the crowds in the streets when Sebastopol fell.
-Sandy may carry away something to fix this, eighty years
-hence, as the day when the Great War ended.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder if people will talk about it then as ‘the
-Great War’?,” Violet mused.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she buttoned her boy into his coat, I felt that she
-was thinking only of the day when her husband of a
-month, with all that health, fortune, rank and riches could
-give him, drifted whimsically to France, in the meshes
-of a machine which he ridiculed, there to die in defence
-of one country, which he faintly despised, against another,
-which he mildly disliked. Violet had been left
-with a son to bring up and a vast estate to administer.
-She would never, I knew, marry again; and, now that
-the war was over, she saw herself fading into the twilight
-of life to dwell with ghosts and memories and
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Great Waste,” I suggested, as we set out. “If
-any one could have foreseen, four years ago, how this
-would end, I wonder if there’d have been a war? I tremble
-to think what the world will look like when we have
-time to take stock.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In our passage from Loring House to the Admiralty, I
-found that the news had spread before us; and young
-Lucien de Grammont, speeding towards the French Embassy,
-stopped long enough to vent on us his disappointment
-that the allies had not insisted on unconditional
-surrender.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Those accursed Americans!,” he cried. “But for
-them, peace would have been signed in Berlin! Now in
-fifty years’ time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, let us hope we shan’t be
-alive to see it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he flung off in furious disappointment, I ventured
-the opinion that, but for the Americans, a German peace
-might have been dictated in Paris. Then we pressed
-through the crowd in the Processional Avenue and took
-up our positions to see at least the greatest war in history
-ending. My secretary had cleared the table of its trays;
-and we sat in a row, looking through the mist of Horse
-Guards’ Parade and trying to guess what was going to
-happen. The Crawleighs had arrived before us and were
-talking to Raymond Stornaway; Sir Roger and Lady
-Dainton followed on our heels; and our last inch of space
-was filled when my uncle Bertrand, puffing and growling
-at the stairs, lumbered in with heavy tread and demanded
-in the loud voice of incipient deafness why it was necessary
-to collect this nest of magpies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Disreputable old wrecks we are!,” he muttered with a
-glance of sour and comprehensive disfavour from Lord
-Crawleigh to Sir Roger Dainton and from Sir Roger
-Dainton to Raymond Stornaway. The grey November
-light, shining on a row of bent backs and haggard faces,
-made us older than our years. “We’ve <span class='it'>had</span> our chance,”
-he continued; “I believe the only way of stopping war is
-to have conscription for all men and women over fifty
-and to call up the oldest classes first.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So that you could hear men of thirty boasting that
-they’d ‘given’ two grandfathers to the army?,” asked
-Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’d still be of an age to be kicked, if they tried
-that kind of cant.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, but I’m sufficiently sick of
-everything to feel it’s indecent for me to be alive when
-mere children are wearing black for men who might have
-been my grandsons. Eighty-four.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Most of my
-friends will tell you I’ve lived twenty years too long;
-and, on my soul, I believe they’re right.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You said something of the kind on the day war broke
-out,” I reminded him. “Now that it’s all over .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand gathered himself for attack, towering over me
-with his hands on his hips till the silence of the room
-daunted him. Then he shrugged his shoulders and
-turned, with a savage tug at his black walrus-moustache,
-to shake hands with his neighbours:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t detect any great reason for optimism. Um,
-Crawleigh. You English have seen a million or two of
-your best men killed or wounded.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Whose child is
-that? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You’ve seen new debt piled up to the tune
-of thousands of millions.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. How do, Lady Crawleigh?
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’m an Irishman.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Violet, my dear!
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And a liberal. I’ve seen liberalism stamped out of
-existence and the Irish party broken.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Lady Dainton,
-your humble servant. Find me a seat, George, there’s
-a good boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Most of us knew my uncle well enough to imagine his
-violent anger if any one else had dared to be so despondent.
-My father-in-law, however, felt obliged to pick up
-the gage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mean that we should be no worse off,” he suggested,
-“if the Germans had drawn up the terms and we
-had accepted them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not quite,” Bertrand conceded, “not quite.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-beg your pardon, Barbara my dear, I didn’t see you! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-If you know your Bible, my dear Crawleigh, you’ll recollect
-that a Jew called Samson tried to get level with the
-Philistines by pulling a heavy roof down on their heads.
-He got level; but he paid for it with his life. Some one
-pulled away the pillars that had been holding up our
-civilization for Heaven knows how many centuries.
-Credit, commerce, law and order, faith and morals, production,
-exchange, distribution: they’ve all toppled; and
-they’ve toppled on the heads of <span class='it'>all</span> of us. You’ll see as
-soon as peace really sets in. No! No, Crawleigh! This
-war should have ended two years ago, while there were
-still a few tiles left on the roof!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I recalled my uncle’s warning, on the day war broke
-out, that freedom of speech was dead; on the day it
-ended, he asserted his right to it with a truculence that
-had been shouted down when he pleaded for “a
-patched-up peace” at the end of 1916, before the United
-States came in, and again in 1917 when the Lansdowne
-letter was published.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lucien de Grammont wants to go on to Berlin,” I
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand clasped his hands over the crook of his stick
-and nodded scornfully at a headstrong world that refused
-to take his advice. His expression and attitude reminded
-me of Dr. Johnson, in the celebrated picture, awaiting an
-audience with Lord Chesterfield.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He forgets, perhaps, that we at least went into this
-war to uphold the neutrality of Belgium. We stayed in
-to make the Germans pay for the damage they’d done
-there. Later .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Later, we were told that the French
-must have Alsace-Lorraine, Russia must have Constantinople,
-Italy must have an infernal place called the Trentino.
-And any stray islands or continents where a German
-or the ally of a German has ever set foot must be
-taken away and given to somebody else. It may be all
-very right and proper; but that wasn’t our aim in 1914.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More was coming; but his audience began to shew
-signs of hostility; and Violet intervened by setting her
-boy on the old man’s knee and whispering:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mustn’t quarrel on a day like this. Help me to
-shew him the different nationalities, Uncle Bertrand.
-Sandy! Sandy! You see the little man down there by
-the tree. D’you know what he is? He’s a Jap. Japanese.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Jap-an-ese,” Sandy repeated slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Those are Americans,” she continued, with her finger
-pointing to three grave, lean-faced young officers. “Amer-i-cans.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Call ’em ‘Yanks’, most noble marquess,” grunted
-Bertrand, who—with much else that was Johnsonian—exhibited
-the doctor’s unreasoning antipathy to the new
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Merry-cans,” Sandy repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s a Frenchman! There’s a Canadian! See,
-Sandy? Uncle Bertrand, find me an Italian,” Violet
-pleaded. “I don’t know how much this mite will remember,
-but it is rather marvellous to see them all together.
-That’s a South African, isn’t it? Oh, and a poor
-soul with only one leg. There’ll still be plenty of them
-for him to see when he’s grown up. I <span class='it'>wish</span> I could find
-an Italian!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The open space under my window had filled so rapidly
-that it was hardly possible for any one to move. Typists
-from the government offices, in short skirts and transparent
-blouses, were standing on tiptoe, bare-headed in
-the biting cold, staring bright-eyed over the shoulders of
-those in front. There were soldiers, in uniform and in
-their hospital undress; sailors; nurses; government messengers
-with battered red boxes; a park-keeper; two
-clergymen; some errand-boys; and a thousand nondescripts.
-At one moment they were very silent; at another,
-they broke into feverish conversation with unknown
-neighbours, occasionally shaking hands and cheering
-a foreign uniform.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Five minutes to eleven,” muttered a voice which I
-could not identify.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The emotions of the crowd were reacting on us. Behind
-me, I could hear murmurs like the soughing of wind,
-rising and falling with the murmurs of the crowd. When
-hands were excitedly shaken below us, I felt Barbara’s
-fingers gripping my wrist and saw Violet bending to kiss
-the silken curls of her child’s head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Out there, over the water, the ‘cease-fire’ must be
-travelling down the unending shambles of the two opposing
-lines. The shadow that had darkened the world for
-more than four years had at last been driven away; and
-no one was going to be mutilated or killed any more. All—more
-than all—that we set out to do in 1914 had
-been accomplished; and the bound heads and empty
-sleeves of the survivors, the black dresses of those with
-no survivors to welcome, testified to the cost. Of the uniforms
-below us, some had first been donned in Tasmania,
-some in Natal, others on the Alaskan border. Belgium
-and Servia, Russia and France, Portugal and Japan, Italy
-and Rumania: all had joined hands with our English-speaking
-peoples to hem in the wild beast. Throughout
-the night, the news had crackled from Poldhu to the
-Azores, from Arlington to Seattle, that the wild beast
-was subdued. It had flashed to lonely patrols through
-the frost of the North Sea and the fire of the Persian
-Gulf; two hundred million men were now standing silent,
-with their eyes on their watches; and I fancied again the
-unearthly hush that must drop on the world when the last
-war ended.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In spite of Bertrand, in spite of Lucien de Grammont,
-in spite of Hornbeck I believed that it was the last war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Burp! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Burp! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Burp!</span> The maroons were
-like the rending of colossal drums. <span class='it'>Burp! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Burp! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Burp!</span> Sandy turned wide eyes of alarm
-upon us and buried his face in Violet’s bosom. <span class='it'>Burp!
-Burp! Burp!</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Eleven o’clock,” muttered Roger Dainton in a quavering
-voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My secretary collapsed into a chair, murmuring “Air-raid”;
-and, though I knew that air-raids had now passed
-into history, I imagined for a moment that the last ‘scrap
-of paper’ had followed the first and that London and
-Paris were to be laid in ruins.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Burp! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Burp! Burp!</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no concerted cheering from the crowd
-below; but I had a curious feeling that the next man
-but one, down all that line from the Admiralty Arch to
-Buckingham Palace, had opened his lips and was waiting
-for a neighbour to cheer with him. Heads were turning
-in every direction; eyes were gazing upward, as though
-they expected to see “Peace” written across the sky in
-letters of flame; bodies, for a moment, were very still.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then that vast sea of men and women gathered itself
-up and poured with a hoarse roar towards the Palace.
-There was a check, and I fancy the first-comers must
-have been pressed against the railings; I threw open my
-window in time to hear a mutter rolling from lip to lip:
-“The king! They’re calling for the king.” Later,
-though we could see and hear nothing of it, the word
-was passed: “The king! He’s speaking”; later still:
-“He’s finished! Give him a cheer! Hip, hip! <span class='it'>Come
-on.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The human sea must have eddied at the Palace. Five
-minutes later, as the crowd below my window surged
-forward, a returning stream poured down the Processional
-Avenue into Trafalgar Square; and a new current
-set in towards the Abbey. There was little cheering now,
-though every one made individual noises of greeting and
-laughter. A War Office car hooted its deliberate way
-across Horse Guards’ Parade and was promptly seized
-by three wounded soldiers and four girl-clerks, who
-ranged themselves along the running-boards and perched
-on the bonnet. As though all had been awaiting a signal,
-the crowd broke into little groups and swept like swarming
-bees upon every vehicle in sight. So long as all could
-move, it did not matter whither they hurried: something,
-all seemed to feel, must be happening somewhere else.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The war’s over!,” some one cried; and mechanically,
-like hysterical children, a dozen others repeated uncomprehendingly:
-“The war’s over! The war’s over! The
-war’s over! The war’s over.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And the funny thing,” said Raymond Stornaway,
-blowing his nose vigorously, “is that they don’t know
-what to do next.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do <span class='it'>we</span>?,” asked Bertrand; and, for once, he seemed
-less anxious to instruct than to be instructed.</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No one wanted to speak first. No one wanted to
-move. No one cared to look any one else in the eyes.
-Lady Crawleigh, I think, was the first to recover; and
-she was slipping out of the room, with a twisted smile,
-when Raymond put his back to the door and took the
-position in hand with a general invitation to lunch with
-him at the Carlton.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No speeches or ‘celebrations’,” he promised. “If
-you’ll fight your way there as best you can, I’ll telephone
-for a table.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With the exception of Violet, we were glad to have
-our minds made up for us. Bertrand was right: we none
-of us knew what to do next. The movements of the
-crowd had become rhythmical by the time that we set
-out. Every cab and bus was loaded with excited clusters
-of men and women who seemed ready to do anything
-but remain still. Boys with paper caps and empty tins
-marched aimlessly at the head of irregular battalions;
-overwrought girls and grave grey-beards tramped with
-arms linked, sublimely unselfconscious. The streets were
-carpeted with torn paper. An indistinguishable hum of
-voices floated over and about us, still seeming—as before—to
-come from our next neighbour but one; and
-on every face was written vague relief, vague good-will,
-dawning disappointment and vast perplexity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘They order this matter, I said, better in France’,”
-quoted Raymond, as we drifted slowly through the crowd
-to kill time before luncheon. “The English don’t know
-how to express their emotions.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They haven’t had much time yet to think what their
-emotions are,” I reminded him. “What’s the next stage?
-Babs and I are going off to the Riviera as soon as we
-can. But after that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>My</span> work will go on,” Raymond murmured with a
-rueful glance down Pall Mall. We were within sight of
-the unwieldy mansion from whose roof young Deryk
-Lancing fell or flung himself on the eve of the war. The
-estate, I believe, was valued at about twenty-five million
-pounds sterling; and a freakish will had laid upon
-Raymond’s shoulders the task of distributing a fortune
-which Deryk himself could not control nor keep from
-increasing. “You can come and help me, if you like,
-George.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thanks, I’ve done the last day’s work of my life,” I
-answered; “but I’ve lived so long at other people’s orders
-that I’ve forgotten how to take a holiday.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rest of our party was awaiting us by the door of
-the restaurant; and throughout the meal we talked, for
-talking’s sake, of the fourteen points and the probable
-terms of peace. Though we had all accepted Raymond’s
-invitation with relief, we were more sincerely relieved
-when luncheon came to an end. We wanted to think;
-and, when I had written a formal request for immediate
-demobilization, I took Barbara home. The streets were
-emptying as the silent crowds began to feel that they
-could not for ever tramp to and fro or steal aimless rides.
-Hunger was driving them in search of food; and the sunless
-November afternoon, already touched with frost, was
-mottling their white faces and chapped hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I feel .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. dazed,” Barbara signed, as we got into a
-taxi with her parents.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We all do,” answered Lady Crawleigh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we drove away, I watched our party scattering.
-From their silence I judged the Crawleighs were trying
-to realize that their two elder boys were safe at last; the
-Daintons, walking close together with bent heads, were
-no doubt thinking of the son who would not return. As
-my uncle’s big, lonely figure disappeared from sight, I
-fancied that he might indeed be feeling he had lived too
-long. William the Fourth had completed half his reign
-when Bertrand was born: a man who had survived the
-nineteenth century, the Victorian era and the greatest
-war in history might well shrink aghast from the unknown
-future.</p>
-
-<h3>6</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At Barbara’s thoughts I could make no guess. Before
-the war, she had been more mercilessly pursued by publicity
-than any one of her generation. When our engagement
-was announced, I slunk like a criminal past the contents-bills
-that proclaimed a “<span class='it'>Famous Society Beauty
-Engaged</span>”; and, on the day of the wedding, when the
-traffic was held up for three hours and the auxiliary
-police were numbered by hundreds, the London crowd
-was certainly far more concerned to catch a glimpse of
-Lady Barbara Neave than to hear that the Channel ports
-were safe. Since our marriage, she had hardly appeared
-in public; but, as she crouched over the fire without speaking,
-I wondered what picture she was composing for her
-life in the unknown, new peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When her maid came to dress her, I went to my own
-room. Night had fallen silently; and, when I looked
-towards the corner of Park Lane, the streets were more
-empty than on the night of an air-raid. Once or twice
-I heard the echo of subdued revelry; but, in ten minutes,
-I counted only four men and two women walking rapidly
-westward, closely buttoned against the biting air. Any
-vision of what this day would be had nothing in common
-with the patchwork I had seen. Dawdling luxuriously—for
-the first time in four years—over my dressing, I
-could recall scraps of altercation with Bertrand, flashes
-of speculation with Hornbeck, confidences with Crawleigh.
-Jerkiness, incompleteness, artificial reserve, an
-overwhelming perplexity and a relief too great to be
-expressed were what I carried away from the armistice;
-and I should think that most people in England experienced
-the same confused emotions and lay down that
-night with the same confused recollections.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was none of the vulgar debauchery that had disgraced
-the capital of a great empire on Mafeking night:
-in nineteen years our pride was more chastened and our
-thankfulness more heartfelt, even if we did not know
-how to give it words.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I thought you promised to arrange a survivors’ dinner,”
-said Barbara, as we went up to bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Only about six of us survived,” I answered. “And
-we’re all scattered. We’re tired, too. The war went on
-too long.” Though I was almost too exhausted to think,
-I remembered a far-away debate at Melton on the first
-anniversary of the war, when the greatest headmaster
-and the wisest man that I have met warned me that a
-long war would be followed by an even longer moral
-reaction: a bruised world, said old Burgess, would go
-back to the ways it knew and to the fleshpots it loved.
-“We shall be useless for years,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder if it was worth it,” Barbara mused.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That depends on what you expected or wanted.
-We’ve secured our terms. And, if it’s not too rhetorical,
-I believe that every man who voluntarily offered his life,
-at a time when we thought we were degenerating, has to
-a great extent saved his soul. This country has been
-spared invasion.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara parted the curtains in her room and looked
-down on the silent street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The first night of peace since Jim’s last party at
-Loring Castle,” she murmured. “We .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, I
-suppose we go on from that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we want to.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, don’t you? For the last four years we haven’t
-been able to call our souls our own.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder whether we ever shall again,” I said, as I
-filled my final pipe. That last night of peace lingered
-more vividly in my memory than any since. War was
-certain. We had read Grey’s speech; and I walked with
-O’Rane up and down the valley-terrace, trying to decide
-what we were fighting to preserve. “We want something
-more than the <span class='it'>status quo</span>,” I told Barbara. “That
-night .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There was no question, then, of a general
-levy: the war must be over in a few months, and only
-the regular army would fight. Well, we’d seen Jack Summertown
-and a car-load of officers driving off the night
-before: they were a small minority who were quite clearly
-going to risk their skins for the rest of us. Were we
-worth it? I told Raney that I’d like to shew something
-that was better worth fighting for.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And haven’t we? When you think how every one
-has worked and fought .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But now that it’s all over?,” I persisted. “Raney
-said that people couldn’t come back from the war to take
-up the old futility; you couldn’t set up social barriers between
-men who had undertaken the same charge. It was
-unthinkable to save a country from invasion in order to
-perpetuate things like sweated labour. I wonder.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What a long time ago it all seems!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no cynicism in Barbara’s voice; but, if anybody
-spoke nowadays of a new world, his words were
-dismissed as Fleet Street rhetoric or Downing Street claptrap;
-and, though not one man of all the thousands who
-would be returning in the next few days was likely to
-say that he had risked his life to perpetuate sweated
-labour, I could not imagine that many would exert themselves
-to abolish it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Exertion! I was too tired to undress! The world
-might be bankrupt and yet survive; the world might be
-decimated and yet make good its wastage; first and foremost,
-the world was weary to the marrow of its bones.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap02'>CHAPTER TWO</h1></div>
-
-<h3>RETROSPECT</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Now tell us what ’t was all about,”</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Young Peterkin, he cries;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And little Wilhelmine looks up</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;With wonder-waiting eyes;</p>
-<p class='line0'>“Now tell us all about the war,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And what they fought each other for.”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“It was the English,” Kaspar cried,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;“Who put the French to rout;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But what they fought each other for,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;I could not well make out;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But every body said,” quoth he,</p>
-<p class='line0'>“That ’t was a famous victory.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“With fire and sword the country round</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Was wasted far and wide,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And many a childing mother then,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And new-born baby died;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But things like that, you know, must be</p>
-<p class='line0'>At every famous victory.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“And every body praised the Duke</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Who this great fight did win.”</p>
-<p class='line0'>“But what good came of it at last?”</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Quoth little Peterkin.</p>
-<p class='line0'>“Why that I cannot tell,” said he,</p>
-<p class='line0'>“But ’t was a famous victory.”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Robert Southey</span>: <span class='it'>The Battle of Blenheim</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we set out for Cannes three days after my
-demobilization, I intended to remain out of England for
-at least a twelvemonth. Since the night when Hornbeck
-and I waited for news of the armistice I had thought
-many times of his blank and puzzled confession: ‘<span class='it'>This
-is what the N.O. has been training for, ever since the old
-Britannia days.</span>’ If I had not also been preparing for
-the peace and for the war which preceded it, I had at
-least toiled for the whole of my adult life to preserve the
-peace which preceded the war. Now I could have
-adapted Hornbeck’s reasoning of ‘<span class='it'>no more wars, no more
-armies and navies</span>’ to my own case; and, when my friends
-asked me what I was going to do now, I might have said:
-‘No more wars, no more politics or journalism on the
-old lines.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And this, I take it, was the attitude of all who had even
-a smattering of modern history. From the moment when
-I warned Barbara that we should perhaps never again be
-able to call our souls our own, I realized that the armistice
-had ended nothing but the long business of killing. The
-victors would now contend for the fruits of their victory,
-as Russians, Prussians and British had contended in the
-Congress of Vienna; the vanquished would struggle to
-preserve in defeat all that compassion, adroitness and
-obstinacy could secure them, as Talleyrand had struggled
-for France after Waterloo. The alliance, if it was like
-any other of modern times, would be strained and perhaps
-broken in the first weeks of peace, as after our wars
-with Louis XIV and Napoleon. We should hear men
-speaking, as de Grammont and Hornbeck already spoke,
-of “the next war”. Any one who was concerned to
-avert that must be prepared for a continued effort in
-which he might truly be unable to call his soul his own.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such energy or ability as I possess were ready to be
-thrown into the common stock. I had told Philip Hornbeck
-that the war would have been fought to no purpose
-if we failed to discover a means of preventing future
-wars. My difficulty was to know where my own very
-moderate ability and energy were to be applied. The
-leading articles and public speeches of these days, taking
-their time from President Wilson, were familiarizing the
-idea of a league of nations. Neither speech nor article,
-however, made clear how the league could be helped to
-birth by the good-will of insignificant, isolated individuals.
-I debated with Bertrand whether I should stand
-again for parliament; but my radicalism from 1906 to
-1910 was too strong for the taste of Frank Jellaby and
-the other liberal whips; it would be repugnant now to
-every section of an assembly that had sunk party divisions
-and was aiming at an agreed peace. Very much as Bishop
-Blougram counselled Gigadibs to “overhaul theology”,
-my uncle suggested sardonically that I should examine
-the creeds which I had been professing for the last quarter
-of a century and see how much of them the war had
-left. He did not, however, urge my returning to the
-House; and, if the outbreak of war had justified him in
-discontinuing our propaganda in <span class='it'>Peace</span>, the end of the
-war was hardly the occasion for resurrecting it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m more completely out of a job than any of you,”
-I told Hornbeck when my old colleagues at the Admiralty
-entertained me to a farewell dinner on my last night in
-England. “An obsolete political editor .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lucky man!,” he sighed enviously. “I’ve been
-warned for duty when the peace conference opens. And,
-after that, I’m to convert the intelligence department
-here to peace uses. Beating swords into plough-shares;
-and what not.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I thought I could be of any use to you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” I
-began, with temperate enthusiasm; but Hornbeck shook
-his head and nodded meaningly towards the men at the
-far end of the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve already more than I know what to do with,”
-he murmured ruefully. “<span class='it'>You</span> don’t <span class='it'>need</span> a job, but most
-of these fellows do; and it’ll be harder for them to find
-one than for you. The war was the opportunity of a
-lifetime for most of them; but when it’s a question of
-conventional, peace-time billets .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hornbeck shrugged his shoulders and looked with
-mingled pride and amusement at the flock which he had
-collected. There were men and women, married and
-single, old and young; drawn from a dozen different professions,
-they were alike in nothing but their admitted
-ignorance of civil-service ways. And, in the hands of
-Hornbeck, this ignorance had been converted into an asset.
-As the department is dead, I can praise it—without
-offence—for loyalty, hard work and efficiency such as I
-have never seen excelled; without offence, too, I hope, I
-can say that we were the strangest collection of government
-officials that one man ever assembled below one roof.
-The war, if it did nothing else, gave scope to our versatility.
-At this dinner I recollect that Bellamy, the
-actor, sat next to Clayton, the paper-manufacturer. On
-his other side was Whitburn, the chancery silk; and, beyond
-him, old Norton, the banker. Next to him sat my
-private slave and fact-finder, Spence-Atkins, who had
-reached manhood as a traveller in Manchester goods and,
-on being discharged for neglect of business, had drifted
-about the world, collecting figures and languages. Next
-to him, again, was Jefferson Wright, who began the war
-as a mathematical coach, lost a hand at Neuve Chapelle,
-formed the statistical branch of the Purchase-and-Supply
-Department, seconded himself to the Admiralty and ended
-mysteriously as a brigadier on the pay-roll of the Ministry
-of Labour.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It takes all kinds to make an intelligence department,”
-I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wish I could find something for them to do now,”
-answered Hornbeck; and I remember his words as the
-first hint of the human dislocation that would come as the
-country declared itself in a state of peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the meantime, our conversation at this dinner
-strengthened my feeling that I could do no good by remaining
-in England at present; and I had excellent private
-reasons for wishing to go abroad and to keep my
-wife abroad. Until conditions were normal, we did not
-even know where to live. Most of my income was derived
-from Ireland: sentiment and duty required that I
-should spend part of my time there as soon as the country
-was habitable; and, now that my sister was married and
-my mother had made her home in the south of France,
-Barbara might well grasp at the chance of escaping from
-England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Quite deliberately, I feel as if I never wanted to go
-back,” she announced next day, as we watched the white
-cliffs of Dover fading from view.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But London, without you, would simply not be London!,”
-said Lucien de Grammont, who was taking us
-to stay with him at his father’s house by the Etoile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It will perhaps be better for London, certainly better
-for me, if we both make a fresh start,” she answered.
-“I’m rather tired of it all.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of London in war? Naturally!,” Lucien persisted.
-“And for the first months after the war, when we look
-for the familiar faces and have to tell ourselves that they
-will not come back .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Later on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Later on, we must see how we feel,” I said; and the
-conversation swung on to a less dangerous tack.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though we never discussed her adventures in the days
-before our marriage, I felt that Barbara was thinking
-less of the familiar faces, which she would not see again,
-than of those which would inevitably reappear in London
-when each man returned to his own place. Among our
-distressingly free-spoken friends it was commonly reported
-that she was half engaged at the beginning of the
-war to young Jack Waring; and, though she never pretended
-to be in love with him, the engagement—according
-to the Crawleighs—kept her from marrying Eric
-Lane, with whom she was in love beyond all shadow of
-doubt. Jack was in England looking for work. Eric
-had been lecturing and travelling in America and Japan;
-he would be coming to England as soon as he had a new
-play to produce. I did not want Barbara to be reminded,
-I did not want to be reminded myself, that she only married
-me when Eric vanished from her world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We want to begin our married life in some place with
-no associations,” she went on, half to herself. Then, as
-though to protest that she was not thinking of Eric, she
-looked up with a smile and took my arm. “George and
-I have had no honeymoon yet; and my beloved parents
-didn’t make things very comfortable for us when I married
-without a dispensation. Perhaps they’ll be more
-reconciled if we give them a holiday.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. How soon
-will peace be signed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That depends how soon the conference opens,”
-Lucien answered with a shrug. “You are to have your
-general election first; and we .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you will not find we
-are in any hurry. There are nearly five lost years to
-make up. France too is tired.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lost years were being recovered when we reached
-Paris in the last days of November. We had seen the
-war ending in London; here we watched it being buried.
-Every one who could get a passport and a ticket seemed,
-like us, to be heading for the Riviera and spending a week
-in Paris on the way. Every one, too, seemed to share
-our vagueness and indifference to what lay ahead of this
-holiday. For the first time in four years, our time was
-our own; for the first time in four years Paris could
-dine and dance without fear of being bombed or shelled.
-Barbara bought frocks; Lucien arranged parties; and I
-added the hall of the Ritz to the brief list—headed by
-Port Said and Charing Cross—of the places where a
-man, without waiting unduly long, can be sure of meeting
-every one who has ever crossed his path before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I doubt if in any other single week I have eaten so
-many meals or spent so much money. From time to time
-Lucien grumbled half-heartedly at all this waste of time:
-he had been recalled from the embassy in London to assist
-in drafting the agenda for the conference, and I felt
-he owed a grumble to his conscience. For myself, I
-blessed every hour of delay that enabled us to shed the
-memories of the last five years and to forget the acerbities
-of the last five months. Lucien had long been an
-old enough friend to drop his diplomatic reserve in talking
-to me; and there were times, before and after the
-expeditions to Gallipoli and Salonica, before and after
-the United States entered the war, before and after the
-Italian reverse and the Russian collapse, when the alliance
-would have been severed if we had been responsible for
-it. Now, as I told him, this brief spell of dissipation had
-saved us from becoming stale. With Victor Boscarelli,
-from the Italian embassy, and Clifford van Oss, from the
-American Red Cross, we formed a private international
-alliance, each entertaining the others by turn and all
-swearing friendships that death itself would be powerless
-to sunder. A critic might have been puzzled to say
-whether Clifford’s Italian was worse than my French;
-but our radiant good-will transcended the halting interpretation
-of words, and I felt a warmer liking for my
-neighbours than I had ever, in my pitiable insularity,
-been able to achieve before with men of another race.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At last,” I pointed out to Lucien, “we can talk amicably
-without discussing whether one country did all the
-work and another made all the money. There’s a real
-understanding. France, England, America: all are at the
-very top of their prestige. If we can pull together, we
-can make what we like of the peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I still think we ought to have gone on to Berlin,” he
-persisted. “However, if you back us up and if we can
-get what we want without it, I shan’t complain.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Remember you’re all coming to stay with us at
-Cannes,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, on that word, we set out for a house where the
-rumour of war and world-settlement seemed never to
-have penetrated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Looking back on the three months which we spent with
-my mother, I am in one way reminded of the two years
-which Jack Waring passed as a prisoner in Germany.
-So complete was our isolation that, when we emerged
-from it, we found a world of peace hardly less different
-from the one we had left than Jack’s war-world of tanks
-and gothas and tear-shells was different from the one
-which was blotted out in the early days of 1915. In the
-first weeks we saw no visitors; we read no papers; and,
-when we were rested enough to think and talk, we turned
-to the days when the world had last been at peace and
-speculated why the war had come and how other wars
-were to be prevented.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The last of my reasons for hurrying abroad was that I
-could take up no work in England until I had discharged
-the task which Violet Loring imposed on me within a few
-hours of her husband’s death. As the world in which we
-had been brought up was swallowed by the war, she asked
-me to set down my memories of it for the later instruction
-of her boy. I had carried my account to 1915; but, after
-that, the mass of material was too great for me to attack
-in odd hours after my work at the Admiralty. A
-steamer-trunk, filled with memoirs and monographs, kept
-me company to Cannes; and, in the few weeks that remained
-before my cousin came to demand her bond, I
-philosophized about the deluge and described the world
-before it and speculated about the world that would
-appear when the waters had subsided.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Small wonder if at this time, with my mother placidly
-dipping into Victorian biographies and with Barbara
-dreaming over her share in the history I was writing, we
-knew little and cared less about what was happening in
-Paris and London, Washington and Rome! While Lucien
-de Grammont drew the lines of a recreated Europe, I was
-living again through the years when Sandy Loring’s
-father and I were fellow-fags and fellow-monitors at
-Melton, when we were freshmen at Oxford, when we
-ventured together into Edwardian London. The dead so
-came to life, as I wrote about them, that sometimes I
-would lay down my pen and forget the war for the days
-before David O’Rane was blinded and Tom Dainton
-killed, the days when every one was quoting Barbara’s
-latest epigram and discussing Val Arden’s last novel, the
-days when Sonia Dainton broke a heart a week and an
-engagement a season. Musing of days and nights softened
-by time, I felt that never had there been such years
-in the life of any country, never had there been women
-and men like those of our generation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In two or three years I expect everything will be very
-much as it was before the war,” predicted Barbara.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The people will be different,” I answered; “and
-they’ll make everything else different. Sandy’s world
-will never be like Jim’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I fell to wondering what Sandy’s father
-would have made of the new dispensation which was taking
-shape before our eyes. He and I, who agreed on little
-else, agreed that we were saying good-bye, that last night
-at Loring Castle, to a phase in history. The old ruling
-families had lost their power since the first marquess commanded
-his fifteen seats in the unreformed House of
-Commons and “Trimmer” Crawleigh dodged in and out
-of George the Fourth’s ministries, leaving a broken government
-in his train; under a new distribution of wealth
-they might lose their prestige. The <span class='it'>arrivistes</span> of the nineties,
-who had floated on waves of beer and diamonds into
-the arid heights of a depressed territorial aristocracy,
-would find their places taken, in the nineteen-twenties, by
-social adventurers of ambition equal to Lady Dainton’s
-and of wealth greater than Sir Adolph Erckmann’s. A
-new class of politician, officer, publicist and financier must
-inevitably be brought to birth by the new demands of public
-life: the sons of the new men would quickly preponderate
-in the old schools and universities, their daughters
-would soon come to dominate a new society. That
-which I had denounced, in my hotter radical days, as
-“privilege” would count for less in Sandy Loring’s life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was not within my terms of reference to say if the
-one order was in any way better or worse than the other:
-it was different. My haphazard recollections, covering a
-period of about fifteen years, were chosen solely for the
-light which they threw on the generation that was of
-military age when war broke out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>As</span>,” I wrote in conclusion, “<span class='it'>the French Revolution
-challenged and overthrew the territorial aristocracies and
-feudal kingships of the middle ages, so the Great War
-challenged the systems which the French Revolution had
-evolved in their place.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There—for the moment—I stopped, for no one could
-say what systems the Great War would evolve in place
-of those which it overturned. Later, in brooding over
-these reminiscences of a vanished generation, I began to
-read a moral into them; and, on the morning of Violet’s
-arrival, when Barbara bent over my chair to ask if I had
-finished my work, I had to answer that, so far as I could
-see, it was only beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I’m right,” I explained, “the old governing classes
-are being superseded, under our eyes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The new lot will pick up the old ideas,” she interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s just what I’m afraid of,” I said.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My discovery—the one incontrovertible moral that I
-could read into the war—had been made by others before
-me; and I doubt not that some at least of them
-reached it by the same road after toiling conscientiously
-through the official explanations and apologies which
-every foreign office in Europe issued in proof of its own
-innocence. The polychromatic outpouring of white
-papers, green books and red books was succeeded by a
-vaster flood of unofficial polemics, in which defensive
-chancellors and prime ministers, field-marshals and admirals
-demonstrated that some one else was responsible
-for the war and that peace would have been preserved
-or victory secured if only their advice had been followed.
-To the strategical arguments I paid little attention: nothing
-will make me understand strategy by land or sea,
-and it was hardly relevant to my main enquiry. The
-diplomatic defence, on the other hand, I studied with
-care, deciding—as, I imagine, most people outside Germany
-have decided independently—that, while Berlin
-was guilty of starting the conflagration, every other power
-lent a hand in piling up an inflammable heap of suspicions,
-jealousies and misunderstandings. It was this
-conclusion that pointed me my moral.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what do you make of it all?,” my mother asked
-as I laid aside the last of these bitter, aggressive manifestoes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I said, “whoever made the war, it’s clear that
-no single country, no single form of government was able
-to keep the peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With that conclusion no one could disagree.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In contrasting Jim’s world with the present,” I told
-Violet Loring, when my essay was ready for her criticism,
-“the outstanding lesson is that the government of
-man by his fellow-man has broken down in every form
-that’s been tried. You had constitutional monarchy in
-England, absolutism in Russia, a republic in France and
-America, a feudal kingship in Austria-Hungary. None
-of them could perform the elementary duty of protecting
-the life and liberty of their citizens. Those who took no
-part lived on the sufferance of the belligerents. From
-China to Honduras .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When once war breaks out .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Violet began helplessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The governments that allowed war to break out failed
-in their first duty,” I maintained. “By negligence or
-malignity or impotence they’re responsible for the death
-or mutilation of some ten million human beings. It’s not
-enough to put the blame on Germany or the kaiser or
-Bernhardi. If a homicidal maniac runs amok in England,
-we blame the police for not stopping him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While my cousin turned the pages of my manuscript,
-I flung a similar cold douche of first principles over the
-head of Philip Hornbeck, who had come to us for a week
-between dismantling his old department and erecting the
-new.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’d had a bigger police-force,” he suggested,
-“your homicidal maniac would have had no run for his
-money. If we’d smashed the German navy while it was
-building .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And turned homicidal maniac on our own account?,”
-I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you like to put it that way. It’s not much use
-arguing with me, George, because I’m one of the old impenitents
-who believe that there will always be wars and
-what not. <span class='it'>Admitting</span> that it’s the duty of all governments
-to keep the peace, <span class='it'>admitting</span> that every government
-has failed in its duty, what are you going to do then?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Try a different kind of government,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A soviet?,” he asked. “If the aristocracy and <span class='it'>bourgeoisie</span>
-have failed, that’s all you have left.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’d sooner have a soviet that thought it could keep
-peace than an aristocracy that admits it can’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You should go and live in Russia,” Hornbeck recommended.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle-piece which I was composing for Violet
-seemed naturally to take the form of a triptych; and the
-first two panels shewed that the governing classes in all
-countries had failed to keep the peace and had bungled
-the business of making war. When the third panel came
-to be painted, I wondered whether they would be more
-successful in making peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is this going to be a <span class='it'>lasting</span> settlement?,” I asked
-Lucien de Grammont, when he came to refresh himself
-after his work on the agenda.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re doing our best,” he answered. “As I told you
-at the time, the war stopped too soon. If we’re to secure
-that France is never again to be menaced, we must to
-some extent carry the war on into the peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you still think there will be another war in fifty
-years’ time?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I won’t pin myself to a date, but you’ll never abolish
-war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then,” I said, “it’s time you made way for somebody
-who will. The old systems, the old diplomacy, the old
-men who ran the old system, are a self-confessed failure.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lucien twirled his neat moustache and addressed to his
-neatly-shod feet a muttered confidence about doctrinaire
-idealists. Gerald Deganway, for the honour of the old
-diplomacy as practised in the British Foreign Office,
-screwed his eye-glass into place and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I say, you know, George, you’re an absolute bolshevist!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And Hornbeck administered the most damaging criticism
-by accepting my premises and proceeding to a
-diametrically opposite conclusion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re proving too much, old son,” he argued. “I
-agree that governments should prevent wars, I agree that
-every government in the world failed to prevent this last
-one. That only shews you’re asking governments to do
-an impossibility. Take every nation in turn, from Belgium
-to the States, and tell me how the government of
-any one could have kept out of the war. When once the
-racket begins .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We must go back a stage, then,” I said, “to the time
-before it begins. We must have a ‘will to peace’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Didn’t we have that in England?,” asked Violet.
-“Honour apart, we couldn’t afford to stay out in 1914.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must go beyond England,” I told her. “We
-want an international ‘will to peace’; a solemn league
-and covenant, not between foreign secretaries, but between
-the units of the world’s cannon-fodder. War will
-end of its own accord when you can’t fill your armies.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And how will you set your solemn league and covenant
-to work?,” Hornbeck enquired sceptically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could make no reply until I had found more time to
-think; time, too, perhaps, to talk with my uncle Bertrand
-of the old Disarmament League and of the propaganda
-that issued from <span class='it'>Peace</span> office before the war. When I
-told Barbara that, so far as I could see, my work was
-only beginning, I felt that in all likelihood the task before
-our generation would be to create a ‘will to peace’ out of
-the present disgust with war. If history was human
-nature repeating itself, there had been the same disgust
-at the end of every great war; but the memory of that
-disgust faded quickly. It was no match for the urgent
-plea that honour or security was at stake; no match for
-the cynical resignation of those who said that there always
-had been wars and always would be.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course you’re right to try,” was the utmost encouragement
-that I could win even from Violet, “but
-these Hague Conventions and things haven’t done much
-good, have they?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No one has yet appealed to the rank-and-file,” I answered.
-“No one has appealed while the full horror of
-war was vividly remembered. No one has shewn the
-dumb millions of the world how much alike they all
-are, how they swim together and sink together. In all
-I’ve been reading these last few weeks I’ve been amazed
-by the sameness of conditions in all countries. If we can
-work on that till the sameness becomes a oneness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In aiming at perspective for my second panel, I tried
-to set my own impressions and experiences of the war
-beside those of the cosmopolitan population that floated
-through Cannes in these first weeks of the armistice.
-When we had passed the stage of fancying that our individual
-histories were unique, I was more struck by the
-similarities of what I heard than by the differences.
-Necessarily, the islander and the continental must always
-disagree on foreign politics; and in Cannes I met for
-the first time the chronic terror that is begotten of land
-frontiers. “It’s all very well for you,” I was told by
-Italians, Greeks, Poles and Dutch: “You’re an island.”
-With allowance for this, I felt that the war had left on
-every country an almost identical mark. The Austrians
-and Germans whom I met in Monte Carlo, old journalistic
-allies—for the most part—, were as bitterly convinced
-that the war had been forced upon them as we in England
-were convinced that they had forced it on us; but, when
-we had agreed to differ, their description of the last four
-years in their own countries might have been applied,
-almost without a word changed, to England. There were,
-I discovered, idlers, <span class='it'>embusqués</span> and adventurers of both
-sexes in all classes everywhere; and it was amusing, for
-one who thought of a German alternately as a sheep and
-a genius, to hear the tribute of Austria and Germany to
-our more than Teutonic docility and enterprise. France
-had her rapacious profiteers, Prussia her bloated munition-makers.
-The drinking that was said to obtain in
-English high-places could be matched by the drugging
-that was reported to be corrupting Austrian society. I
-was assured, without calling for proof, that there was
-little to choose for courage and endurance between the
-best troops of any two countries; and, when the public
-morale broke, any one class in its own way cut as sorry
-a figure as any other. If I despaired of the populace
-that believed the grotesque stories in the Pemberton-Billing
-case, I despaired more profoundly of Lady Dainton
-when she told me that Prince Louis of Battenberg had
-been executed in the Tower for treason.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The moral is,” I told Violet Loring, “that, under an
-abnormal strain, the sublime and the dastardly go hand-in-hand.
-Five years ago, we didn’t know the meaning
-of danger or suffering. To face it without breaking, we
-called up the primitive beast that lies inside all of us: he
-was a very brave beast, but he was also very treacherous,
-savage, credulous.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Violet turned my pages, I looked through a palisade
-of palm-trees to the sparkling blue of the Mediterranean
-and filled my lungs with warm, scented air. Cannes,
-after London, was like the open street after an opium-den;
-and, in thinking of the strange shapes seen in the
-long, mad half-light of the war, I almost fancied that I
-had been dreaming. The political intrigue and chicanery
-that began with the high-explosive controversy in 1915
-and continued until the 1918 election was incredible unless
-one likened it to a panic on board a burning ship. If
-Violet had told me four years earlier that one common
-acquaintance would be imprisoned for trafficking in cocaine
-and that another would commit suicide to avoid
-prosecution for forgery, I should not have believed her.
-I could now hardly believe my own certain knowledge
-until I remembered that every war has claimed its civil
-casualties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How long does it take to chain up your primitive
-beast?,” Violet asked. “I mean, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. these are the
-people that the war has left us to live with and work
-with.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To that I had no answer ready. It was easier to say
-that Sonia O’Rane would not have run away from her
-husband before the war than to be certain she would not
-run away again. And it seemed idle to talk of international
-conferences and a reconstructed world, of a new
-spirit and a ‘will to peace’ while the passions of the war
-were still unfettered.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My triptych, displaying—in its centre—the war and—on
-either side—the peace that preceded and should
-follow the war, spared no space for dividing or linking
-frame-work: though I was working in the transition-period
-between full war and full peace, I made little attempt
-to describe the condition in which we all found
-ourselves at the moment when a truce was called.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To some extent—in these blissful, lazy days, when we
-had nothing to do but sleep and eat and smoke and gossip—we
-filled the blank by discussing the present and future
-states of our friends. My battle-piece was subjected to a
-more general scrutiny than I had intended; and for many
-rather embarrassing days I was challenged to defend myself
-against critics who opened wide fields of speculation
-with the words:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>If</span>, as you think, the old political game is really played
-out .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”; or</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>If</span> you’re right about the redistribution of wealth .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the morning, as we idled in long chairs on a glowing
-marble verandah; at night, as we sat in a half-circle while
-Barbara played to us; in leisurely afternoon walks and
-occasional peripatetic sessions from one bedroom to another,
-we discussed war-literature and war-religion, the
-new position of women, the fate of the demobilized soldier
-and the day-to-day life which we expected to lead
-when peace was proclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Most of our predictions were unbelievably wild, in
-their assumption either that everything or that nothing
-would be the same as before the war; and our discussions
-were so formless that they could never be summarized or
-recorded. When we abandoned conjecture for the concrete
-plans that each was making for himself, I felt that—in
-the words used at a dinner to Eric Lane in New
-York—‘the convulsion’s as great, when you turn a soldier
-into a civilian, as when you turn a civilian into a
-soldier.’ Sam Dainton, after ten years’ service, was leaving
-the army, “to prey on society”, as he put it. Deganway
-was saying good-bye to the Foreign Office; Barbara’s
-cousin, John Carstairs, to the Diplomatic. Professionally,
-the climax in both their lives had been reached
-and passed; the first wanted to make money, the second
-to look after his estates.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this time I began to detect the rise of that adventurer-class
-at which history points a punctual finger after
-every great war but which I somehow did not expect to
-see in my own time. When I was called back to London,
-I found new men in Fleet Street and the City, new names
-at Covent Garden and in the candidates’ books of the
-clubs; at Cannes I discerned, in the good-looking person
-of Violet’s brother Laurence, an adventurer in the making.
-As I became acquainted with his friends in the
-course of the next three years, I saw the natural, perhaps
-the necessary, evolution of a type which has not
-yet found its place in the social void. My cousin had
-been snatched from Melton on his eighteenth birthday
-and thrust into the Irish Guards, where his precocious
-development as a man-of-the-world had been won at the
-expense of his small aptitude for learning. The Hunter-Oakleighs
-could not afford to maintain him in idleness;
-and Laurence, recognizing this, quartered himself on Loring
-House and allowed Violet or any other of his relations
-to maintain him. In theory, he was reading for
-the bar; and a text-book on Roman law was always
-at hand to rebut the charge of idleness. In practice, he
-blandly awaited pecuniary compensation from a society
-which had taught him expensive tastes at a time when
-he might have been teaching himself the means of gratifying
-them. The army had paralysed his initiative; he believed—or
-affected to believe—that, at one-and-twenty,
-his life-work was done; and already he had learned that
-personal charm and rich friends were a fair substitute
-for industry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wish you’d advise me about Laurie,” said Violet
-one day, with a troubled glance down the verandah to
-the bed of down cushions where her brother was devoting
-to <span class='it'>La Vie Parisienne</span> the hours demanded by the institutes
-of Justinian. “He’s rather a problem.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The whole of his generation is a problem,” I said.
-“He stands between Jim, who’s dead, and Sandy, who’s
-still a child. He and his like have already borne the
-burden of the war; now he’ll have to bear the burden of
-clearing up after the war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My proposal found less than no favour in the hearing
-to which it was directed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m not bearing any more burdens till I’ve made myself
-secure,” Laurence declared. “Nor’s any one else.
-Half the men I know have come back to see another fellow
-doing their job; the other half are like me and never
-had a job to come back to. And, while we were away,
-you let a pack of women into all the professions,” he
-grumbled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Laurie will marry a rich wife,” Sam Dainton prophesied.
-“I’d do the same myself, only I’m so precious
-ugly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That doesn’t matter when men are scarce,” said
-Laurence reassuringly; “but I’d much prefer it if <span class='it'>you</span>
-married the rich wife and let me blow in as the <span class='it'>tertium
-quid</span>. That’s the way all the best marriages are arranged
-nowadays.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder what the modern girl will turn into,”
-drawled Philip Hornbeck at a tangent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The modern girl is a contradiction in terms,” answered
-Lucien de Grammont. “To modernize yourself
-is to change; and woman never changes, she only adapts
-herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She adapted herself in the war, good and plenty,” said
-Sam Dainton with authority.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She was brought up to know nothing,” rejoined Barbara;
-“she thought she knew everything. With luck
-she’ll learn enough to bring her daughters up better than
-she was brought up herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This from you!,” Violet laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s only now that I see what narrow squeaks I had,”
-said Barbara reflectively. “Whenever a girl makes a
-mess of her life, I believe it’s the parents who are to
-blame.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While this theme was developed in the uneasy hearing
-of my mother, Violet took a last look at my manuscript
-before handing it back to me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You say nothing about religion,” she commented in
-an undertone. “It’s the biggest thing in life for many
-people.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For women more than for men,” I submitted. While
-we were still at school, Darwin, Huxley and Renan were
-made accessible to us in cheap reprints. I have felt, ever
-since, that, if my salvation depends on faith in something
-that ignores ordinary rules of evidence, I would prefer
-not to be saved. “And you couldn’t have had a bloodier
-war, if we’d all been followers of Anti-Christ.
-By a paradox, the only people who tried to live up
-to their religion were persecuted as conscientious objectors.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What will you put in its place?,” Violet asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should only have hurt her feelings if I had suggested
-that Christianity might now be given a trial: to her, that
-faith is synonymous with the Holy Roman Catholic
-Church; to me, it is the service of man, and the Christian
-churches with their deadening forms and dead rules, their
-deferred punishments and rewards, their proscriptions
-and feuds and exclusive salvations have gone far to stifle
-Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If people thought less about the next world,” I answered,
-“they might make a more tolerable place of
-this.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And it was in some such words that I ended my criticism
-of the war. The folly and suspicion and malevolence
-of all the nations had made it possible; when it came,
-all the nations engaged in it exhibited much the same endurance,
-if simultaneously they exhibited much the same
-savagery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, is it ‘the Great War’ or ‘the Great Waste’?,”
-Violet asked. “Jim was over age when he gave up the
-staff. They didn’t want him to go. He felt that every
-one who got so much out of England in peace <span class='it'>must</span> go.
-<span class='it'>I</span> felt that, too. I shouldn’t like to think I’d helped to
-have him killed for no purpose.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If we had taken a poll of the eager disputants at the
-other end of the verandah, I doubt if the verdict would
-have satisfied her. On their own admission, the mailed
-fist of Philip Hornbeck, the diplomacy of Lucien de
-Grammont and the first-hand experience of war which
-Laurence and Sam Dainton had won on four fronts provided
-no more security than the religion of Violet Loring
-that another war, equally or more cruel, unnecessary and
-futile, should not break out as soon as the memories of
-one generation were grown dim and the exhaustion of
-one generation had been repaired.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Doesn’t that depend on the people who’ve survived?,”
-I asked. “Until the conscriptionists turned a crusade into
-a hunt for cannon-fodder, the war had a moral grandeur.
-Whether Jim’s death served a useful purpose for any one
-but himself depends on our power to recapture the spirit
-of 1914.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For this elastic formula I can claim little credit. The
-cynic is now sure of his laugh if he mocks the idea of
-“a war to end war”; but I saw too much of my contemporaries
-in 1914 to join the later chorus of fashionable
-disparagement. Before their first idealism became
-jaded, the young men who had been reared in an atmosphere
-of war-preparations and war-scares, who aspired
-to a world orderly and a life beautiful and who saw their
-aspirations thwarted by men too old for hope or faith,
-resolved to create from the war a world of which they
-need not be ashamed. They enlisted in the service of
-man. From their deaths I learned the phrase. One of
-them, the last and best of my friends, who was literally
-and awfully crucified, came back blinded and broken to
-tell me that he was unrepentant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I was in New York</span>,” O’Rane wrote at this time,
-“<span class='it'>when the armistice was proclaimed. If you’d shouted
-‘as you were’ from the Woolworth Tower, you couldn’t
-have scattered people more quickly. ‘As you were before
-the war’ is the general feeling. I expect it’s been the
-same in England. We must do better than that.</span>” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m not sure that I know what you mean,” said
-Violet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I’m not sure that I can put it into words,” I
-answered. “In general terms, no sacrifice was too great
-in the war; I want people to feel no sacrifice is too great
-in peace. It’s an empty victory if a high proportion of
-the victors are diseased, hungry, verminous, discontented.
-Any one of imagination must be ashamed of the slums in
-our big cities; but we <span class='it'>won’t</span> make the effort or the sacrifice
-to cure them. I want to fan the crusading spirit of
-1914 back to life.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Before that, though, we must
-make sure that we aren’t going to drift into another war.
-That means a crusade covering the whole inhabited
-world.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know how you’ll begin.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nor do I yet. I may be able to tell you more in a
-week’s time. Have you heard that the O’Ranes are coming
-here? He cabled to say that he was in urgent need
-of my advice. I cabled back that I was in much more
-urgent need of his.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Glancing at my manuscript for the last time before
-sending it to be typed, I felt that, in a week’s time, I
-might know better how to paint my third panel. We had
-to see now whether those who had failed to avert war
-were capable of ending war.</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I charged O’Rane at the time with disturbing
-the repose of our retreat, I can see now that, even before
-I invited him to Cannes, I was resigned to moving at
-least one stage nearer to the heart of politics. It is true
-that my uncle Bertrand’s appeal for help in his election
-was answered with a lame reference to Barbara’s health;
-simultaneously I told Frank Jellaby, without a trace of
-lameness or indecision, that I was too little in sympathy
-with the liberal party to fight a seat on my own account;
-all the time, however, I was conscious of a chilling remoteness.
-I did not want to go back; I was thankful
-that Barbara seemed content to vegetate; but, if I was
-right in thinking that the fruits of the war remained to
-be gathered, I was right in thinking that they could not
-be gathered in Cannes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hoped that O’Rane, with his knowledge of other
-countries, would tell me whether my derided ‘will to
-peace’ was practicable or even necessary. If he shared
-my misgivings, I wanted his help in planning a campaign
-that would be bounded only by the confines of the inhabited
-earth and would engage our energies for the rest
-of our lives. A train of reasoning is sometimes so persuasive
-in its premises and overwhelming in its conclusion
-that human intelligence rejects it without argument;
-and a train of this kind was presented to me on the eve
-of the armistice, when Hornbeck declared in succeeding
-breaths that another war would be synonymous with the
-end of the world and that nothing could prevent another
-war. His first premise was substantiated by all the evidence
-of the late war; his second was at least supported
-by every soldier and statesman whose memoirs I had
-been reading for the last month. The syllogism could
-only be refuted by a general strike against war. This
-was my revelation and mission; and I had suffered too
-long from the revelations and missions of others to trust
-my own until I had been put to the question.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The O’Ranes arrived, with my sister and her husband,
-a week before Christmas. It was characteristic of the
-times that I should first set eyes on my brother-in-law
-two years after his marriage. Beryl wrote in 1916 to say
-that she was engaged to a certain Gervaise Maxwell,
-whom she had nursed at the Lorings’ hospital in Scotland.
-They parted after a week’s honeymoon: Beryl went
-back to House of Steynes, Gervaise rejoined his battalion
-in Mesopotamia; and they met for the second time four
-days after the armistice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now they were coming to exploit my influence in finding
-work for Gervaise; and I, knowing the slender proportions
-of that influence and recollecting the claims
-already advanced by Sam Dainton and my cousin Laurence,
-wondered helplessly whether the government did
-wisely in releasing men from the army before they had
-found civil employment. For a week before leaving
-London my telephone had been agitated by the voices
-of anxious friends who assured me that they could be
-demobilized at once if I would invent some urgent private
-business for them. “Good pay, light work and
-decent holidays,” they all said. I suppose the army let
-them go because the army could not retain them. At
-Wilminster and Yareham the troops demobilized themselves
-and walked home; at Enstaple and Durncliffe they
-threatened to mutiny if they were ordered back to
-France. It was one thing, however, to kick a uniform
-into a cupboard; and something quite different to find
-civilian clothes that would fit. Gervaise, I decided, must
-wait until I had discussed with O’Rane my own plans.
-It might be that, within a few months, I should want all
-the men I could get; or it might be that I should be cultivating
-my garden in Ireland. I must wait, too, until I
-had heard O’Rane’s proposals. Eighteen months had
-passed since I hunted him out to America, nominally to
-lecture on the war and really to make a fresh start with
-Sonia after her disaster with Vincent Grayle. In that
-time I had purposely not enquired how they were getting
-on, as a fresh start might well be the fresh start
-only to more trouble. The woman who jilts two men,
-marries a third, runs away with a fourth and returns
-with his child, all before the age of thirty-three, has either
-too much emotion in her nature or else too little.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I must confess to a feeling of embarrassment as the
-train drew in. The feeling passed as Sonia waved ecstatically
-from her window and announced breathlessly that
-no one would believe what a success she had had in Paris,
-that she was insolvent, that this no longer mattered, that
-she had the most wonderful news for me, that she was
-going to have an unprecedented success in London, that
-it was heavenly to see me again and that she was really
-going to enjoy herself in Cannes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A woman who lived only for the moment was not
-likely to be disturbed by regrets or fears; and, as Sonia
-swung down from the train into my arms, her eyes were
-as limpid and innocent, her lips were as moistly red and
-provocative, as when I took her to supper at her first
-parties fifteen years before. Then and now, she was of
-those who make the world take them at their own valuation.
-Then she had babbled of her earliest ball-room
-triumphs; now she described the men who had thrown
-themselves at her feet from San Francisco to Paris.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you enjoyed yourself?,” I asked, when she
-paused for breath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>They</span> enjoyed <span class='it'>me</span>,” she answered complacently. “I
-don’t think they’d ever seen anything quite like me before.
-Oh, George! Has David told you our news? We
-met Mr. Stornaway in London; and he wants us to come
-and work with him! Say, kid, can you beat it? I asked
-him what the work was; and he said it was just helping
-him to spend money. If there’s one thing I <span class='it'>do</span> know
-about .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We’re going to be the new big noise in
-London. Collect David; and we’ll tell you all about it!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If my embarrassment returned as I went forward to
-give her husband a hand, it vanished as he took up the
-interrupted tale. In voice and manner there was nothing
-to hint that he had ever been estranged from his radiant
-wife; and I decided that, in a sense, he too lived only
-for the moment. When we first met, a small boy without
-a friend in the world had decided that he must put
-himself to school. His father had been killed, fighting
-for Greece against Turkey; and David made his way to
-England, with enough money for one term, by working
-his passage round the world. When he had sucked in all
-that Melton and Oxford could give him, he banished them
-into the past, as he had already banished his wanderings,
-and concentrated all his energies on making money; when
-the money was made, he turned his back for ever on the
-oil-fields of Mexico and devoted himself to English politics
-until the war imposed on him a more urgent duty.
-On the day that he was discharged from hospital, blinded
-and maimed, he called to tell me that he had already secured
-new work. When Sonia left him, he set himself to
-get her back; and, when she returned, I am sure that he
-set himself with equal singleness of purpose to forget that
-they had ever been parted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now he could think of nothing but Raymond Stornaway’s
-proposal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s where I want your advice,” he explained
-gravely, as though in all his thirty-five tempestuous years
-of life he had ever taken advice from anybody.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I want yours,” I told him. “I’m sorry to find
-Raymond butting in: I expect to need your help much
-more.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That evening after dinner, when the others had gone
-away to gamble, we talked of the war and of that other
-evening, when we stood on the dividing ridge between
-two worlds. Of the men who dined at Loring Castle on
-the last night of peace, he and I alone had survived. We
-talked of the war that was over as then we had talked
-of the war that was coming. I quoted him the words
-in which he had described his vision of what the world
-might be after the war; and I challenged him to say
-whether he still believed in the perfectibility of man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve acquired a lot of patience in the last four years,”
-he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I tested him with Hornbeck’s prediction that wars
-would be fought so long as the human race survived to
-fight them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I want you to help me organize a general strike
-against war,” I said, as I began to blow out the candles.
-Then I paused to frame a question which I had kept unasked
-since our last evening of peace: “D’you remember
-blowing out the candles that night?” He nodded.
-“You left two. Why?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he hesitated, I saw that he was frowning. I saw
-also that, like the rest of us, he had aged in the last five
-years, though the thin face had its old passionate vitality
-and the fine black hair its old gay disorder. Slight as
-ever, boyish as ever, he was none the less lined with the
-mental and physical tortures of the war. His very hesitation
-was a subtle mark of decline, as though for the
-first time in his life he doubted himself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I knew in my bones that only two of us would come
-through,” he muttered. “I should be one; I couldn’t
-make a guess at the other.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There aren’t more than half-a-dozen left out of all
-our generation,” I told him. “The old club-groups at
-Oxford.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I can’t look at them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I couldn’t see ’em if I <span class='it'>did</span> look. Not that I need
-to be reminded of them.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The unseeing eyes
-flashed in sudden exaltation. “What death takes away,
-George, is very little by comparison with what he leaves!
-The men I’ve loved best in the world have been my father
-and your uncle and old Burgess and you and Jim. Three
-of you, thank God!, are alive: I stayed with Burgess
-for his last night before he retired from Melton; but
-you’re no more alive than my father and Jim. Nothing
-can take away the time I spent with them.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I shan’t
-see again in this world, but nothing can take away all
-that I’ve seen in the past. I still see the men I recruited,
-the men who trained with me, though I helped to bury
-more than a few.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some of them were here to-night,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes! And what death has done is just to put their
-bodies out of action .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. That means there are fewer
-hands and more work.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I led him to the door, O’Rane’s fingers ran lightly
-down my arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s about twenty years since you first came to stay
-with us,” I reminded him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose it must be. Good, full years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I was feeling middle-aged till you came. Middle-aged
-and depressed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He laughed and gripped my hand:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ve no time to grow middle-aged. It’s the next
-twenty years that will count. We must pull together. In
-a sense we <span class='it'>are</span> the last two.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I blew out the remaining candles, the room once
-more seemed to fill with our friends of other days. We
-were indeed almost the only survivors; and I could not
-tell these ghosts that they had given their lives, I could
-not tell O’Rane that he had given his sight, to no purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Think over what we’ve been saying,” I suggested.
-“Tell me if you can see any reason why just such another
-war shouldn’t break out with just as little reason.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If it does, then this war wasn’t worth while.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-And it’s our business to make it worth while,” he answered.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap03'>CHAPTER THREE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>THE DAWNING OF MORN</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“ ‘Rise up, rise up, thou Satan, upon the Earth to go,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And prove the peace of Dives if it be good or no;</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;For all that he hath planned</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;We deliver to thy hand,</p>
-<p class='line0'>As thy skill shall serve to break it or bring low.’ ”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Rudyard Kipling</span>: <span class='it'>The Peace of Dives</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Average, sensual man is no match for an enthusiast.
-When O’Rane wrote that he wanted to ask my advice,
-vague instinct warned me that he wanted the costlier, if
-no more valuable, privilege of my personal cooperation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And it was my intention that he should cooperate with
-me. If I seemed a doctrinaire to Lucien, a fanatic to
-Hornbeck and a ‘bolshevist’—whatever that might
-mean—to Deganway, I seemed to myself the mildest
-revolutionary that had ever schemed to carry out a revolution
-by deputy. When, at this time, people talked of
-“winning the peace” and asked what we meant to do,
-I felt and said that no active man or woman who had
-survived the war was justified in sitting idle. I was
-ready to write, speak and subscribe money on behalf of
-any organization that would rouse the world to the danger
-which I saw threatening it. I would work for my “will
-to peace” as others worked, in the years that followed
-and along lines which I deplored, for the League of Nations.
-I lacked the fire and the endurance, however, to
-inspire a crusade. This, I felt, was O’Rane’s part.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nevertheless, from our first conversation I divined
-that we were thinking on different planes. To “make
-the war worth while”, in my view, was to secure, first
-and foremost, that there should be no future wars. Perhaps
-because he had spent so many months in America,
-where by now the world seemed already to have been
-made “safe for democracy”, perhaps because he had seen
-too much of the late war to fancy that any one wanted
-more of it, O’Rane assumed the end at which I was aiming.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If the war is to be made ‘worth while’,” he pronounced
-at the end of our first night together, “we have
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. in some way .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to make England .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘A land fit for heroes’ and what not,” Philip Hornbeck
-interrupted flippantly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After that, though we conducted our debates in private,
-I felt that O’Rane’s enthusiasm was sapping my
-will to the point when I should be drawn from my own
-leisurely crusade and pressed into his. If, at the end
-of ten days, he returned to London without me, I can
-only explain his failure by saying that in the meantime I
-had fallen to the assault of a yet more formidable enthusiast.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You heard what Sonia said about Stornaway’s proposal?,”
-O’Rane began on the second day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rest of the party had disappeared to Monte Carlo;
-and I was imprisoned in the shade of a palm-tree until I
-surrendered or bolted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He made the same proposal to me,” I said. “I
-turned it down because I thought there was more important
-work nearer to hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Our work won’t lack in importance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you’ve accepted his offer?,” I asked. “You’re
-giving up the House?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m committed in principle,” he answered. “Yes, I
-shan’t stand again: this coupon business leaves no scope
-for the independent member. Why the prime minister
-wants an election at all, when his position is impregnable .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He wants to keep it impregnable,” I said. “Well,
-you’re going in with Raymond to succeed where Deryk
-Lancing and his father and every millionaire in history
-has so far failed? It’s easier to make money honestly
-than to spend it wisely, you’ll find. How much is there?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“About twelve hundred thousand a year.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can do a lot of harm with that,” I said. “How
-will you spend it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For the first year or two it’s ear-marked for universities
-and hospitals.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And after that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We might make the war worth while,” he laughed.
-“But you must help. The trouble with England at present
-is that we’ve so little sense of responsibility. Isn’t it
-about time we educated people up to a civic conscience?
-In the war, I admit .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You found a hundred men who would die for their
-country to one who would live for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because, in peace, we call people ‘good citizens’ if
-they obey the laws and pay their taxes. That’s not
-enough for a civilized state, George! Good God, when
-a man commits murder, we hire another man to hang
-him! It’s you and I who ought to be hanged for not
-teaching him our own reverence for law. We hire people
-to persecute other people for beating their wives or neglecting
-their children or concealing their diseases! It’s
-<span class='it'>we</span> who ought to be persecuted. Illness, to me, is the
-wound inflicted on society by the indifference of the
-healthy. Poverty. Degradation.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And your civic conscience .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?,” I reminded him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Another word for imagination! You’d be ashamed
-of yourself if your tenants in Ireland died of want; if
-the men drank or the women turned prostitutes. Yet I’ve
-seen sights in different parts of the world that would
-make your blood run cold. Famines and pestilences and
-massacres. Things we don’t allow in England: we’ve got
-<span class='it'>that</span> far. Now it’s time we went farther. If the war’s
-to be worth while, you must satisfy yourself that what
-has been saved was worth saving.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But how on earth are you to do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In other days I had heard Aylmer Lancing, as he
-wheeled himself with slow impatience about his workroom,
-muttering of a dread project to corner the raw
-material of high explosives throughout the world. Some
-Central American republic was causing him trouble; and
-he had decided to make future wars impossible. Later,
-I had been present when Raymond Stornaway schemed
-to force up the standard of living for manual labour by
-paying uneconomic wages in one place and raising a
-storm of envious discontent in every other. Both men
-had been wonderfully convincing; but they had done
-nothing. Behind O’Rane’s shining eyes, in a stain of
-shadow between two white sheets of sunshine, I seemed
-now to see Raymond’s tired face at his luncheon-party
-on Armistice Day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So far,” said O’Rane thoughtfully, “no one’s gone
-about it in the right way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was not for want of intelligence. Can it be that
-the modern world has grown too fast for any one to
-control it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I had not parted with my little monograph on the
-war, I should have liked to explore this idea that civilization
-was bursting like an overripe fruit. Everywhere,
-in my own lifetime, I had seen fourth-dimensional energy
-collecting in a world of three dimensions. At a far distance,
-I had watched the Harrimans and Carnegies and
-Rockefellers bowing under wealth too great for a single
-man’s direction; and, since we began to raise men a hundred
-thousand at a time and to spend money at the rate
-of millions a day, I was convinced that we were operating
-forces which we could not control. For twenty years I
-had tried to “think imperially”, but I doubt if Mr.
-Chamberlain himself would have recognized the British
-Empire as I saw it represented from my window at the
-Admiralty on Armistice Day: in fifty years it had
-changed to something that might become a federation of
-British states but had certainly ceased to be an empire.
-America had ceased to be a nation without becoming
-even a federation. When I heard of a gas that would
-destroy whole cities, when I read of private fortunes that
-could buy whole countries, I felt that the earth was
-hardly big enough for its Rockefellers and Hearsts and
-Fords; the Rockefellers and Hearsts and Fords themselves
-seemed hardly big enough for the monsters they
-had created.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No one,” said O’Rane, “has spent twelve hundred
-thousand a year to spread his own doctrines. We’ll buy
-up derelict palaces like Braye and Eldridge; turn ’em
-into schools for the new poor who can’t afford Eton and
-the new rich who can’t get in. We’ll stuff them with
-scholarships to attract the brightest wits; we’ll have our
-subjects taught, as we want them taught, by giving prizes
-at Oxford and Cambridge. And, when the best men in
-every profession, every walk of life, are men who’ve been
-through our mill, we can convert the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What the text-books of a civic conscience were to be I
-did not enquire at this stage. If O’Rane aspired to make
-each man love his neighbour as himself, that was an
-aspiration towards which the Christian churches, usually
-with relatively greater wealth, often with the power of
-the sword and always with a grip on the fears and hopes
-of the faithful, had been working for nearly two thousand
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The late war,” I propounded, “was not a good advertisement
-for Christian teaching.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because Christianity has never been brought to men’s
-doors and into their lives.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>‘<span class='it'>What ragamuffin-saint</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Believes God watches him continually,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>As he believes in fire that it will burn,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Or rain that it will drench him?</span>’</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>I often wonder what would have happened to Christianity
-if it had come into the world with our modern means
-of communication.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were still arguing when the rest of the party returned;
-and, until the brief winter twilight faded, we
-sat and spent Stornaway’s money for him. To this day
-I can see the half-circle of light dresses and the fire-fly
-movements of the men’s cigarettes; I can see faces white
-with avarice and eyes dark with excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Over a million a year .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” Barbara gasped.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I told you we were going to be the big new noise
-in London,” said Sonia complacently. “George, of
-course, thinks he’s very superior.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I only think it’s a tremendous responsibility,” I defended
-myself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If the job’s too big, we can turn it down,” said
-O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The others thought that, too,” I warned him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a strange discussion, which ultimately became
-a monologue of foreboding. As all the world knows,
-Aylmer Lancing made his first fortune by chance and
-then found that he could not help adding to it; after
-buying the site of a burnt city, he had to build a city
-on the site; he constructed railroads to feed his city and
-manufactured agricultural machinery to pay for the food.
-Daily, until his breakdown, he grew richer; and, in the
-long years of his dying, he was to find that, while the
-hospitals, the universities, the museums and galleries
-could live on his bounty for a year, after that he must
-invent new outlets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If your income’s too big, you can always reduce your
-capital,” Sam Dainton contributed. “I’ve been doing it
-for years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With a capital of five-and-twenty million?,” I asked.
-“It’s not a simple question of dropping bags of gold into
-the sea.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early in his career, as I told them, Aylmer Lancing
-had tried to sell the New-Mexico-Montana Railroad when
-it was threatened by the South-Western Trunk. As he
-unloaded, the price fell; and, as the price fell, others unloaded
-too. A panic set in at one moment, to be ended
-the next by a rumour that Lancing was selling a bear.
-Up went the price; and Aylmer sold his last share on a
-soaring market, to find himself the richer by several million
-dollars.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In time I tired of my Cassandra prophecies. Unlike
-his predecessors, Raymond Stornaway was face to face
-with a world in which every one would for many years
-be trying to pay for the war; and I fancy the annual income
-of the trust had been handsomely exceeded before
-each of us had explained the best method of spending
-it. While my sister Beryl, with her hospital training,
-launched vague projects for stamping out phthisis and
-cancer, Gervaise rebuilt the more unsightly parts of England.
-Hornbeck petitioned for an arctic expedition; and
-Barbara threw the stock-markets into confusion by paying
-off the national debt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t say it’s impossible,” I told them in conclusion,
-“but Lancing wasn’t the only multimillionaire in
-history. Other people have faced his problem, but none
-of them solved it.”</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the two years that followed, O’Rane and I were to
-hark back many times to this first discussion; but we
-suspended it now before I learned what part he was assigning
-me in his moral revolution. The invitations
-which I had scattered so impulsively in Paris matured
-disconcertingly at the same moment; and we were dragged
-from our lazy reminiscences and lazier speculations to
-disagree fiercely about frontiers of which I had never
-heard and which I suspected Lucien de Grammont of
-inventing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As my mother’s villa was by now full, our guests overflowed
-to the Regina and came to us only for meals and
-for a preliminary peace conference at sundown. Daily,
-with noses sensitized to the lure of gin and vermouth, the
-dark and voluble spokesmen of the new states collected
-to redraw the map of Europe. Through indolence or defective
-imagination, the rest of us took little part in the
-earlier discussions: the peace, like the armistice, would
-be based on President Wilson’s fourteen points; and I
-for one was thankful that it was some one else’s business
-to unravel these unpronounceable Balkan combinations
-and to delimit these undiscoverable Baltic states.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The English are incurably insular!,” Lucien fumed
-at short intervals. “If you would look at politics from
-a <span class='it'>European</span> point of view, George .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was our love for the European point of view,”
-Hornbeck retorted, “that made us shoulder a heavier
-burden than any other power. Our contribution in
-money, men, ships .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though the claim was inoffensive enough to my “insular”
-hearing, he was not allowed to finish. The war,
-we were assured in spluttering rotation, had been won
-wholly and solely by the Belgians in their first defence
-of Liège and Namur; wholly and solely by Russian numbers;
-wholly and solely by French endurance and strategy.
-Italy and Rumania had won it by intervening to prevent
-a stalemate; the United States by pouring in money and
-men at a time when the allies were exhausted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For an hour the verandah was like a Tower of Babel
-attacked by a swarm of bees.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If those who did most to win the war are going to
-have most voice in making the peace,” Hornbeck prophesied
-as we went up to dress, “you’ll be able to hear their
-deliberations in London. This dago-parliament is your
-remedy against future wars?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I left his gibe unanswered, it was because the tone—still
-more the unanimity—of these impassioned voices
-had disquieted me. I can hardly say too often that my
-mother’s villa was a political vacuum: we all assumed
-that, when we emerged from it, we should find the
-armistice taking permanent form in a peace drawn on
-similar lines. I had not dreamed until this night that a
-new war was to be declared at the conference-table. Yet
-the demands of my excited young friends were of a kind
-that no signatory of the armistice could accept. Paul
-Sanguszko, I think, outdistanced all competitors by demanding
-a united Poland which in fact included more
-Germans than Poles; but Lucien, in his rape of Alsace,
-and Boscarelli, in his butchery of the Tyrol, were but a
-short head behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aren’t you rather forgetting your old panegyrics
-on nationality?,” I asked Lucien.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you handing back the German colonies?,” he
-demanded in his turn.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s for our dominions to say. I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>And</span> you don’t care!,” Lucien rejoined bitterly.
-“Now that the German navy is out of the way, nothing
-else matters!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With luck, George, this ought to be a peace to end
-peace,” Hornbeck whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next day, I asked Barbara whether she was feeling
-homesick for England. I have been so long indentured
-to politics that the hint of a new development sets me
-fidgeting to be back amid the whispers of the clubs and
-the rumours of Fleet Street. Unless I could wholly discount
-the wild words of Lucien and his friends, the
-peace negotiations would develop very differently from
-my expectations; and, whether I could discount him
-or not, I was realizing for the first time how far we
-had travelled since the day when we talked of fundamental
-understanding and a common effort for a common
-cause.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you mean you’re tired of this place?,” asked Barbara
-with a smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I was only feeling we were rather out of things,” I
-answered. Then, as the “dago-parliament” collected
-round the cocktail-table for a morning session, I caught
-Hornbeck’s eye. “Are people in England talking the
-same kind of criminal nonsense?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, the House is not sitting,” he summed up judicially.
-“On the other hand, there’s a general election
-raging. What you lose on the swings, you make on
-the roundabouts.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you <span class='it'>want</span> to go back .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” Barbara was beginning
-with a sigh, when my mother came on to the verandah
-with a cable in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was from my uncle Bertrand: if we had a bed to
-spare, might he occupy it? Otherwise, would we engage
-a room for him at the Regina? He must see me at once.
-A letter was following; but, if we did not know already,
-he had lost his seat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In so far as any one moment can be separated from all
-that goes before and linked with all that follows after, I
-suppose this moment should be called decisive. Two
-minutes before, my wife had shewn me that she wished
-to remain abroad; from this moment hung the chain that
-drew us back to London. Twenty-four hours earlier I
-had been bandying academic crusades with O’Rane;
-forty-eight hours later I forsook my own crusade and
-extricated myself from his in order to join my uncle’s.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bertrand <span class='it'>beaten</span>?,” I cried. “That’s been a safe
-radical seat for fifty years!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where are the English papers?,” O’Rane asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It must have been an odd election if <span class='it'>he</span> couldn’t get
-in,” said Hornbeck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thanks to our isolation, I think we were all taken
-equally by surprise. As I read out the strength of the
-new parties, our tranquil garden became like a stricken
-field the day after battle. For a time we tried to count
-the dead; then we found it simpler to hunt for the living.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Runciman’s gone!,” I cried. “McKenna’s gone .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-Then the tragedy changed to farce. “<span class='it'>Asquith’s</span> gone!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Laurence caught the paper from my hand:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Coalition-liberal .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Coalition-liberal .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Coalition-unionist.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The old liberal party’s dead!,” I exclaimed. “There’s
-a handful of independents.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ireland, except in the north, has gone solid for Sinn
-Fein,” Hornbeck read out over my shoulder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Labour will be the biggest single party in the House,”
-said Laurence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You were asking if people in England were talking
-the same kind of rot,” Hornbeck reminded me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we sat silent as he pieced together this amazing
-election and rehearsed the battle-cries on which it had
-been won. As he read, I saw O’Rane rising slowly and
-facing north with one hand outstretched for an instant
-towards the bleeding and exhausted world on the far side
-of our sheltering mountains: from Denmark to Italy,
-from Ireland to Siberia, two continents were still fighting
-for life because one man, nearly five years before, had
-flung bombs at another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’ll take years to undo this,” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hornbeck read remorselessly on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Germans themselves couldn’t improve on it,” he
-commented at the end.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But <span class='it'>we</span> can! We <span class='it'>must</span>!,” O’Rane cried. “In
-Heaven’s name .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We went into this to secure the
-rights of small nations to a free existence; no one seems
-to care whether the big nations have a free existence or
-not! Could France and England follow out their destinies
-in the days when we lived under the shadow of
-this war? Can they do it now, when Europe is being
-sown with dragon’s teeth?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>None answered him; but, as I waded later through the
-rhetoric of the election, I felt something of the helplessness
-that came over me four and a half years earlier,
-when one telegram after another shewed us that peace
-was slipping momentarily farther from our reach. The
-old dispensation could not avert war and could not make
-war; was this the third panel of my triptych and should
-we have to admit that the old dispensation could not make
-peace?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We should all of us, I suppose, have been less thrown
-off our balance, if we had been given the least warning
-how the election was being conducted. Writing four
-years afterwards, I seem to be claiming an exceptional
-wisdom for our criticism at this time: section by section,
-the electorate that backed the 1918 coalition has withdrawn
-its support, though my old liberal colleagues made
-no sign of protest at the time. Little by little, the government
-itself swallowed its own rash words. The wildest
-fire-eater says now what Hornbeck and Laurence, O’Rane
-and I—a sufficiently heterogeneous group!—were saying
-in the last days of December four years ago. Our
-views were an accident of geography, for we were living
-in a political vacuum; an accident of history, too, for in
-our serious moments we based our expectations on the
-settlement of Vienna, believing that we in our generation
-were neither less magnanimous nor more insane than the
-contemporaries of Castlereagh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If this is to be the atmosphere of the peace conference
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Hornbeck muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“These,” I reminded O’Rane, “are the people you’re
-going to educate up to a civic conscience.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I must be getting back to London,” was all he would
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was reminded irresistibly of a similar party, similarly
-dispersing in the first days of August four and a half
-years earlier. We had all said then that we must get
-back to London; we could none of us have said what we
-expected to do there.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll wait till Bertrand comes,” I begged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. I don’t suppose a day or two more or less will
-make much difference,” said O’Rane. “After all these
-years, too .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It’s a curious thing, George; we’re both
-of us Irishmen, both of us men of peace; and, most of all,
-we’re reformers. All our working life we’ve seen the
-reforms nearest our hearts postponed and postponed by
-an eruption in Ireland or by a threat of European war.
-God forgive me, I had to stand as a tory and a militarist,
-because I saw this war coming! Overboard went all my
-dreams of making life tolerable for the sons of Ishmael!
-And now again!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might have added that it was this feeling of futility
-which kept me from standing again for parliament when
-I lost my seat in 1910.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Until these same sons of Ishmael strike against war,”
-I answered, “it’s idle to think of improving their
-lot.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And yet it’s so little I’m asking!,” he sighed. “I only
-want every man to have freedom to work .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and save
-money .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and marry .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and have children .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-without interfering with his neighbours .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and without
-interference from them. I want him to spend his old
-age in the comfort and peace of mind which he has
-earned. His children must be born healthy, to work, to
-save, to marry, to live and die as he has done. If civilized
-society can’t give him that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And it can’t so long as
-a country contains one single prison or workhouse or
-infirmary or brothel .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suspect there were brothels in the golden age,” I
-interposed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane leant forward and gripped my wrist till I
-winced with the pain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the golden age,” he answered between his teeth,
-“there were hopeless, uncaring cynics, who said that
-prostitution was the oldest profession in the world. Slavery
-was the oldest solution of all labour problems. Torture
-was the oldest safeguard of civil authority. The
-moral sense of the world must be roused till it sweeps
-away prostitution and disease, as it swept away torture
-and slavery. It was not to keep them flourishing that we
-went to war. And we <span class='it'>can’t</span> sweep them away while another
-war threatens.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He broke off, as my mother came into the garden with
-the day’s letters; and, as I struggled against the impact
-of my uncle’s fury, I recognized that I was being assailed
-by a stronger enthusiast even than O’Rane and
-being asked to save by propaganda a world that I thought
-had already been saved by war.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand’s descent upon Cannes may be likened to the
-unheralded arrival of the headmaster in a form-room
-that has for some time been left to its own devices.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘<span class='it'>The Theodosian code</span>’,” Laurence recited virtuously,
-“ ‘<span class='it'>was published in Constantinople on the 15th of February,
-438 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</span>’ If Bertrand tries to find me a job, say
-I’m suited, thank you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rest of us, for all our feeling that we were drowsing
-in a back-water, looked regretfully at the blazing
-hibiscus-hedge and guiltily at one another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We all ought to be going back,” said Barbara, who—six
-weeks before—had never wished to see Dover Cliffs
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I asked what good we could do; I nearly told her what
-harm we could not avoid doing, for Eric Lane had crossed
-from New York on O’Rane’s boat and was now in London.
-Bertrand’s outpouring, however, was beyond the
-range of argument.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>You will find</span>,” he predicted, “<span class='it'>that the world is entering
-on a new glacial age of materialism. We must
-fight it.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And his method of fighting it was to resurrect our old
-paper, to set me in the old editorial chair, to sweep the
-country with new propaganda and to create a new political
-party in the dining-room of Seymour Street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Those who have never edited a paper are inclined to
-compare themselves with Delane at his most legendary;
-and the comparison is seldom favourable to Delane or to
-<span class='it'>The Times</span>. Those who have never tried to influence
-opinion—as my uncle and I tried in six years’ devoted
-service to the Disarmament League—become in their
-daydreams a rival to Parnell or Gladstone and convert
-mass-meetings with a single speech. Hard-won experience
-had taught me better, yet this is what Bertrand proposed;
-and Barbara, I knew, was seeing herself already
-as the maker of cabinets and the adviser of kings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Read your Balzac</span>,” my uncle recommended in a disastrous
-postscript. “<span class='it'>London, for the next few years of
-your life, will be amazingly like Paris in the restoration-period .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the postscript, I think, that fired Barbara’s imagination;
-and, as I watched her big eyes lighting up, I
-knew that it was empty to ask if she felt competent to
-stay a glacial age in its course. For a year or two before
-the war, she had occupied a position that, so far as I
-know, had never before been accorded in England to an
-unmarried woman, certainly to an unmarried woman of
-twenty. Raised above ordinary laws by her utter fearlessness,
-she had imposed a law of her own, in dress and
-manners, speech and thought, upon the greater part of
-her generation. As a child, Barbara has often told me,
-she saw that her personality would be bled white by her
-father’s. In Ottawa, in Simla and in London her wings
-beat unceasingly against the political, the religious and
-the social bars of the Crawleigh cage. Then she asserted
-herself; and, ten years later, she was known by
-sight wherever an illustrated paper penetrated; the first
-colonial contingents demanded to see Westminster Abbey
-and Lady Barbara Neave; and, had she ever paused, she
-might have seen herself becoming a legend in her own
-lifetime, as Bernhardt—on vastly more bizarre lines—became
-the heroine of the ‘Sarah myth’ in France.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had my answer to the question which I had asked
-myself on Armistice Day, when she gazed into the fire
-for a picture of what her own new life was to be. London,
-in the restoration-period, was marked out for her
-empire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When my uncle arrived, his mood was made apparent
-by the sombre opening statement that nations got the
-governments they deserved. He added, with fine public
-spirit, that the worst result of the election was the lack
-of an effective opposition. Then less impersonal feelings
-broke through: he charged ministers with treating the
-fourteen points as ‘a scrap of paper’ and recommended
-a strait-waistcoat for all who escaped the lamp-post.
-Sitting in a half-circle round his chair, with Lucien’s
-international parliament huddled on our fringe, we were
-castigated with a fury that would have been better deserved
-if we had in fact uttered the vain things with
-which we were charged: <span class='it'>we</span> had promised that there
-should be no punitive damages and now <span class='it'>we</span> were threatening
-to squeeze Germany like an orange; <span class='it'>we</span> were
-pledged to try the kaiser, if not to execute him without
-trial; <span class='it'>we</span> were to restore our trade by destroying our best
-customer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I’d asked for the kaiser’s head on a charger,”
-Bertrand thundered, “you’d have promised me <span class='it'>two</span> heads
-on <span class='it'>two</span> chargers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the first fury had abated, Lucien fanned it to
-life by a reference to the peace of Brest-Litovsk, demanding
-why Germany should be treated more tenderly in defeat
-than she had treated others in victory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If England had been <span class='it'>invaded</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he went on with
-a kindling eye. “The mistake your prime minister made
-was that he didn’t say enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You should have thought of all that before you agreed
-to the armistice,” Bertrand retorted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, say, the terms of the armistice .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” began
-Clifford van Oss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have no doubt he was going to say that, if the French
-quoted one set of undertakings against us, then America,
-which had drawn the terms, would speedily quote another.
-My uncle, however, who detested what he called
-“the American habit of making speeches instead of conversing”,
-broke in with a speech of his own:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not that it matters whether he said too little or too
-much! The speeches have served their turn. I tell you,
-Lloyd-George is a better journalist than Northcliffe in
-knowing what the public will want the day after to-morrow!
-<span class='it'>He</span> knew that, when the troops came home to
-find no job waiting for them, people would forget they’d
-ever called him ‘the man who won the war’. Before
-they forgot him for high taxation, high prices, falling
-wages and a creeping paralysis of unemployment, he had
-to make himself snug. <span class='it'>And he has!</span> Five years of autocratic
-power with the certainty that something <span class='it'>must</span> turn
-up; five years’ support from the Curzons and Milners
-who’d never have seen the back-door of office without
-him; five years’ support from the Monds and Greenwoods
-of the liberal second-eleven; five years’ support
-from every man who’s lost a son, every woman who can’t
-make both ends meet. You need only promise to hang
-the kaiser and make Germany pay: England was worth a
-general election.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand’s outburst was followed by a long silence;
-and, as he chewed his moustache and gathered strength,
-I fancied that he might be reflecting how much he had
-aged since we incubated the Disarmament League in
-Princes Gardens and hatched <span class='it'>Peace</span> out of a grimy office
-in Bouverie Street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You give this lot five years, sir?,” asked O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Unless they blunder into a new war before then,”
-Bertrand answered; “or unless we can make an opposition
-strong enough to break them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he swung round on me, I pointed out that he was
-forming an opposition before he had anything tangible
-to oppose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We must <span class='it'>shape</span> the peace!,” he cried. “I give you
-till to-night to make up your mind! If you desert me,
-George, I shall fight single-handed. And I’m getting too
-old for that. Where’s Barbara? I must explain what’s
-expected of her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I capitulated without even taking my hours of grace.
-When Bertrand stumped indoors, I knew he was going to
-depict a shattered and mutinous army of liberals rallying
-to our exhortations and reconciled by Barbara’s diplomacy.
-I knew, further, that, outside the pages of a
-woman’s novel, politics never had been so theatrically arranged.
-Lord Crawleigh might dine with his daughter,
-but he would never vote with his son-in-law. Frank
-Jellaby and the independent liberals might, if we caught
-them unawares, maintain a civil front to the coalition-liberals,
-but they would never serve in the same administration
-as the men whom they charged with stabbing them
-in the back. None of this, however, was likely to influence
-Barbara in her present mood of exaltation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Liberalism,” said my uncle in one of his fine, vague
-phrases, “is greater than the liberal party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the present state of the liberal party,” I answered,
-“that would not be difficult. But you don’t <span class='it'>believe</span> you’re
-going to make a new party of any kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand shook his head mournfully and sat with the
-far-away expression of an old and tired man who had
-sampled in his time the liberalism of Mazzini and Lincoln,
-Bright and Cobden, Bradlaugh and Chamberlain,
-Gladstone and Asquith.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we can bring liberalism back to life,” he sighed,
-“a party will form without our help: all we need is a
-rallying-point. I mean something bigger than electoral
-reform and tariff squabbles, George: I mean a liberal
-spirit in politics. At the beginning, I should have called
-this a liberal war. When Wilson aimed at a peace that
-should leave nobody too strong, nobody too much
-broken, I called that a liberal spirit. I wrote to you about
-the glacial age of materialism, because a liberal spirit is
-the only thing that can melt it. Every individual, every
-country will fight for its own hand: it’s instinctive, like
-food-hoarding in 1914. Does Lucien care if Russia’s
-starving? Does van Oss care if England’s crippled with
-debt? Does any one care if the majority get less than
-the best out of life? Devil take the hindmost! That’s the
-spirit we have to fight.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But can it be done with a sixpenny review?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When our other guests had left us, Bertrand, Barbara
-and I set ourselves to collect our headquarters staff.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Old men,” boomed my uncle oracularly, “make wars;
-and young men fight them. We must be surrounded by
-the young men.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He then sat back, in the attitude which had become
-characteristic of him since his stroke, with his hairy,
-gnarled hands clasped over the ivory knob of his stick.
-I saw Barbara’s dark eyes shining as she hurried indoors
-and returned to the verandah with a pencil and paper.
-In her absence, Bertrand sought to seduce me by describing
-my room at the office and hinting at the furniture
-which he proposed to transfer from Princes Gardens.
-He resented my criticism that we were setting out to convert
-the world with six dubious Sheraton chairs and less
-than six more than dubious phrases; but, as we drafted
-our programme, I became ever more gloomily convinced
-that we were losing sight of the essentials in a wanton
-outburst of ornamentation. My excellent and unpractical
-colleagues agreed that we could have a delicious meal
-sent in from the Greyfriars Tavern for the editorial dinners;
-Barbara fought gamely for a weekly cartoon;
-Bertrand informed us, with an air of originality, that
-the youth of the nation were the trustees of posterity;
-and no one said a word about our gospel or our
-prophets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All the conditions are new,” my uncle reminded me
-at short intervals. “We need new men, new methods.
-A new spirit .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, while he coined phrases and Barbara designed
-our front page, I thought over the young men whom I
-had met when I was working at the Admiralty. Spence-Atkins
-and Jefferson Wright were still on Hornbeck’s
-“live register” of unemployed; and I invited them to
-take charge of our foreign policy and economics. That
-their names were unknown seemed a recommendation to
-Bertrand, who exclaimed in high glee:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“New men! To catch the other new men!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On that, I presented him with a cynical jack-of-all-trades
-whom Hornbeck had engaged for his experience in
-the deeper waters of undetected roguery. I have no proof
-that Triskett’s hands were soiled, though a man whose
-friends included the scamps of every race and country
-must have lived under constant temptation to blackmail.
-I did not propose to give him free scope in what he wrote;
-but I thought that his curious information might sometimes
-illuminate an obscure motive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A new man to catch the other new men,” Bertrand
-repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A thief to catch a thief,” I answered; “but, if it’s
-youth you want, these men are all under thirty-five.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The average was reduced further when, at Barbara’s
-suggestion, I invited a novelist of thirty, a poet of twenty-five
-and a composer of nineteen to take our artistic pages
-under their protection. They were all, she told me,
-touched with genius. I was also becoming reckless.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now,” said Bertrand, “can you set them to work
-in three months’ time? You’ll want that to get in touch
-with new conditions. You must study life in the marketplace,
-George. Mass-feeling. The great movement of
-men.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We’ll have our first editorial dinner somewhere
-about the end of March.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should have it,” I suggested, “on the first of April.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When my uncle returned a few weeks later, we returned
-with him; and, while Barbara made our house ready for
-party-meetings and drawing-room conclaves, I carried
-the dubious Sheraton chairs to Fetter Lane and passed
-from the Eclectic Club to my uncle’s study in Princes
-Gardens, in leisurely pursuit of the great movement of
-men.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I doubt if I have at any time felt more out of my element.
-I could understand O’Rane’s contention that, for
-all they won from civilization, the vast majority of mankind
-would be no worse off by taking to the hills and
-woods as bandits. I was prepared to work quite reasonably
-hard for my rooted faith that, if this vast majority
-was to be saved, it must be saved by its own efforts. I
-could sympathize with the proselytes to the League of Nations,
-though I placed no reliance in a league that did not
-make disarmament its first condition of membership.
-What I wholly failed to grasp was my uncle’s objective
-in taking an expensive office, exhuming our old manager
-from his retirement and entering the name of our paper
-once more at Stationer’s Hall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>London had never, in all my experience, been so little
-interested in politics.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s been happening?,” Sam Dainton echoed when
-I took Barbara to dine with his parents. “Well, I’ve
-awarded myself the order of the bowler-hat; and I had
-the hell of a time in Paris after I left you; and now I’m
-thinking how I can make a bit of money.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Same here,” added John Gaymer. “If you come
-across anything, George .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, the family first,” Laurence interrupted. “<span class='it'>Dear</span>
-Cousin George .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The conversation at most dinner-parties in these weeks
-seemed to run on ways and means. Seizing on the jargon
-of the times at a moment when every one else was abandoning it,
-Lady Dainton described herself facetiously as
-“one of the new poor” and denounced every more fortunate
-neighbour as a “profiteer”, though I could not
-see that her novel poverty compelled her to retrenchment
-nor that her scorn for profiteers prevented Sir Roger’s
-trying to sell Crowley Court, at three times what he gave
-for it, to one of “the new rich”. In place of retrenchment
-I found a bewildering blend of ingenuity, industry
-and blackmail on the part of those who insisted on a life
-of pleasure and could find no one to finance it for them.
-Day after day, Barbara was dragged to new shops, where
-her friends sold her hats at exorbitant prices. Other
-friends offered to decorate our house. Others, again,
-begged me to open a “social” column in <span class='it'>Peace</span> and to
-put them in charge of it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t expect people to take much interest in
-public affairs,” Lady Dainton said to me at this first
-dinner. “There are <span class='it'>so</span> many other things! These children”—she
-looked benevolently round the table at the
-girls she had collected for the approval of her necessitous
-son—“they don’t know what society <span class='it'>was</span> before the war.
-They’ve none of them even been presented, so you can
-imagine the flutter they’re in. Their first season!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shouldn’t have thought any one had the money to
-make much of a season,” I objected, with a cast back to
-her late confession of universal ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The war has only transferred it from one pocket to
-another,” she assured me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This dark saying was made plain in these first unsettled
-days before the rebirth of our paper, when I drifted about
-London, analysing the atmosphere of the armistice. Less
-diplomatically, Lady Dainton might have said that, if the
-natives had too little money, the foreigners had too much;
-and, without a trace of diplomacy, a number of my acquaintances
-seemed to be coaxing it back from the new
-pockets to the old. With my own ears I heard the
-Duchess of Ross demanding a list of the Americans she
-could advantageously invite to her house. I listened with
-amusement as Clifford van Oss tried to explain politely
-that the people on whom she fawned were not received in
-New York. And I watched Sir Adolf Erckmann being
-made a test case for the date at which a wealthy man with
-a German name could be received by his less wealthy
-friends.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The great movement of men isn’t carrying me anywhere
-in particular,” I confessed to Bertrand as the day
-of our first issue drew near. “I’ve met a number of
-spongers, lately, and a greater number of snobs. Which
-are the more to be pitied .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s only a phase,” my uncle answered. “London’s
-only a part of England; these people are only a
-part of London. While you were a boy, you must have
-seen the Rand Jews agonizing to fill their houses; and you
-saw the ‘new poor’ of the Harcourt death duties taking
-all they could get.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And we saw the result in the last years before the
-war,” I said, as Sir Adolf Erckmann shambled out of
-earshot. Could we give rein to our racial prejudices, I
-never knew whether I would sooner lynch him or the
-girls, like Sonia Dainton, who in those days had endured
-his odious familiarities for the sake of a string-quartet,
-a champagne supper and a free drive home in an Erckmann
-car. “A whole generation grew up in the belief
-that man had a natural right to be amused at some one
-else’s expense.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’d have found the same thing in Rome and Nineveh,”
-said Bertrand. “Whenever a conspicuous social
-position is divorced from the means to keep it up .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-<span class='it'>That’s</span> not a thing to notice. I told you to study the
-movement of men because one class is being squeezed out
-of existence. It may last my time, but it won’t last yours.
-It was never a big class, but in some ways it was the best.
-Now the sons have been killed; and the parents are crippled
-with taxation. Who’s coming to take their place,
-George? That’s the riddle for boys like you; and it’s to
-the newcomers we must appeal.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Is everything
-ready for our first number?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As ready as it can be,” I answered, “without a principle,
-a policy or even a catchword.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I went to Fetter Lane for the ceremony of ordering
-the machinists to print off, I was glad to see that my
-colleagues shewed no lack of enthusiasm. Headed by
-Bertrand, we marched to the Clock Tower Press and
-stood in a half-circle till he should give the sign. Martin
-Luther, printing his own bibles, could hardly have been
-more impressive; and, as we marched back to toast Bertrand
-in tepid champagne, the day seemed pregnant with
-fate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All the same,” I said, as we dispersed, “you’ve none
-of you suggested a single reason why any one should
-want to buy this paper. People are simply not thinking
-of politics.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They will, when they come out of their fool’s paradise,”
-answered Bertrand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a prediction so vague I could not contend. Reconstruction,
-of which I had heard so much in the last
-years of the war, appeared to stop short when private
-lives and fortunes had been reconstructed. Employment
-was good; money was plentiful; trade was booming; and,
-after we had spent five million pounds a day without suffering for it,
-after we had found work for every one at
-his own price, it was not wonderful if the laws of political
-economy seemed to have been suspended. My brother-in-law
-Gervaise was but one of many whom I settled on
-the permanent wage-sheet of the country; during the next
-few days I was to help Sam Dainton into an engineering
-firm at Hartlepool and to be told that the directors could
-accommodate as many more of the same kind as I chose
-to send.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was too good to be true; it was too good to last;
-but, while it lasted, I felt we could expect little support
-for gloomy vaticinations that were being falsified under
-our eyes.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap04'>CHAPTER FOUR</h1></div>
-
-<h3>AFTER THE DELUGE</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>Death is the end of life; ah, why</p>
-<p class='line0'>Should life all labour be?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Let us alone. Time driveth onward fast,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And in a little while our lips are dumb.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Let us alone. What is it that will last?</p>
-<p class='line0'>All things are taken from us, and become</p>
-<p class='line0'>Portions and parcels of the dreadful Past.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Let us alone. What pleasure can we have</p>
-<p class='line0'>To war with evil? Is there any peace</p>
-<p class='line0'>In ever climbing up the climbing wave?</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Tennyson</span>: <span class='it'>The Lotus-Eaters</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the end of March, as Bertrand had ordained, our
-first editorial dinner took place. It was followed by a
-reception; and the two events might have been read, by
-the optimistic, as an announcement that a new force was
-at work in political and social London. Throughout the
-long preparations, Barbara told us repeatedly that she
-had no personal interest in our organization; but she
-could not have worked harder if this had been a battle
-which she had to win or a lost battle which she had to
-retrieve. For the first time since our marriage, she seemed
-fully alive; the old love of ascendancy had returned; and
-I forgot the futility of my uncle’s crusade in the happiness
-which it brought to my wife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I wasn’t going to spoil <span class='it'>your</span> life, if I could help
-it,” she laughed, when I complimented her on her new
-radiance. “Whatever kind of mess I’ve made of my
-own .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s early days to be saying you’ve made a mess of
-your life,” I told her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These first weeks had been less formidable than I had
-expected. Every one was too busy with his own concerns
-to recall the furious tongue-wagging of the war; and the
-players in what Barbara counted her tragedies had obligingly
-withdrawn from the stage. Jack Waring, the first
-of her victims, crossed my path but once in three
-years: I met him hurrying out of his tailor’s, and he
-stopped only long enough to say that he was breeding
-blood-stock in the midlands and hardly ever came to London.
-Eric Lane, a greater sufferer in a longer tragedy,
-had disappeared; I was told that he was in London and
-I assumed that he must be at work on a new play. Certainly
-we did not see him for several months; and it was
-only in rare, startling moods of depression that Barbara
-seemed to remember him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How much you feel depends on how much you put
-into life,” she suggested, a little wistfully. “You can
-make a mess of your life when you’re a child, if you go
-the right way about it. <span class='it'>You</span> wouldn’t, because you let
-other people live your life for you; but I always had to
-make mine a great spiritual adventure, a thing to be
-squeezed dry, not tasted! At the end I must feel that
-I’ve taken a wonderful journey and that every moment of
-it has been marked by poignant emotions, vivid experiences.
-The whole of myself must go into everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When you see a <span class='sc'>wet paint</span> sign, you must make
-sure that the paint is really wet?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With both hands! Unlike my dear George, who
-avoids all paint because some of it is sometimes not quite
-dry. We’re a strange and wonderful combination, darling.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The actor and the audience.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re content just to look on?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Life is varied enough!,” I said. “And, though I
-don’t suppose any period is dull when you know it, I
-believe our own period is the most interesting in all history.
-I believe, too, that we’re in the most interesting
-part of the most interesting period. Bertrand will tell
-you that our day is over and that the future lies with
-the new men. I’m watching.”</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My uncle’s opinion was endorsed, perhaps naturally,
-by one who was a new man himself and who introduced
-me at this time to some at least of the other new men.
-Nearly four years have passed since I began to watch this
-battle of old and new; I am watching still, and the battle
-is undecided. It was on the day when our paper was
-reborn that our old advertisement-manager called in
-Fetter Lane to prove that we were working on wrong
-lines; and, as he knew enough of mob-psychology to make
-a fortune out of it, I listened respectfully to the criticism
-and studied the critic. Sir Philip Saltash had travelled
-far since the August day when Bertrand paid off the staff—Mr.
-Saltash included—and brought <span class='it'>Peace</span> to an end
-by shivering the electros of the headings with a mallet;
-he was to travel farther before he entered the House of
-Lords as Lord Saltash of Bonde, publicity-expert and
-political wire-puller. How much farther he will travel is
-another of the things I am watching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If <span class='it'>you</span> think people will listen to the <span class='it'>stuff</span> your old
-man’s put in his <span class='it'>prospectus</span>,” he began with a force and
-directness that made me feel the new men were bringing
-new manners with them, “you’re making the mistake of
-your life. You may be right; every one else may be
-wrong .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he paused with a shrug of contemptuous challenge,
-I reminded myself that he was come to offer me publicity
-for <span class='it'>Peace</span> and must therefore prove that, without publicity,
-<span class='it'>Peace</span> would wilt and die.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My uncle feels,” I said, “that it’s bad policy to cure
-one Alsace-Lorraine by setting up half-a-dozen others.
-It’s time <span class='it'>some</span> one made a protest against the last election.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Even if no one pays any attention to it? Mark you,
-I can <span class='it'>make</span> people listen,” he added, as he rolled an unlighted
-cigar from side to side of his loose mouth; and
-I tried to recall how many million pounds Saltash had
-advertised into war-loans and how many thousand men
-he had ordered, from his ubiquitous hoardings, into the
-army. “That’s my job. <span class='it'>Has</span> been, ever since I left
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How would you make people listen to <span class='it'>us</span>?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Saltash caught up a copy of our first number and
-turned the pages with loud slaps of an annihilating hand.
-I have forgotten his technical proposals, though I remember
-that he kindled me with his cleverness the while he
-was outraging me with his vulgarity. I have not, however,
-forgotten his lyrical flights in describing the place
-of publicity in public life. I had met “press-secretaries”
-and heard of “propaganda sections” in government departments;
-I had suspected that certain ministers were
-raised or disgraced at the bidding of certain newspaper-proprietors;
-but I had not imagined that newspaper-proprietors
-themselves struck or spared at the behest of men
-like Saltash, who in their turn controlled the flow of
-information from Whitehall to Fleet Street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a question of spot-light,” Saltash explained; and
-I learned that, when Dormer came to grief over food-rationing,
-it was Saltash’s artful manipulation of the
-switches that saved him from public vengeance and secured
-him his seat in the cabinet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never <span class='it'>did</span> think Dormer was to blame,” I happened
-to interpose.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never let you!,” cried Saltash. “Remember the
-Flying Corps scandal? <span class='it'>I</span> did that. And you soon forgot
-about Dormer. I told him from the first he had only to
-lie quiet.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Later on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Later on, without prompting, I remembered Dormer’s
-reappearance. Discovered by the caricaturists and taken
-to the heart of the public, Dormer—with his vast chin
-and grotesque hat—became a music-hall hero. “Our
-Willie” was acclaimed by the gallery with the loyal
-fervour accorded in other days to “good old Joe”. The
-<span class='it'>Snap-Shot</span> shewed him pruning roses with his smiling
-wife in an “old-world garden” and playing bumble-puppy
-with his apple-cheeked children. Finally, in the
-last days of a united front against a common foe, his portrait
-was thrown on the screen—after those of King
-Albert and General Joffre, Lord Kitchener and Mr. Lloyd-George—as
-the man who had saved England from
-starvation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The cost of Dormer’s apotheosis was one baronetcy
-and the promise of a peerage when the more squeamish
-section of the government was better used to the Saltash
-idea.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Spot-light,” repeated the wizard. “People can’t look
-at more than one thing at a time. Has it ever occurred
-to you why the old coalition went and the new one came?
-The ginger-group were working that way from the day
-Asquith carried conscription for them; they didn’t need
-him after that, but the public wasn’t ready for a change.
-Well, it was my job to <span class='it'>make</span> the public ready. I concentrated
-opinion against certain men and never left ’em
-alone; I concentrated in favour of others. The Dardanelles.
-Mesopotamia. Shells. Food. You and I know
-that the new lot were tarred with the same brush as the
-old; but we made the public think they’d been on another
-planet when all these messes were made. The old lot
-were too quiet; they never hit back.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There was a war on,” I reminded him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They would never have fallen if they’d shewn fight,”
-Saltash retorted. “A man’s power in politics is what he
-makes others believe it to be. ‘This war is too big for
-ordinary folk,’ people were saying: ‘we want supermen.’
-Well, we said the new lot <span class='it'>were</span> supermen. When
-there weren’t enough to go round, we made so much din
-that office-sweepers seemed like supermen. We restored
-confidence; and we frightened the Germans. Now, you
-say you’re reviving the old rag and your slogan is to be
-‘a <span class='it'>lasting</span> peace’. You’ll be called pro-Boche. You’ll be
-told you’re letting the Hun off. I don’t despair, though.
-The first thing is to out the present lot; and I can do that
-on departmental scandals alone. ’Got all the papers.
-Then we must prepare a big peace-boost.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Lunch
-with me and talk it over.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I had nothing to discuss, I went with Saltash
-because Saltash hypnotized me to come. All the vitality
-of young America radiated from him, though he styled
-himself a Canadian; his features recalled semitic South
-Russia, though he dissembled his love for the Jews; in
-the ten or twelve years that I had known him I never
-detected a trace of breeding, education or principle; and
-in the next two years I was never to see him entirely
-sober. Until he has his first stroke, however, I count him
-one of the six most dangerous men in Europe, for the
-“yellow” press of every country is an instrument on
-which he has played himself into wealth and power. As
-a purveyor of publicity, he is the logical conclusion from
-the cheap press that came into existence when England
-was taught, willy-nilly, to read; and England is imperilled
-by him, as she is imperilled by every man who, in his
-daily work and life, has everything to gain and nothing to
-risk.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I</span> trouble waters,” he explained thickly. “<span class='it'>Other</span> fellers
-do fishing. No personal axe t’ grind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After a champagne luncheon he talked to me of these
-others. If the war unified the British Empire, it also
-brought to England a number of adventurous spirits who
-had made existence unsafe for themselves in their native
-dominions and whose claim to a hearing depended less on
-their political wisdom than on the number of miles they
-had travelled to reach Downing Street. The blatant
-harangues of Mr. Giles to indulgent imperial conferences
-were received with so much respect that hysterical women
-petitioned to have him included in the war-cabinet; a
-country with population and wealth equal to the city of
-Glasgow ranked in our councils as a great power.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I</span> did that,” Saltash confided. “Overseas dominions.
-Young wolves claiming place council-rock. People here
-<span class='it'>crawled</span> to him. And the government didn’t dare snub
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So long,” I said, “as the prophet comes from another
-country, he has full honour in ours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He was a cut above some of them,” said Saltash defensively;
-and I was told of one great public man who
-had dodged the dock in Australia to buy papers in England,
-of another who operated in London because he was
-threatened with a bullet in his brain if he ventured back
-to Winnipeg. Though Saltash did not say so, I think
-they may have fished in the waters which he troubled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The revenges of time!,” I said, as I stood up to go.
-“This is the remittance-man come home to roost.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A party can’t exist without funds,” said Saltash,
-beckoning to our waiter for a third liqueur. “Or without
-publicity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That I was not prepared to contest; and, as a new-born
-party had to collect its funds and build up its organization
-at short notice, I was not surprised that the rich men
-surrounding the coalition were more numerous and less
-savoury than the sufficiently dubious candidates for honours
-whom I had seen haunting the whips’ office during
-my active political career. If I was to believe Saltash,
-however, London had suddenly become a hunting-ground
-for the desperadoes of the empire. These “new men”
-were unknown names when the war began; soon I heard
-of them whenever a political crisis was being engineered.
-Their ability was undoubted; their experience had been
-gained in rough schools; and their resourcefulness admitted
-no limit. Supplying the impecunious with money
-and the affluent with advice, they acquired knowledge
-and influence which they used to acquire more money;
-and this in turn purchased them a further power of unseen
-interference in the direction of our government.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That night, as I sat down to our inaugural dinner, I
-told Bertrand of my host at luncheon and of his conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s no new thing,” said my uncle, who in these nights
-of doubt and sorrow unmasked an almost irritating resolution
-to be jolly at all costs. “The great international
-financiers have influenced governments and been influenced
-by them since banks and governments began.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Historically, that may have been true. The new thing,
-as Bertrand himself might have said, was the character of
-the new men and the new methods which they employed.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This dinner was to be my last frolic as an irresponsible
-spectator.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When, as editor and managing-director, I proposed the
-toast of “<span class='it'>Peace</span>”, a vibration from my colleagues’ eagerness
-troubled my rigid negations and stirred doubt in my
-bland assurance. <span class='it'>Was</span> Bertrand’s project so hare-brained
-as I had thought? I questioned myself in honest uncertainty
-as I settled my tie and looked down on the double
-row of expectant faces. The old man’s predictions at
-Cannes were fulfilled as soon as the conference met and
-a vague parliament of man reformed as a quarrelsome
-committee of ten; the clash between President Wilson’s
-fourteen points and Mr. Lloyd-George’s election speeches
-rang out when the committee of ten shrank to a camarilla
-of four; and, if we had ever doubted the apathy of the
-British public, our doubt must have evaporated day by
-day as the first House of Commons in the new glacial age
-sat with hands folded and eyes set jealously on the position
-each member had wrested from the war. Twice or
-thrice in these months a vigilance-committee of sterner
-and more unbending new members sent hectoring telegrams
-to keep their representatives up to the mark; President
-Wilson once ordered his ship to get up steam; and
-the Duchess of Ross dined out intermittently on M.
-Clemenceau’s latest epigram; but it is substantially true
-to say that no one in England thought of the peace-treaty
-until it was submitted for the approval of parliament.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In my speech I confined myself to congratulating Bertrand
-on his staff. At the end, he hoisted himself slowly
-to his feet and indicated his own part in our endeavour:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You young men will have to do the work; but perhaps,
-from a long experience, I may be able to advise you.
-No lasting peace can be founded on a sense of grievance;
-and, though the heathen are raging furiously now, they’ll
-outgrow that phase. Maybe it’s because I had to keep
-my mouth shut during the war, maybe old age is making
-me more radical. This is not a party organ, it never was;
-it was an expression of liberal spirit, and that’s what it
-has to be again. We were called hard names when war
-broke out; but we had the right vision. Labour still
-thinks parochially; toryism still thinks imperially, which
-is the same thing; radicalism must think internationally.
-These fierce local patriotisms are an unconscionable time
-a-dying; but England is a bigger conception than the
-heptarchy, Europe is a bigger conception than England,
-the world is a bigger conception than Europe. We depend
-too much on our neighbours to blow them out of
-existence every few years. That truth has been vouchsafed
-to those of us who are at this table; we have to get
-it accepted.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I rang a bell; and we were handed early copies of our
-first number. Every man turned avidly to his own contribution.
-Then Barbara sent for me to help her receive
-our guests.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This first of many receptions might have been arranged,
-I thought, as a review of all that the war had left
-us. Barbara stood at the stair-head in a white shawl of
-Chinese silk, with flamingoes in flight and a deep fringe
-sweeping to the scarlet heels of her white shoes. One
-shoulder, miraculously whiter than the shawl, was bare; a
-high comb of dark tortoise-shell proclaimed the astonishing
-fairness of her skin; and in the soft light of the
-chandelier her deep-set eyes shone like huge sapphires.
-I stopped in stupefaction to realize that this was my wife;
-and Barbara, reading my thoughts, coloured softly and
-pressed my hand. As our guests came self-consciously
-up the stairs, I saw one after another checking in the
-same bewilderment; and Raymond Stornaway supplied
-the image that was eluding me when he exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A wand! A wand! You sweet child, with a wand in
-your hand you’d be the fairy queen I fell in love with at
-my first pantomime, fifty years before you were born.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I had taken little part in sending out the invitations,
-I have only an indistinct memory of all who came. A
-phalanx of perpetually disapproving relations gave place
-to a battalion of my old Admiralty colleagues, headed by
-Hornbeck; new young diplomats, representing yet
-younger, newer states, raised Barbara’s hand ceremoniously
-to their lips; <span class='it'>débutantes</span> of a generation after mine
-pressed under the elbows of old family friends, who
-blocked the traffic while they retailed trivial anecdotes of
-my wife’s or my infancy. Here and there I saw an
-actress, whose name in private life always eluded me;
-time and again I uttered or received a warning against
-‘the world’s worst bore’. I remember being introduced,
-after frantic, whispered explanations, to innumerable authors
-in tortoise-shell-rimmed spectacles. In my turn, I
-remember introducing to Barbara the lost political sheep
-whom she was to charm back into their fold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I didn’t know there were so many people in the
-<span class='it'>world</span>!,” she exclaimed in one of the few brief lulls.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Raymond Stornaway overheard her and sighed:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s the summer and autumn without the spring.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the brief lull ended, my thoughts went back to the
-morning of Armistice Day when I paused on my way
-home from the Admiralty to reckon how many of my
-own generation had survived the war. As Robson bent,
-straightened himself and turned at the stair-head, I expected
-at every moment to hear him calling out “Captain
-Dainton” or “Lord Loring” or “Mr. Arden”; had I
-shut my eyes to their absence, I could have fancied that
-we were living in 1914. Now, as then, Crawleigh was
-so much engrossed in a political altercation with Bertrand
-that he walked stormily into the drawing-room without
-noticing us; Sam Dainton trotted up grinning—as usual—and
-whispering scandal into Violet Loring’s reluctant
-ear; Sir Roger, waiting uneasily for his wife, was mistaken—as
-usual—for a hired waiter and urged to tell
-John Gaymer where he could get his usual drink.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The last time I did this sort of thing was at my
-coming-of-age ball,” Barbara murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Which you gave for yourself because no one would
-give it for you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I hated father’s friends; and he hated mine,”
-she laughed. “Besides, I’d been in so many scrapes that
-I <span class='it'>had</span> to see whether people would continue to know
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They all came,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Except one. That was the time when Jack Waring
-proposed to me one day and quarrelled with me the next,”
-she explained lightly. “Why he wanted to marry me
-when he disapproved of everything I did .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I invited
-him specially.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And he wouldn’t come?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No. Apparently .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Eric isn’t coming .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The announcement fell so tranquilly, it was so long
-since we had mentioned Eric Lane’s name that I doubted
-for a moment if I had heard her aright.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. invited him?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Sonia and David were dining with him; and
-I told David to bring him. You don’t mind? I wanted
-to be friends. Ah .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.!” The sound was painfully like
-a sob; but, when I turned, I saw Barbara smiling eagerly
-as the O’Ranes came—unaccompanied—up the stairs.
-“Take David where he won’t be trampled on,” she whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was glad of a moment’s respite after the unintended
-shock which Barbara had given me. Eric had left too
-deep a mark on her spirit to be quickly forgotten; but I
-fancied, when her old exuberant joy in life returned, that
-she was no longer missing him. An hour before, I had
-been stupefied to realize that Barbara was my wife; now
-I wondered how much she was my wife. Not all her
-thoughts were mine; was all her affection? I was
-checked, by some question from O’Rane, on the verge of
-a shameful jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You want to know who’s here?” I looked down on
-a seething mass of heads. “It would be easier to say
-who’s not. Generally speaking, any one who was too old
-or too young for the war; and a sprinkling of people with
-charmed lives. The summer and winter without the
-spring, Raymond calls it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was a slaughter and a half!,” O’Rane muttered.
-“If you calculate, among your own friends, the families
-who’ve been left without a direct heir .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, Bertrand will tell you the old aristocracy is done
-for. I don’t know. It weathered the industrial revolution
-and the Napoleonic wars.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The shock was more gradual; there was a greater
-power of resistance. Now the big estates are breaking
-up; and the great masses are becoming conscious of their
-strength.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I looked down the stairs, Crawleigh and Bertrand
-were finishing their altercation. I heard Raymond telling
-them that it was time for old men to be in bed; and the
-phrase reminded me of my meeting with Saltash. In
-every sense of the term, they were old men, no longer able
-to hold their own against the young vigour of Saltash’s
-recruits; in any struggle of class with class, the material
-ammunition had passed from their hands. Their prestige
-was weakening before the pressure of those who excelled
-them in everything but length of tradition; and that tradition
-was now being cut short.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose you can call yourself a radical and still
-believe in the value of a good strain in breeding,” I said.
-“That hard-worked creature ‘the historian of the future’
-will <span class='it'>have</span> to say, I suppose, that the people of this
-country carried a heavier burden than any other in the
-war? I <span class='it'>think</span> he’ll say that, of all our people, those who
-carried the heaviest burden were the leaders. In fighting,
-in directing, in paying .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And in being killed: that’s
-why there are so few of them here to-night. We shall be
-the poorer if we lose that strain.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ll hope there are still enough of them left to
-carry it on,” said O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The next few years will be a race; there’ll be a fight
-against time, to spread the tradition before the people
-who maintain it are swallowed up.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We talked at random until Sonia came to collect him
-for another party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m sorry we couldn’t bring Eric,” I heard him say to
-Barbara on leaving. “Some friend of his had a first
-night; and he’d promised to look in.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did he say if he was coming on?,” asked Barbara.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should think it depends on the time. There was
-some talk about a supper-party afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then I don’t suppose he will,” she answered with the
-composure of complete indifference. “Good-night, David.
-Good-night, Sonia.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we were by ourselves, I sent the servants to bed;
-and we sat for half-an-hour discussing the party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Half-past one,” she sighed at last. “Nobody <span class='it'>can</span> be
-coming now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If any one does,” I said, “he’ll find an excellent doorstep
-to sit on. Come to bed, Babs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I must write one letter first. You go on and turn
-out the lights. If you see my torch, you might put it
-on the hall-table.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I chose a book and went to my room. Only when I
-was in bed did I discover that I had brought the wrong
-book; and, on going downstairs again, I saw the lights
-in the hall blazing. Then, as I reached the drawing-room,
-I caught sight of Barbara, seated in a high-backed chair
-at the stair-head. At first I thought she was asleep; then
-I saw that she was staring through the hall to the front
-door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is anything the matter?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He <span class='it'>can’t</span> be coming now,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who? Eric?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My earlier whisperings of jealousy were silenced by her
-utter forlornness. I did not care whether her thoughts
-and affection and heart and soul were his, so long as I
-could take the look of pain out of her eyes. I wanted to
-tell her that I understood and was sorry for her; but the
-name had roused her, and she stood up with languid
-dignity:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. She was once again the alert and vigilant
-hostess of an hour before. “I thought it would
-look so terribly rude if he came here and found no one
-to receive him. After I’d specially asked him, too,” she
-added on a higher note. Then her self-possession returned
-to her. “It’s two o’clock. As he hasn’t come
-now, I suppose .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. he’s not coming .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. at all.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If “the historian of the future”, whom I have already
-invoked, have the microscopic vision and the titanic industry
-with which his predecessors credit him, I believe
-he must find space for a footnote, in brilliant, to describe
-our share in forming a critical opposition during the last
-four months of the armistice. In the days immediately
-following the 1918 election, the government had hardly
-an enemy; in the months after the peace-treaty was signed,
-it had hardly a friend. Even before the <span class='it'>Economic Consequences
-of the Peace</span>, even before the mutual vituperation
-of the allies, an independent mood of questioning
-and doubt succeeded to the hysterical assertions and demands
-of the mad election. How far we fostered that
-mood by means of open propaganda and private suggestion,
-how far we made articulate a frame of mind that
-was already struggling to express itself, I cannot say;
-but that the mood became contagious cannot be challenged.
-In these first spring days, Barbara’s circumspect cousin,
-Lord John Carstairs, avoided our house for fear of finding
-himself described as a ‘defeatist’, a friend of the
-enemy, a creature of Caillaux or a hireling of Stinnes.
-By the end of the summer, an alert opportunist such as
-Sir Rupert Foreditch sought publicity in the columns of
-<span class='it'>Peace</span> or opened his campaign by an attack on Seymour
-Street because our paper was frank and fearless and because
-“the Oakleigh gang”, as we were unflatteringly
-called, was too important and, in time, too numerous to
-be ignored.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the morrow of the inaugural dinner, Bertrand
-hunted me out of doors to study “the great movement
-of men”, while he plotted with Barbara new days of
-keeping me on the run. No reference was made to our
-pitiful encounter at the stair-head; but I left a note to
-say that she was not to be called, and, when I carried in
-her breakfast, she looked up—with the eloquent silence
-of a dog—to thank me for understanding and to shew
-that she too understood. At once, after that, she began
-to discuss the party of the night before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am not going to pretend that my work for the next
-three years, though it left me without an hour, a house
-or a wife to call my own, was void of interest: duty compelled
-me to meet every one, from labour-leaders to cabinet
-ministers and from editors to bishops, who might
-be thought to influence action or opinion by a hair’s
-breadth; I had to read the new books and absorb a mass
-of papers; I explored different parts of the country to
-find what different classes were saying or thinking; and
-a New York reporter could not have been quicker to lay
-hands on the foreign bankers and diplomats who passed
-through London. Two or three dinner-parties were given
-in each week to these unofficial missionaries; I met my
-uncle daily at the Eclectic Club to pool our discoveries
-in collective psychology; and on Wednesday nights the
-staff of <span class='it'>Peace</span> assembled on their spurious Sheraton
-chairs and helped to hammer out a new message to mankind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If from time to time I harboured unworthy projects
-for desertion, my weakness of purpose must be attributed
-to natural indolence and perhaps justifiable impatience.
-Our progress seemed so lamentably slow; our aims were
-so exasperatingly vague! Much as I valued Bertrand’s
-long experience, greatly as I admired his flashes of intuition,
-I dreaded his descents on Fetter Lane in these first
-discouraging months. From Sir Philip Saltash or from
-the spirit of the age he had caught an itch for supermen;
-and I went about my work with a shame-faced consciousness
-of inadequacy while my uncle clasped his hands over
-his stick and boomed oracularly of novel tendencies and
-strange expedients.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re becoming precious,” he grunted unamiably
-at our second number. “Average opinion; the common
-touch: you mustn’t neglect that, George. If you take
-your friend Dainton as a barometer .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And I was incontinently pricked into the least comfortable
-of my clubs, where I tested average feelings as
-they were represented in the changing utterances of one
-well-meaning and uniquely stupid legislator. The first
-experiment was made at a time when the successful
-candidates of the December election were uneasily hoping
-to be saved by the firmness and idealism of President
-Wilson from the consequences of their less temperate
-speeches.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Wilson <span class='it'>le bienvenu</span>’,” Dainton murmured approvingly,
-as he laid down a welcoming number of <span class='it'>Punch</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A few weeks later, I found the French press excitedly
-proclaiming that Germany was being let off too easily.
-Sir John Woburn demanded with all the polyphonic energy
-of the Press Combine why America should be allowed
-to deprive the allies of their just reparations; and
-Dainton assured me profoundly that the task of winning
-the war was child’s play compared with that of winning
-the peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Damned obstinate fellow, Wilson,” he grumbled.
-“If he thinks we’re going to let him throw away all that
-our gallant boys fought for, he’ll have a rude awakening.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Later still, he ceased to speak of the president altogether.
-Remembering Limehouse, he could not give implicit
-trust to the prime minister; but the gossip that
-floated from Paris to London convinced him that M.
-Clemenceau was the only statesman in Europe and he
-was content to leave himself in the hands of a man whose
-rare, sardonic utterances embodied the ferocity which
-Dainton had expressed so much less concisely in his
-election speeches. Members of parliament, he told me,
-had duties nearer home. Labour menaces were more
-important than quibbles about frontiers: coal strikes and
-railway strikes, both leading through nationalization and
-civil war to ruin and the disruption of the empire, were
-the proper study of political mankind. Sir Roger no
-longer spoke of the British working-man as one of “our
-gallant boys”; and I was invited to penetrate the disguise
-that sheltered a Russian communist. Before I could
-do justice to this conception, he had found new duties
-even nearer to the hand of a patriot. “Bolshevism”
-was bad, but it soon ceased, in Dainton’s eyes, to be quite
-so bad as “profiteering”; and neither, by the middle of
-the summer, was so exasperating nor so tenacious of
-life as Irish irreconcilability.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I could hold the wretched country under the sea
-for five minutes!,” he exploded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Fed on political catch-words and instructed by safe
-cartoons, Sir Roger Dainton, coalition-unionist member
-for the Crowley Division of Hampshire, would explain
-Ireland on alternate days by reference to the incurable
-dourness of the north and the ineradicable savagery of
-the south. He was the ‘pendulum voter’, the representative
-of all that is unstable, ill-informed and irresponsible
-in public life. For that I was prepared; for that Bertrand
-had sent me to study him. I was not prepared, however,
-to be accepted as a disciple and an ally. Dining weekly
-in Rutland Gate, I wondered whether the little man had
-ever before found any one who would listen to him:
-obviously, pathetically, he looked forward to our “good
-pow-wows”; and, when he saw me to the door and gave
-me a fresh cigar, still more when he said, “Then, next
-Tuesday as usual?”, I felt that I was being sent back
-to school with a sovereign in my hand and being invited
-to Crowley for my next leave-out day. My embarrassment
-was increased by a sense of black ingratitude. Sir
-Roger always made these meetings “an occasion within
-the meaning of the act”, as he called it, and opened his
-best champagne for me. When Barbara deserted me on
-the plea that we wanted to talk business and she would
-be in the way, Dainton redoubled his hospitality and became
-increasingly confused in speech. As I watched
-the clock, I would ask myself how such a man was admitted
-to the board of a company or tolerated in parliament;
-then, in a flash of revelation, I saw him as the type
-of all the class on which Sir Philip Saltash exercised the
-wiles of his publicity. Saltash was a logical inference
-from Dainton.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now you see why I told you to study him,” Bertrand
-chuckled, when I announced that I would resign
-my editorship before I submitted to another spell of Dainton’s
-political conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In despair, I asked how our little office in Fetter Lane
-was to overtake and undo the work of Saltash and his
-forebears of the popular press. To this, however, my
-uncle had no answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though he continued to speak of us as a chosen people,
-our mission of enlightenment was established on a
-paying basis by the success of our literary editors, who
-made of <span class='it'>Peace</span> the most feared and least loved review in
-London. As Hancock confined his criticism to novels
-and Mattrick to poetry, they could not be charged with
-rolling their own logs or obstructing a rival, though I
-noticed that Mattrick’s sweeping condemnations stopped
-short of “Mr. Hancock’s true lyrical genius” and Hancock’s
-devastating onslaughts on modern fiction made
-an exception in favour of Mr. Mattrick. My conscience
-became unquiet when books were sent out for review and
-I heard Hancock choosing critics who could be trusted
-to “sit on this sort of rot”; but, as the “rot” was usually
-written by men who seemed to be making a substantial
-income, I hoped that they could afford an occasional
-attack and console themselves with the knowledge
-that, in the Penmen’s Club, fifty yards away, a league of
-disgruntled novelists and poets was plotting the destruction
-of “the Hancock-Mattrick gang”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All the same,” Bertrand expostulated after a month
-or two, “we’re not running this paper so that one ill-tempered
-young gentleman can read what another ill-tempered
-young gentleman has said about a book he
-hasn’t troubled to finish. We’re not in touch yet with
-opinion. You don’t mix with enough people, George:
-it’s all the office, or the club, or Barbara’s parties.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But where am I to find your new men?,” I asked.
-“You say politics are no longer manufactured over a
-week-end party at Woburn. The political clubs only
-harbour your Tapers and Tadpoles. Where do men like
-Saltash and Wister and Foreditch do their work?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They take their pleasure at the Turf and Stage,”
-Bertrand answered sourly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m dining there with the O’Ranes to-night,” I said,
-as we began to walk home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you’ll probably meet them. New men, new
-meeting-places.” My uncle laughed mirthlessly. “If
-Pam or Johnnie Russell .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It’s the rising tide of
-democracy. Agricultural depression and death duties
-have slowly strangled the landed classes; their social influence
-is tottering. Before the war, Asquith was almost
-the only prime minister, bar Dizzy, who wasn’t
-drawn from them; but the prime ministers of the future
-will come from the middle class .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. till they come from
-labour. And the stage changes with the actors,” he continued
-in a deep rumble that carried from the one side
-of Fleet Street to the other. “<span class='it'>Circumspice!</span> When the
-masses had been taught to read, Newnes gave them <span class='it'>Tit-Bits</span>;
-Pearson and Harmsworth followed with the cheap
-daily press; headlines took the place of news and arguments.
-The focus shifts to the newspaper office.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were passing a flamboyant, white-and-gold building
-described as a “Super Electric Palace de Luxe”; and I
-asked Bertrand if he thought pictures were coming to
-take the place of headlines.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s not the instrument that matters, but the man
-who handles it,” he answered. “Does Saltash play on
-Ll-G. or does Ll-G. play on Saltash? You’ll know better
-to-night when you’ve seen the new stage with the new
-men on it. Your modern prime minister doesn’t waste
-his time with duchesses at Ross House or with dukes at
-the Carlton. He has suave young secretaries to feed
-the press; he has rich friends to provide him personally
-with the sinews of war. He has his publicity agent.
-And, if he’s wise, he has a chain of intermediaries running
-through the country, somebody always knowing
-somebody who knows somebody else, so that he can draw
-any one into his net at a moment’s notice.” As we crossed
-Waterloo Place, Bertrand glanced contemptuously at Mr.
-Gladstone’s old house in Carlton House Terrace.
-“There’d be no end to the buzzing if Ll-G. spent a week-end
-with Sir John Woburn: he <span class='it'>must</span> be trying to collar
-the Press combine! But if my Lord Lingfield entertains
-a few actresses and a jockey or two and a prize-fighter
-and if Woburn happens to come along .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.? That’s
-how politics are manufactured nowadays; and the Turf
-and Stage is the sort of place to see them manufacturing.”</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Such a preparation was almost inevitably a preparation
-for disappointment; but the unexpected end of my first
-evening at the Turf and Stage left me no time to define
-my expectations nor judge whether they had been fulfilled.
-As Barbara had a headache, I entered the resplendent
-club-room off Hanover Square under Sonia’s protection;
-and, for all the scars that the last five years had left, I
-could have fancied for a moment that we were back in
-1914 when the “Cottage Cabaret” and “Blue Moon”
-were tentatively opening their doors. I observed the same
-mirrored walls and plush sofas, the same small tables
-surrounding the same polished floor, the same high gallery
-and beaming, southern band. From the atmosphere
-I inhaled the same desolating quality, only to be rendered
-by the desolating name of “smartness”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I found no hint, however, that my rigidly standardized
-neighbours were powers behind thrones. Apart from a
-passion for dancing that grew ever more feverish as
-youth receded, they were severely domesticated. Men
-brought their wives to supper, I was told, their sisters
-to dinner and their mothers to luncheon; I should not
-have been surprised to hear of a nursery upstairs or to
-see Gaspard, the incomparable manager, devising quiet
-games with the children in their parents’ absence. Most
-of the men that night were young and exceedingly prosperous
-financiers; the rest, exemplified by Laurence Hunter-Oakleigh
-and Johnnie Gaymer, had at least the appearance
-of prosperity. Born to rule, they had all done
-well in the war; they were doing well in the peace; and
-their women dominated the situation as shrewdly, as
-calmly and as confidently as the men. Some trick of
-memory sent my thoughts back to the “Duchess of Richmond”
-ball at Loring Castle on the eve of the war. I
-remembered standing in the hall with Puggy Mayhew,
-watching the lithe girls and hard-trained men mounting
-the stairs with their magnificently English self-possession;
-and, though Mayhew filled a grave in Mesopotamia,
-I could hear again his tone of startled discovery as he
-murmured: “There’s nothing to touch them in any country
-<span class='it'>I</span> know.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had been invited to meet a girl who aspired to that
-career of mendicancy and private blackmail which is
-known to women with a friend in Fleet Street as “freelance
-journalism”; and, while O’Rane waited in the hall
-for the rest of his party, Sonia led me downstairs for
-a cocktail.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have a standing invitation from Gaspard to come
-here at his expense,” she confided. “He considers me
-rather a draw. And, as Lorrimer is always good for a
-dress if I’ll wear it in public, I can usually kill two guests
-with one free dinner. If Johnnie Gaymer would only
-give me one of his firm’s cars to be seen driving
-about in, David would get a perfectly good wife below
-cost.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we descended to a more intimate room, with smaller
-tables half hidden by plates of oysters, I suggested that
-the assistant-almoner of the Lancing millions could afford
-to buy his wife a car.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you don’t know David,” she rejoined with a
-touch of petulance. “He’s working himself to death;
-but, if any one tries to pay him for what he does, he
-thinks it’s charity. Let’s talk of something else. You’ve
-not met this Maitland child? She’s very pretty and very
-silly, I should think. Just what I was at her age .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. or
-at my own, I suppose you’d say if I gave you a chance.
-Finished? Then let’s go up,” she continued with the
-restlessness that characterized the age or at least the women
-of it whom I met that night.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One and all, they sat down and jumped up again like
-marionettes that would collapse if their wires slackened;
-they looked at one page of a paper and then tossed it
-away; they clamoured for cigarettes and laid them aside.
-Finding that her other guests were not yet arrived, Sonia
-hurried into the dining-room, snatched a youth unknown
-to me from his protesting party and danced with him
-till a voice, peevish with hunger, cried: “Bertie, you little
-beast, come back and order dinner.” She then attached
-herself precariously to another party, stole some one else’s
-portion of caviare and rejoined us in the hall with her
-booty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane, I thought, was looking ill and overworked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stornaway’s gone down with pneumonia,” he explained;
-“so I’ve had all his work to do. It’s a bigger
-thing than I contemplated. I wonder .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I wonder
-very much .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whether you can carry out the schemes we discussed
-at Cannes?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No! Whether we’ve any place in our present civilization
-for these colossal fortunes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah, that’s Ivy’s
-voice. Come and be introduced.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have never known for certain who constituted our
-party that night. Four of us met in the hall; but we mislaid
-Sonia as we went to our table; and John Gaymer
-invited himself to join us until his own friends arrived.
-Between the dances, some twenty to forty people surged
-into our corner; during them, I was usually left with
-one compassionate neighbour. As in a dream, I talked
-to O’Rane with grave absorption about shell-shock treatment;
-then I listened as Sam Dainton was convinced
-against his will that he had spent the previous night in
-the hall of his hotel, because he could not remember his
-bedroom number nor his name; then Sonia plunged me
-in a morass of domestic finance, demanding how any one
-could keep herself, her husband and child on the pittance
-which David allowed her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now I’m going to have another,” she added, as
-the saxophone uttered a warning bleat.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dance?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, baby, of course.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Do knock some sense into
-David’s head.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Good-bye-ee.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she slipped away, I found myself alone with a
-pretty little dark-eyed girl, precocious and unbalanced,
-whom I remembered with difficulty as Ivy Maitland; and
-for another five minutes we talked gravely of work and
-life and careers for women. Ivy must have been younger
-by several years than any other woman in the club; and
-in that setting she seemed a human note of interrogation,
-scored by the present on the threshold of the future. She
-also seemed sadly out of place. Her friends were too
-old for her, most of them were married, some were living
-apart from their wives and others were not living
-far enough apart from the wives of other men.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the end of five minutes, forgetting her concern for
-a career, she darted off to dance with John Gaymer; and
-her place was taken by Sam Dainton, lately returned from
-Paris and full of gossip about the conference. The unruffled
-Gaspard conjured one more chair to our ever-lengthening
-table; and a basket of plover’s eggs for Sam
-appeared simultaneously with O’Rane’s chicken and my
-savoury, while heated revellers lolled over chair-backs
-with coffee and cigarettes. A warning of indigestion
-assailed me as I changed my place for the fourth
-time; intellectual dyspepsia had prostrated me from the
-moment when these five-minute conversational turns
-began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You look a bit out of the picture, old son,” Sam told
-me candidly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m a spectator,” I said. “My uncle feels that I
-should study the great movement of men.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Paris is the spot for that,” he chuckled, with his
-mouth full. “They call it a peace conference, but I
-should say it was a full-dress parade for the next
-war.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He broke off as Sonia danced up with shining eyes
-to whisper her discovery that one of our neighbours had
-married a second husband in the premature belief that
-the first had been killed. By the time she had done, Sam
-had finished his plover’s eggs and was in the thick of a
-discussion with my cousin Laurie, which was to enrich
-them both if they could only find an out-of-work capitalist
-to launch them. Ivy concluded an audible disagreement
-with Gaymer, who I thought was more sodden than
-his wont, and dragged me headlong into a conversation
-that seemed to begin as startling indecency and cooled to
-the temperate obscurity of psychoanalysis.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You should read Freud,” she told me. “Psychoanalysis
-explains everything. You <span class='it'>are</span> behind the times.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the little knowledge which I had been compelled
-to acquire in the hope of understanding the novels and
-plays of the period, I should have said that psychoanalysis
-defiled more than it explained; but I was chiefly interested
-to distinguish this night as the first on which the old
-reticences between men and women were torn away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not bored, I hope?,” murmured a voice at my elbow,
-as Ivy flitted away for the second time.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turned to see O’Rane sitting huddled with fatigue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bewildered, rather. This .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. this is the generation
-you’re undertaking to educate,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must expect some kind of reaction.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s been going on for six months now.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. However,
-I’m more concerned with the shepherds than with
-the sheep.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was only as the theatres emptied that I appreciated
-my uncle’s sardonic wisdom in sending me to study “the
-great movement of men” in the Turf and Stage. The
-government was then represented by Lord Lingfield, who
-danced—for exercise rather than pleasure—with Miss
-Maud Valance, of the Pall Mall Theatre, and by the Right
-Honourable Wilmot Dean, who refrained from dancing
-on the principle that a man must learn to walk before
-he can run and must be in a condition to stand before
-he can dance. What weight Mr. Dean and Lord Lingfield
-contributed to cabinet councils I am too ignorant to
-guess; at the Turf and Stage they demonstrated that
-ministers, in spite of a nonconformist head, were not killjoys;
-and those who did not get many chances of hailing
-convivial privy councillors by their Christian names took
-the opportunity when it came.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s about twenty-one years since Gladstone died,”
-I murmured to O’Rane. “It’s ‘new men, new manners’,
-with a vengeance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In strident conversation with Wilmot Dean, I could
-hear ‘Blob’ Wister roaring the latest of his political
-creeds. For three months he had won consequence by
-purchasing in succession the <span class='it'>People’s Tribune</span>, the <span class='it'>St.
-Stephen’s Times</span> and the <span class='it'>Daily Echo</span>. No one knew
-whence the money had been collected; no one that I ever
-met could tell me whence Wister himself sprang. He
-burst upon London like Sir Philip Saltash, like Wilmot
-Dean, like a third of the new men inside the government
-and on its outskirts, in response to the prime minister’s
-known desire for business talent. I was still watching
-the unsteady antics of Lingfield, when Sir Philip Saltash
-himself rose with a well-remembered lurch and bore down
-on us with the customary unlighted cigar swinging like
-a semaphore from the one side of his mouth to the other.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Come to inspect my bunch?,” he enquired, with a
-careless nod and a less careless scrutiny of our liqueurs.
-Then, as I hesitated for an answer: “You’re too dam’
-superior for these times. When you’ve been in the game
-as long as I have .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Funny thing! The first slogan
-I ever heard in the States was that politics was not a
-job for a gentleman; ten years later I heard it in Canada;
-I’ve heard it in Australia; and, from what I’ve seen of
-your rag, you’re sighing for the great days of Salisbury
-and Pitt and all that lot.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should hardly expect to find them here,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They wouldn’t be in a state to come here! Old Pitt
-was a rare one for the booze. People don’t change much.
-You remember the old Limehouse days? Lloyd-George
-said that an aristocracy was like old cheese; and the aristocracy
-answered that Lloyd-George was a dirty little
-Welsh attorney: ‘Oh, how <span class='it'>vulgar</span>!,’ you cried. Was
-that worse than your old Salisbury’s nicknaming Joey
-Chamberlain ‘Jack Cade’?” He looked round with a
-fuddled but tolerant smile, as a miller might look when his
-wheel stopped suddenly, at the corner where startling
-silence had fallen on the conspiratorial, closely grouped
-heads of Dean, Wister and Lingfield. “The war
-opened up a place in the sun for people who hadn’t been
-brought up to your kid-glove ideas of public life.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The whispering group was joined by Sir Rupert Foreditch,
-whose chief claim on his country’s gratitude is
-that he sacrificed the dilatory chance of promotion on the
-staff in order to race home after Neuve Chapelle and offer
-himself for a place in the first coalition. It was by an
-accident of geography rather than through any lack of
-zeal that others were before him; but he and the group
-that broke the first war-administration have the comfort
-of knowing that all decisions at the Dardanelles were
-postponed till an embarrassed government could decide
-which of their willing swords must be declined.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Would you say,” I asked, “that there was a touch
-of the adventurer about some of them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A man,” enunciated Saltash, “is only an adventurer
-till he arrives; then he’s a pioneer. Nobody minds new
-men when they’re like Asquith. Nobody minds rich men
-when they’re like Derby.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For one reason, because the Stanleys don’t drift
-from one country to another, seeing which they can turn
-to their own greatest profit.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Saltash shook his head incredulously:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t try to pull any stake-in-the-country stuff on
-me. That’s well enough for your father-in-law. I sat
-next to old Crawleigh at a city dinner last week; and he
-didn’t know what to make of things. I did. And I
-told him. ‘The aristocracy,’ I said, ‘has been swamped
-by the middle-classes. Well, if the aristocracy couldn’t
-keep its end up against men like Chamberlain and Asquith
-and Lloyd-George, it was best out of the way.’ D’you
-mind if I bring Foreditch over here? He’s just back
-from Germany; and I want to know how the land lies
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could not repel such a man at a time when my sole
-function in the Turf and Stage was to study the new
-leaders in our political life. When I first met Sir Rupert
-at Oxford, he was an unbending radical; but the 1906
-election brought into the world more radical mouths than
-there was bread to feed, and, when I took my seat, Foreditch
-was spaciously enthroned in the wastes of opposition.
-As a hired assassin, his tale of Budget Leaguers’
-scalps won him the deputy-leadership of the Die-Hards
-when the Parliament Bill came to be fought; and, in the
-Home Rule controversy, he preached rebellion in Ulster
-with a gusto not exceeded by Mr. Bonar Law, Sir Edward
-Carson and Mr. F. E. Smith. An incautious declaration
-that the kaiser could be trusted to save Ulster from a
-false Hanoverian, as William of Orange had saved her
-from a perfidious Stuart, kept Foreditch from reaping the
-reward of his shell-intrigue in 1916; but, if he missed
-cabinet rank, he achieved a greater position as the unofficial
-plenipotentiary who was always being sent, with
-the easy informality introduced by a ‘business’ government,
-to make overtures and arrange deals. His ambition,
-I think, was to play the part of Colonel House
-to Mr. Lloyd-George’s President Wilson: in the last
-years of the war he was always vanishing mysteriously
-to Stockholm or Berne; and, two years after this date,
-I heard that he was visiting, in disguise, the leaders of
-all the parties in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The present condition of Germany .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” he began;
-but, before I could hear what it was, an unknown woman
-bustled up to our table and began to make notes for an
-article which informed the world two days later (1) that
-anybody who was anybody would be found dining at the
-Turf and Stage, (2) that “Lucile”—as she confided to
-her “darling Betty”—had seen good-looking Bobbie
-Pentyre dancing with Lady Clackmannan’s girl, (3) that
-Lady Barbara Oakleigh—“Babs Neave, as we must
-still think of her”—had been at the table next to “Lucile’s”
-and (4) that her husband would certainly stand
-again for parliament when opportunity offered. In its
-slangy pertness and familiarity, the style was the woman;
-and, as accuracy was less important to the <span class='it'>Daily Picture</span>
-than snappy diction or a knowing air of intimacy, it
-would have been idle to correct her statements or to reprove
-her manners. No doubt she had a livelihood to
-earn; and those who create a demand have to bear as
-heavy a responsibility as those who furnish the supply.
-When I had recovered from my first exasperation, I felt
-that the loud-voiced lady was less to blame than “Blob”
-Wister, who owned the paper for which she wrote, and
-the two million readers (the circulation of the <span class='it'>Daily Picture</span>
-was certified by an impeccable firm of chartered accountants)
-who liked to think of Miss Murchison as
-“Lady Clackmannan’s girl” and of Lord Pentyre as
-“Bobbie”. Those who had no chance of seeing for
-themselves whether he was good-looking must have been
-grateful to “Lucile” for lifting a corner of the curtain
-from the world of beauty, rank and fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Another section of the public you propose to educate,”
-I told O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you,” he retorted. “You heard what Sam Dainton
-said about the state of Paris. Everybody hating
-everybody else.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I looked round to make sure that we were not being
-overheard. Lucien de Grammont, I knew, was somewhere
-in the room; but I fancied that he was avoiding me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s only these damned French,” I said. “Instead
-of thanking us for pulling them out of the mire,
-they think <span class='it'>they</span> won the war single-handed and our job
-is just to foot the bill. Hang it all, Raney, we spent more
-money and provided more ammunition than any one else;
-we raised about five million men; we stayed on to clear
-the Germans out of France when it was all we could do
-to keep the French in the war at all; and, when our papers
-were gushing about the splendid unity, the French government
-was making us pay rent for the trenches our
-men occupied to defend their miserable country. They’re
-the meanest hounds on earth. During the war, one
-couldn’t say these things .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Does one do much good by saying them now? The
-Americans bring pretty much the same charge against
-us. You’ve an organization, George, and you should
-make it your business to fight the hatred-epidemic.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He broke off, as the bland Gaspard presented himself
-at our table with the announcement that a lady was waiting
-outside. When I read Yolande Manisty’s name, I
-guessed that Raymond Stornaway was worse; when I
-met her, I knew—without being told—that he was
-dead. As I came back to the blaze and blare of the dining-room,
-I felt that this was my first contact with reality
-that night. The financiers and wire-pullers and propagandists,
-the glittering <span class='it'>corps de ballet</span>, the punctual scribe
-who chronicled their movements, all belonged to a world
-of masquerade. I cannot say what lesson Bertrand had
-sent me there to learn; the lesson which I carried away
-was a doubt—the first since 1914—of victory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I drove O’Rane to his house in Westminster and left
-him to think over Yolande Manisty’s message. By the
-terms of her uncle’s will, he had—for better or for worse—inherited
-unconditionally an estate of more than twenty
-million pounds.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap05'>CHAPTER FIVE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>THE RED ACCOUNT</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Countess of Montesquiou</span>:</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;So much for the Congress!</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Only a few blank nobodies remain,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;And they seem terror-stricken.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Blackly end</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Such fair festivities. The red god War</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Stalks Europe’s plains anew!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Thomas Hardy</span>: <span class='it'>The Dynasts.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Those who had never before heard of Sir Aylmer
-Lancing or of Deryk are no more likely than I am to
-forget the excitement of the week that followed Raymond
-Stornaway’s death. That it lasted no more than a week
-was due to the number of competing claims on the public
-attention; but, between the Bloomsbury cocaine-prosecution
-and the Dawlish murder, half the papers were
-calling O’Rane’s heritage “romantic” and the other half
-“sensational”, while the conversation at every dinner-party
-that I attended came by divers ways to the unanimous
-conclusion that Sonia would now spend twelve
-hundred thousand pounds a year on feeding her friends.
-Before she had recovered from her first shock, I observed
-that she was considering bigger houses in other parts of
-London; on the morrow, when I dined—for the last
-time, as I vowed to myself—in Rutland Gate, Lady
-Dainton told me that she had never entertained any idea
-of selling Crowley Court; and, when I visited O’Rane
-to enquire if he needed help, he shewed me a pile, waist-high,
-of begging letters.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was my first visit to the offices of the Lancing Trust;
-and I retain the memory of a vast, wind-swept barn on
-the edge of Hampstead Heath, with an old red-brick cottage
-and pent-houses of tarred wood attached. There
-were a great many box-files, a gigantic set of loose-leaf
-ledgers, a fair-sized reference library and a large number
-of typewriters. On one wall I recognized the map which
-Aylmer Lancing used to keep in his study to remind him
-of the stages by which his grip had spread over the earth’s
-surface. In all other respects, the building might have
-belonged to a poor-law relieving-officer; and Sonia, who
-obviously expected to find a double row of bankers smoking
-long cigars at a gleaming mahogany table, was no less
-obviously disappointed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I came to see if I could help you in any way,” I told
-O’Rane, who had rather frightened me the night before
-by his air of physical exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We found him now with one of his secretaries in
-Raymond Stornaway’s private office, fidgeting with the
-will. I learned that the money was to be spent “for the
-good of humanity”; and in the construction of that clause
-he had already received so much contradictory advice that
-he had closed his office to chance callers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I didn’t expect Stornaway to die so soon,” was all
-he would say when I asked him his plans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I doubt if time will make your problem any easier,”
-I answered, as I joined Sonia in front of the tattered
-wall-map.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There, from the centre of what Lancing had bought as
-a burnt-out town-site, the Lancing influence spread in
-extending circles. A name and date in faded ink marked
-the advance of his railroads, the acquisition of his forests
-and mines, the linking of lake to ocean for the transportation
-of his grain. Dotted lines, leading to vague infinity,
-shewed where Lancing had splashed out of the union into
-the Atlantic, the Pacific and the Gulf of Mexico.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must move to a decent office,” Sonia put in.
-“And we can’t go on at The Sanctuary if you want to
-entertain properly. People will expect us to live up to our
-position, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane smiled grimly as he ushered us compellingly
-to the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whether that’s for the good of humanity .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” he
-murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After this single meeting I resolved not to break in
-on his contemplation until I was invited. Very soon my
-attention was to be claimed by troubles of my own, for
-I was not satisfied with the state of Barbara’s mind or
-body; I, too, wanted to think; and, though I treated
-O’Rane to an unsolicited misgiving whenever I remembered
-his new estate, I will not pretend that I thought of
-him much after the feverish seven days in which every
-one I met said: “You’ve heard about it, of course?
-That’s the sort of thing that <span class='it'>would</span> happen to Sonia.
-What d’you suppose they’ll do with it?” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was in these days that the last touches were being
-given to the great peace-treaty which was to make an
-end of war; and, but for that, I should have handed Bertrand
-my resignation and taken Barbara abroad. Until
-we saw the terms, however, we could not tell how far his
-gloomy predictions at Cannes would be fulfilled nor how
-far any one could undo the mischief that was reported
-from Paris. If we could believe a quarter of all we heard,
-the butchery for which Sanguszko and Boscarelli clamoured
-in Lucien’s verandah-parliament was taking place
-in one country after another; as I warned Saltash, three
-discontented Alsace-Lorraines were being created for one
-that was pacified; and the mood of the December election
-seemed to return as the public realized the helplessness
-of the defeated enemy. Outside the now notorious “Oakleigh
-gang” I found few to admit that any country but
-Germany had been responsible for the war; and on that
-foundation each man erected his own standard of retribution.
-My father-in-law went the length of collecting a
-party at the Eclectic Club to reason with me and to check
-the wrong-headed doctrines that poured forth, week after
-week, from Fetter Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You really seem to live in a world of your own,”
-he explained wearily. “<span class='it'>I</span> don’t hope to convince you;
-but, if you take a poll of your friends, on a question like
-indemnities .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before he had time to finish or I to answer, John
-Carstairs put his own case with alluring brevity:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Boche made the war. The Boche must pay for
-it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What would have happened to our colonies if we’d
-lost?,” pursued Crawleigh, who seemed to regard the
-empire as a dumping-ground for the viceregally-inclined
-members of his family. German West Africa was below
-his dignity, but he had three sons. “These people mustn’t
-complain if they’re served in the same way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I recalled and quoted Bertrand’s dictum that no lasting
-peace could be established on a sense of grievance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I feel no tenderness towards Germany,” I said, “but
-aren’t we making another war inevitable?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will make it inevitable,” said Mr. Justice Maitland,
-“if you let the last war go unpunished. No one
-will deny that the Germans broke a treaty, that they
-robbed, tortured, violated and murdered, not in the heat
-of fighting but as part of a terrorizing campaign ordered
-from headquarters. If acts like these go unpunished,
-every nation will know that it can take ‘frightfulness’
-as its starting-point. Rape and mutilation will become
-sanctified usages of war. There will be a precedent.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s unanswerable,” I told the judge. “But, if
-this war proves anything, it proves that war doesn’t pay.
-I want to make that the great contribution of this war
-to history. If we impose a peace so unendurable that
-even war is no worse .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Maitland interrupted me with a smiling head-shake:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have to try murderers in the course of my duties.
-Their state would be no better than that of their victims,
-if vendettas were permitted. You might say truly enough
-that murder doesn’t pay. I should be sorry to see the
-death-penalty abolished on that reasoning.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you could hang every German,” I said, as I left
-to dress for the opera, “I might accept your argument.
-As it is, a punitive peace will set them thinking of revenge;
-and, the moment they’re strong enough, they’ll
-take it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A good reason for keeping them weak,” said Carstairs,
-“which—quite rightly—is all Clemenceau cares
-about.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might have multiplied, almost to infinity, the number
-of similar opinions, held by the most dissimilar people. I
-heard them at the club, I was inundated by them at my
-office and I wrestled with them at Barbara’s parties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder whether Bertrand thinks we’re making any
-headway?,” I asked that night at dinner, after venting
-my despondency on my wife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am not sure whether she heard me; her only answer
-was to look at her watch and to ask which opera was
-being played.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Louise?</span>” she repeated. “Then we can miss the first
-two acts. I suppose you wouldn’t care to go alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aren’t you feeling up to it?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara turned her back on me and busied herself with
-the wad of her cigarette-holder:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I don’t know! Yes, I’m all right! And, anyway,
-I shan’t do any good .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t know what I’m
-talking about!,” she cried with sudden loss of control.
-“I’m going to lie down till we start.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll take you up,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No!,” she answered, with what I can only call a suppressed
-scream.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her look and tone took me aback as though she had
-struck me in the face. For some weeks I had fancied
-that her nerves were disordered; but, as I finished my
-cigar in solitude, I felt that this night marked a subtle
-change in my relations with her. To this day I cannot
-tell when it began. We had been married little more than
-a year; before that, for ten years, we had been excellent
-friends. At first I believe she told me every thought
-in her heart; and there were times when I wished for
-both our sakes that she would think less and say less
-about what could not be mended. As though I had put
-my wish into words, her manner changed at the armistice:
-we were to make a new start, she was to forget her love
-for Eric Lane; and, after that, an onlooker would have
-said that she belonged to me, soul and body. She and I
-alone knew that, in some way, we were becoming
-strangers. Though she was bored with Cannes after the
-first week, she never told me; she might be bored with the
-life of a political hostess, but loyalty or lack of confidence
-kept her silent. She would not admit that she was ill or
-unhappy; but something now tortured her beyond bearing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And I was afraid to ask her. In all that touched her
-soul, I was a stranger, an amateur and a bungler. Something
-of this must have revealed itself in my expression,
-for on her return to the dining-room she put her arms
-round my neck and told me not to look so worried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m worried about you,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But I swear to you I’ve never felt better in my life!
-Come on; or we shall miss the only act worth hearing!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I followed her, more worried than ever. If I said
-nothing, I should seem callous; if I said anything, I might
-inflame her misery. I knew her too little for any idea
-what she wanted of me; and she trusted me too little to
-help by a hint. At this rate, she would become every
-day more uncommunicative; and each unanswered appeal
-for understanding would separate her farther from
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If <span class='it'>ever</span> there’s anything the matter,” I said, as we
-got into the car, “I hope you’ll tell me, Babs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Everything’s <span class='it'>perfect</span>,” she answered. “A darling
-house, a darling husband.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Her voice suddenly lost
-its false ring of assurance. “No, the fault’s in <span class='it'>me</span> somewhere.
-There’s something missing. Don’t let’s talk
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the unexpected quaver, I caught her fingers in mine;
-and she brushed away a tear with the back of my hand.
-Though no more was said, I felt that something more
-ought to have been said and that I was a moral coward
-for not saying it. In the silence and darkness of the car,
-I wondered whether Barbara was unhappy because she
-had been given no sign that she was to bear children.
-For all I knew, she did not want them or was afraid;
-for all I knew, she wanted them and could not bear them
-and was afraid to tell me. And we were both afraid to
-confess our fear.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we reached the opera-house, the second act was
-over; and, on the way to our box, we ran the gauntlet
-of a dozen friends, who invited us to meals, and of a
-hundred staring strangers, who turned to their neighbours
-and whispered: “There’s Lady Barbara!” with the
-mingled triumph and awe which the English display when
-they recognize any idol of the illustrated papers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One gets used to anything, even the manners of the
-well-bred,” I murmured, as we struggled towards the
-stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If any one else asks us to lunch, I shall say we’ve
-given up eating.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, I <span class='it'>must</span> speak to Marion!
-You go on.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I ploughed slowly into an open space by the entrance
-to the pit-tier boxes, then came to an involuntary standstill.
-Face to face, too near for either of us to escape,
-I found Eric Lane smoking a cigarette and looking over
-my shoulder to the place where Barbara was talking to
-Mrs. Shelley. Unless she had already seen him and
-was lingering behind till I had made myself a screen, they
-must meet in another moment. Eric never had much
-colour to lose, but even his lips now seemed bloodless.
-When our eyes met, I could not have said which was
-the more uncomfortable. I enquired after his father, I
-believe; and he asked me, as he had been in Japan at
-the time of our wedding, to accept his belated good wishes
-now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When are we to have another play?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This autumn, I hope,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good for that. Well, Eric, I little thought in the
-old Phoenix Club days that we were entertaining a
-genius unawares.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They were g-good days,” he sighed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then there was a pause; and the cordiality which old
-habit had brought to life wilted. As he glanced in Barbara’s
-direction, I fancy he was charging her with making
-our friendship impossible; this second sight of her
-seemed to incapacitate him; and we stood stockishly silent.
-When she joined us, there was, indeed, a smile
-on either side, a high and rather breathless “Oh, how do
-you do?” Then we hurried to our box; and Eric strolled
-across the hall. His hand was shaking as he tried to relight
-his cigarette; and the hollow eyes and cadaverous
-cheeks seemed ten years older for the ten seconds’ encounter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Was it a presentiment of this meeting that had unnerved
-Barbara? I had no time to speak before we
-were surrounded by a new throng. It was her first appearance
-at Covent Garden; and from the boxes and
-stalls we had opera-glasses trained upon us until I seemed
-to be looking at a tank of lobsters; a queue formed outside
-our door and we were flattened against the side of
-the box. The acclamation was not confined within a
-ring of our friends: I felt the atmosphere of the whole
-house warming in the greatest tribute to personality that
-I have ever seen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I watched you coming in to-night,” Dr. Gaisford
-told her at the end. “It was like the sun breaking
-through.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. How are you, my dear child? As you
-don’t come to see me professionally, I hope that means
-you’re well and happy?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Everything’s <span class='it'>perfect</span>,” Barbara cried, with a conviction
-that had been lacking when she used the same words
-earlier. As we settled ourselves in the car, she added
-joyously: “How sweet every one is! Marion wants us
-to choose a night for dining with her next week. And
-I’ve committed you to the Pinto de Vasconcellos the
-week after. And Bobbie Pentyre wants us to go to Croxton
-one week-end. Can you remember all that? And
-will you come?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Anywhere you like,” I promised. “You seem to
-have had rather a success to-night, Babs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a good world! I’ve got back my grip on life.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I feel <span class='it'>free</span>,” she went on with a note of wonder;
-and her hand stole shyly into mine as though we were
-composing a quarrel: “George dear, I’m sorry to have
-been unsatisfactory, sorry to have worried you. I
-promised on Armistice Day that I wouldn’t speak of certain
-people. You can’t help thinking of them, but since
-to-night I’m not .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. haunted. <span class='it'>Seeing</span> Eric has broken
-the spell.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I can meet him now. I’m going to.
-Madame Pinto said he was coming to her party.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Remembering Eric’s look of anguish when he caught
-sight of Barbara, I felt that the greatest kindness she
-could shew him would be to prevent further meetings.
-It was folly, I thought, for her to invite him to our first
-reception, it was madness to expect that he would come;
-and, if I said nothing at the time, it was for fear she
-would imagine that I was jealous.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Make things as easy as you can for him,” I recommended.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We can give him the opportunity of being friends
-again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And don’t be hurt if he doesn’t take it. Men of that
-kind, imaginative and highly-strung .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. In his way,
-he is a bit of a genius.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I gave him that,” she murmured with a pride which
-I thought ill-timed. “He had only talent before.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>To judge by appearances, Eric had paid dearly for
-his goddess’ kiss.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They feel things more intensely,” I continued, “than
-dull, matter-of-fact people like me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara made no answer for several minutes; then
-she looked straight ahead and asked:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Wouldn’t you feel it as much if you lost me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should feel it more than anything in the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s broken Eric. He’ll never be mended. But it
-wouldn’t break you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Faint though the challenge was, I fancied, for the first
-time in my life, that Barbara was trying to drag me into
-a ‘scene’.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We won’t talk about it,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think anything would break you. And you
-may take that how you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The words may have been her tribute to flint-like
-resolution or her criticism of wooden insensibility. The
-way that I decided to take them was in silence. Barbara
-hid her face in the great nosegay of carnations
-which she always carried, then held them out, like an
-impulsive child, for me to smell. As she walked, slender,
-tall and radiant, into the house, I felt that this was the
-day which I had waited fourteen months to see dawning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, I had quite a success,” she murmured to her
-reflection, when we paused in front of a mirror halfway
-up the stairs. “You seem surprised, George.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know how any one could hope to resist you,”
-I said. “<span class='it'>I</span> never can.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The South American dinner to which Barbara had
-committed me marked our grudging surrender to a lady
-whose hospitality was rapidly breaking the <span class='it'>morale</span> of
-London. Madame Pinto de Vasconcellos, if her ambitions
-had been examined before the judgement-seat, must
-have confessed a resolution to force free wine, food and
-tobacco on a larger number of victims than had fallen
-to any other Brazilian. Setting out with an introduction
-to the Duchess of Ross and a system of snowball terrorization
-for every one else, she secured B for her
-parties by playing on his fear of hurting A’s feelings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She is a stranger to London,” the duchess explained
-to Lady Crawleigh in a tone that hid natural exultation
-under less natural pity. “I should like to shew her a little
-hospitality.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Crawleigh had been caught too often in similar
-traps to forget that, while Herrig Castle and Ross House
-remained unlet, no one was secure; but, like every one
-else, she tried to shelter herself behind a substitute.
-Madame Pinto, she told Barbara, had heard so much of
-her “beautiful daughter”; it would be only a kindness
-to accept one of her many invitations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I pointed out that the whole English-speaking
-world had heard so much of Barbara, my mother-in-law
-rejoined wistfully that it was a small thing to ask, that
-she did not ask much and that she would not have asked
-now if she had imagined we should make difficulties.
-Remembering the unsteady concordat which was the best
-that a heretic and a radical could ever hope to establish
-with the Crawleighs, I urged Barbara to capitulate before
-I knew that Eric Lane was to be our fellow-guest. Had
-I now urged her to refuse, Lady Crawleigh would have
-had a grievance; and Barbara might have thought that
-I had a personal interest in preventing another encounter.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though the dinner passed off pleasantly enough, it
-had one wholly unexpected result which changed the
-course of history for two or three of Madame Pinto’s
-guests. Had we refused this invitation, I might not have
-seen John Carstairs for another month; had I not seen
-him, I should not have asked him to tell me about his
-recent tour of the Ross estates in Connemara; had he
-not told me, I might have contentedly played my part
-of absentee landlord for years to come. Carstairs, however,
-succeeded in frightening me with his stories of
-impending Irish trouble. The precarious peace, he said,
-might break down at any moment. As trustee for his
-half-witted brother, he was anxious to sell at any sacrifice
-and advised me to do the same. Whether I sold or
-not, I should be a fool if I did not at least visit an estate
-which I had neglected since the Easter rising of 1916.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Our chance conversation was the cause of my first
-serious disagreement with Barbara. Before parting with
-a property that had been in the family for three hundred
-years, I told her that we must explore the conditions of
-the County Kerry for ourselves. In my suggestion that
-we should go to Lake House for Whitsuntide she acquiesced
-at once, only stipulating that she should be allowed
-to stay behind at the last moment if the crossing
-threatened to be very rough. Next morning I reserved
-our sleepers and arranged with Spence-Atkins to postpone
-his own holiday and to take charge of our paper
-till my return; in the evening she warned me, rather
-fretfully, that she might not feel well enough to come. I
-asked if she would care for me to send for Gaisford;
-but, after a night’s rest, she assured me buoyantly that
-she was all right. I telegraphed to warn my agent of
-our coming; and, when I read out his reply, Barbara exclaimed
-with almost hysterical passion that, well or ill,
-in fine weather or foul, nothing would induce her to come
-with me to Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, do you mind my leaving you alone here?,” I
-asked, when I had recovered my breath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No. Bobbie Pentyre has arranged his Croxton party
-for Whitsuntide.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But why didn’t you tell me that before? I could
-have gone another week. Now I’ve made Spence-Atkins
-cancel his own plans .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, you’d better stick to your present arrangement,”
-she answered. Then, for some reason that I could not
-guess, she broke into wild weeping. “I’m so miserable!
-I’m mad! I don’t know what I’m saying! George, I’m
-sorry I was rude.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You weren’t rude,” I assured her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve not slept for nights and nights,” she gasped.
-“You’ve been very patient with me. Go on being patient,
-go on loving me! I’m so miserable.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This time I determined to be a moral coward no longer:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But why?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, I’ve told you! Because I’m a damned soul. I
-told you that when you asked me to marry you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I told you that I’d make you happy or die in
-the attempt. There’s nothing I won’t do .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In her first convulsion of grief, Barbara had allowed
-me to take her into my arms; but, as she became more
-composed, I felt her struggling gently to be free.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You really mean that?,” she asked, with her head
-averted. “If it meant your honour, your life, your happiness,
-you’d give all that to see me happy?” I fancied
-again that she was challenging me and that, if I made
-unguarded reservations, I should be told that I did not
-love her as Jack Waring and Eric Lane had loved her.
-The second, as she believed, was paying with his life;
-the first had already paid with his soul. “I don’t know
-what I’m saying!” she cried, with her hands pressed to
-her temples. “I’m worried .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. No, I won’t see a
-doctor. You go off as you arranged. I’ll go to Croxton
-if I feel in the mood. When you come back, I may be
-all right; if not .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She stared distractedly round the room in a way that
-reminded me of the sad, mad time when Eric first went
-out of her life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you <span class='it'>will</span> be all right,” I assured her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I’m not, remember you married a lost soul, George;
-I warned you. I kill whatever I touch.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is hardly to be imagined that I carried a light heart
-to Ireland. And the state of the country at this time
-was not of a kind to cure any private depression. In
-1916 I entered Dublin as an academic nationalist, who
-had voted year after year with the staunch, self-effacing
-Redmondites; I left as a perfervid Sinn Feiner, when the
-men who had played with me as boys five-and-twenty
-years before were shot off their crazy barricades or done
-to death by a mockery of legal forms. Then for the
-first time, face to face with a people cheated of its
-promised independence, I too said that no trust was to
-be reposed in English honour and no sane leadership
-expected from men who believed in English pledges.
-Through weary years we liberals had fought constitutionally
-for our Home Rule Bill; it was inscribed on the
-Statute Book in spite of intrigues and intimidation; but
-treason triumphed over constitutionalism on the day when
-Germany made war in the belief that an Irish guerilla
-would keep Great Britain from taking part.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Melancholy memories and uneasy forebodings were
-my companions on the familiar road to Holyhead. I was
-dining with my uncle Bertrand on the night when the
-Home Rule Act was suspended; he at least had protested
-and perhaps he was a little self-righteous, but in 1916
-I was to remember his grim prediction that from the
-breach of that undertaking, which every party in parliament
-helped to repudiate, would follow inevitably the
-discredit of the simpleton nationalists and the rise of Sinn
-Fein. The rebellion, which he foretold so accurately,
-was succeeded by a repression, which he and every one
-else knew would continue until the next rebellion. Sinn
-Fein, in these first months of the armistice, was penetrating
-the country peacefully; but even John Carstairs, who
-usually advocated the use of machine-guns and aeroplanes
-against political opponents, recognized that there
-would be war if the present army of occupation interfered.
-As yet there were only sporadic outrages on both sides,
-followed by reprisals, followed by counter-reprisals. As
-always happens, the non-combatants, squeezed by both
-sides, suffered most.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On this score, when at last I reached Lake House, I
-had no personal complaint to make. My agent told me
-that certain Sinn Feiners had been billeted on me and
-certain stores of food commandeered; my gun-room had
-been emptied; but both my cars, after a short period of
-detention, were returned with a permit from republican
-headquarters. This, I believe, made them liable to seizure
-by the forces of the crown; but my agent warned me
-that any license which recognized the authority of Dublin
-Castle would cause the cars to be taken and not restored.
-And nothing in Kerry tempted the Castle to send its
-emissaries so far into hostile territory. If I abstained
-from provocative acts or speeches, I should be left in
-peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They like you,” my agent was good enough to tell
-me; “and it’s what they’re all saying, that you should be
-living here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are the tenants paying me any rent?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They are.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I drifted away by myself to see how well the house
-would suit Barbara. The lake was like a sheet of glass,
-in a frame of dense green wood, hanging from the gardens
-by the red ribands of the fuchsia hedges. Here and
-there I saw thin spirals of smoke: it was turf smoke,
-though I could not smell it. From Castlemaine, in the
-west, the air blew soft and salt from the Atlantic. I
-cursed the malevolence of man that disturbed such peace
-and desecrated such beauty. I cursed, too, the fate that
-had sent me to an English school, because there was none
-good enough in Ireland, so robbing me of one home
-without giving me another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m a married man,” I told my agent, “since last I
-was here. I don’t care to bring my wife over till things
-are more settled.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, he assured me regretfully, was what every one
-said; but I should be comfortable enough if I did not
-make trouble. He was himself an avowed republican,
-not from any hostility to the king, whom he admired, nor
-from devotion to the forms and spirit of republicanism:
-he wanted peace; and, whether Sinn Fein would achieve
-it or not, no other party had succeeded. Sinn Fein was
-feared, if not respected; and the English only remembered
-Ireland when they were frightened. If Redmond
-and his lot had put the fear of God into the English one
-half as well as the others, they would be lords and ministers
-and the rest now, like Mr. Law and the man who
-prosecuted Roger Casement. My agent disapproved of
-Sir Edward Carson’s politics but admired him as the
-Irishman who had put more fear of God into the English
-than any one since Parnell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The one sentimental relaxation that this hard-headed,
-soft-spoken man allowed himself was that Parnell was
-still alive and would come back to lead Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I could find a purchaser .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“An Englishman? The house would be burnt over
-your honour’s head if the whisper of it ran round!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then,” I said, “I may as well be getting back to
-London.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My agent protested with touching fervour, but I was
-uneasy at being separated from Barbara. Two days after
-I landed at Kingston, she telegraphed: “<span class='it'>Missing you
-dreadfully hope you arrived safely and are coming back
-immediately all my love bless you</span>”; and, if her language
-seemed still a trifle neurotic, she had almost recovered
-her tranquillity by the time she wrote to describe the
-Whitsuntide party at Croxton Hall. The week-end had
-been uneventful; and, though Eric Lane was in the house,
-I could not read any embarrassment between the lines
-that described their meeting. The nervous excitability,
-however, of which I had seen too much evidence in London,
-betrayed itself once in a comment on a rumour:
-“<span class='it'>You remember the Miss Maitland you met with the
-O’Ranes? She’s here. A pretty little thing! Obviously
-in love with Eric. I’d give anything to see him happily
-married, but I hope he’s not serious about this child.
-She’s too hopelessly young, she’d send him mad in a
-week. It’ll be too tragic if he lets another woman make
-a mess of his life.</span>” The next day Barbara telegraphed
-again, telling me once more how much I was being missed
-and offering to join me at Lake House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I returned to London as soon as I had finished my
-business and was met at Euston by a shivering form in a
-scarlet tea-gown and an ermine cloak.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You crazy child, you’ll give yourself pneumonia!,”
-I cried as I hurried her into the car through a double line
-of smiling porters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s a pretty way to greet me when I’ve stayed up
-all night for you!,” Barbara laughed. “I <span class='it'>am</span> glad to
-see you again, George, though that wasn’t why I came to
-meet you. It’s your little friend Ivy Maitland: she’s gone
-down suddenly with appendicitis.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I’m very sorry, of course .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, dear, but we must do something about it. You
-know she was acting as Eric’s secretary while his own
-girl had a holiday? Yes! And this child has collapsed
-in his flat. Dr. Gaisford’s attending her; and he says
-she’s not to be moved on any consideration whatsoever.
-When I heard about it last night, I felt we <span class='it'>must</span> offer
-Eric a couple of rooms till she can return home. Things
-being as they are, though .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Barbara faltered and
-turned away. “It’s all such a muddle that I thought I
-couldn’t ask him without your permission.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From her consulting me, I surmised that she doubted
-the wisdom of her impulse. From my knowledge of Eric,
-I imagined he would sleep on the Embankment before he
-accepted a bed from us. If Barbara wished to make a
-sign of friendship, however, I would not check her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t need my permission,” I said. “If you
-think it will do any good for us to invite him .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We received our answer before the invitation could be
-sent. At the end of breakfast, Lady John Carstairs telephoned
-to say that she had herself placed her house at
-Eric’s disposal, but that he preferred to remain in Ryder
-Street till the girl was out of danger. On my way to
-Fetter Lane, I left some flowers and a card bidding Eric
-to let us know if we could be of any service; but we
-heard nothing till a week later, when O’Rane telephoned
-to catch me for five minutes before I went to bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I couldn’t get round before,” he apologized, “and I
-thought you ought to know. Poor old Eric! He’s getting
-all his troubles in a lump. Where’s Babs? I’m
-afraid she ought to hear this, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was under the impression that she had gone to bed
-half an hour before; but I heard sounds in the drawing-room,
-almost as though she had expected news of Eric
-and was staying up because it was bad news.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s happened to him now?,” I asked, as we went
-upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s been ordered abroad immediately,” O’Rane answered.
-“California. Lungs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do not know whether Barbara heard more than the
-last word; but she seemed to rise from her chair and
-cross the room in a single movement. O’Rane’s expression
-changed to wonder and then softened to pity as she
-caught and gripped his hand. No name had been mentioned
-in her hearing; but I think we both realized that
-he and I and all the world—with one exception—might
-be ordered to California for our lungs without striking
-an equal terror into her heart. In that moment I knew
-how far I had always been from winning her love.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane, I feel, atoned for want of sight by keenness
-of hearing. I fancied that a little of the pity in his expression
-might be intended for me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is he .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. dying?,” Barbara whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not yet awhile.” O’Rane withdrew his hand to feel
-for a chair. I thought I saw his expression changing
-again, this time hardening slightly as though to keep the
-flash-point of her emotions low or, perhaps, to douse
-them with a single chilling jet. “He can get all right
-if he wants to. You may imagine, he’s rather bowled
-over at present.” As he turned to me, I felt that he
-wanted Barbara to hear his next announcement without
-being watched. “It came quite suddenly,” he told me;
-“and, but for this, you’d have seen him happily married
-to Ivy Maitland.” If Barbara gave any sign of interest,
-I saw and heard nothing. O’Rane took time to let his
-announcement sink in; and I fancied again that he was
-tacitly advising her to close her side of an account which
-Eric had already closed against her. If she chose to
-think that he was still in love with her and that his
-engagement to Ivy was an act of despair, no argument
-would cure her; at least there was now no reason why
-this shadow should force its way between us any longer.
-“It’s rather a facer,” O’Rane continued, “when you lose
-your wife and your health on the same day. I’ve been
-telling him all evening that no woman in the world is
-big enough to spoil a man’s life, but at the moment he’s
-in the mood to creep into a corner and die. He’s too
-good for that. I want you to see him before he starts,
-George; and write to him while he’s away.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Naturally, I promised without hesitation. If Barbara
-sent a letter of farewell, she said nothing to me about
-it; when I told her next day that I was going to Ryder
-Street on my way to the office, she nodded abstractedly
-but made no suggestion of accompanying me; and, on my
-return, she sat like a spirit of tragedy, refusing to ask
-me the result of my mission, till I volunteered to tell her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By the way, I missed Eric this morning,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh? Had he gone already?,” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The maid said he was not at home,” I answered; and,
-mercifully for me, Barbara did not enquire further.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A less diplomatic version would have recounted that, as
-I hurried round to Ryder Street, I saw Eric getting out
-of the taxi in front of me. His front-door slammed as
-I was halfway up the stairs; and, when I said something
-to the maid about being one of his older friends, I was
-informed that Miss Maitland was still seriously ill. Divining
-that Miss Maitland could not be occupying all the
-rooms in the flat, I scribbled a note in which I begged
-Eric to see me for two minutes. A verbal message
-apprised me that Mr. Lane was engaged; and I went away,
-more hurt, I believe, than ever in my life before. Since
-his interrupted romance with Ivy, the fellow could bear
-me no grudge for marrying the woman he had tried so
-long to win; our friendship went back, sixteen years, to
-Oxford and the dinners of the Phœnix. There were not
-too many survivors from those days; and, coming to
-sympathize, I had seen my sympathy flung back in my
-face. I made every allowance for his illness and misery;
-but I could not write to him, at least for the present and,
-when a letter from him, several months later, hurtled
-like a flask of vitriol from California to England, I was
-too nearly blinded to attempt an answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Will you call again?,” asked Barbara perfunctorily.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t suppose he wants to be bothered,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a long silence; and Barbara’s shoulders
-moved in a slight shrug:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t suppose he wants to be friends. I tried, when
-we met at Croxton; but, when there’s been love, I don’t
-think you can go back to friendship.” She looked at me
-almost guiltily; and for an embarrassed moment I feared
-that I was to be drawn into yet one more unwanted confidence.
-Then, changing her mind, she walked slowly
-to the fire and stood with the dancing flames reflected in
-her sombre eyes. “I’m .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>glad</span> he’s going,” she murmured
-at last. “I’ve not really been myself since I met
-him again, whatever I told you about feeling free. When
-you wanted me to come with you to Ireland .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I was
-mad. I’ll go with you now, if you like .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. anywhere.
-We’ve talked so often about a fresh start: I can make it
-now. I <span class='it'>do</span> want our life to be a success. If there’s anything
-I can do .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t do more than you’re doing at present,” I
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With a sudden turn, Barbara flung her arms about my
-neck and hid her face against my chest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is there nothing more that you want?,” she asked.
-“Don’t say ‘your happiness’! I know you want that,
-darling. Don’t you want anything for yourself? Don’t
-you want me to be like other women? Don’t you want
-me to have children?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Most men want children,” I said, “but women have
-to bear them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ve always wanted children and I’ve always
-been afraid of them. I’m still afraid, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but I’m
-going to have one now, George, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for your sake.
-You’re pleased? Hold me tight, darling, and promise
-me one thing. If anything goes wrong .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, good God .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.!,” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It <span class='it'>may</span>. If anything <span class='it'>does</span> go wrong and one of us
-has to die, promise you’ll let it be me!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was dispensed from answering by Barbara’s sudden
-surrender to hysterics. When she was recovered, I put
-her to bed and sent for Gaisford; as soon as he allowed
-her up, I took her to Crawleigh Abbey and left her to
-recuperate from something which the doctor described
-enigmatically as “a nervous breakdown that didn’t come
-off”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been expecting this for years,” he told me.
-“And for years I’ve felt that she’d be a healthier, happier
-woman when she had some brats to look after. This
-business about Eric Lane must have been a shock to her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, thank Heaven, that’s all over,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At last,” Gaisford grunted. “If you’re going down
-to Crawleigh .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall stay here, except for week-ends, unless I’m
-sent for,” I interrupted. “This is going to be a busy
-time. The peace terms are to be signed within the next
-few days.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder what kind of mess they’ve been making out
-there,” Gaisford mused.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re convinced it <span class='it'>will</span> be a mess?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear George, when two human beings get together,
-they always make a big mess,” he answered with
-more than his usual misanthropy; “and I’ve known human
-beings who could make a fair-sized mess with their
-four unaided paws.”</p>
-
-<h3>6</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The peace of Versailles was celebrated in London with
-thanksgivings by day and fireworks at night.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder why,” said Bertrand sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lady Dainton wants me to bring you to her party at
-the Excelsior,” I said, though, when he repeated: “I
-wonder why”, it was not easy to find a convincing answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are <span class='it'>you</span> going?” he asked suspiciously, as though I
-were revenging myself on him for my dinners in Rutland
-Gate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” I answered. “I wonder why myself; but I’m
-a bachelor at present and I must dine somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“All right,” sighed my uncle; and, on that, we drove
-to the office and sat until seven o’clock considering the
-terms and discussing, with Spence-Atkins and any one
-else who drifted in, what the future policy of our paper
-was to be.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For several weeks the dearth of news in Fetter Lane
-and the claims of outside interests had brought our
-fragile bantling to the verge of death by starvation. Ministers,
-I thought, revealed a shrewd knowledge of mass-psychology
-in denying us all news of the conference.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Kid asks for a thing,” explained Sir Philip Saltash,
-when I loosed a grumble in his hearing; “you refuse it;
-kid screams. Go on refusing it; kid goes on screaming.
-Go on refusing still; kid thinks of something else.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By July, even the press had almost ceased to scream;
-parliament had long been silent; and the country was
-probably thinking of a prize-fight. My own record was
-representative of the vast majority: I went to my office
-six days a week, I continued the farce of exploring London
-to find what people were thinking, I supported a wall
-at the parties which my wife gave to please my uncle;
-but such intellectual energy as I possessed had been devoted
-at one moment to my private affairs in Ireland, at
-another to O’Rane’s inheritance and again at another to
-the havoc which poor Eric Lane’s return had wrought in
-my life with Barbara. At our editorial dinners I was
-chiefly concerned to see that we had enough readable
-matter of any kind to fill twenty-four pages. Like the
-child in Saltash’s parable, I was now indifferent; and,
-when at last the great secrets which we had screamed to
-know were flung to us in bulk, we were mildly bored.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I warned you at Cannes how it would be,” said Bertrand;
-then he lapsed into unhelpful silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You heard what they were saying in Paris?,” asked
-Spence-Atkins. “ ‘The seeds of a great and durable
-war’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Meanwhile,” I said, “as our first article will be on
-the treaty .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had reached no decision by the time my uncle and
-I adjourned for dinner with the Daintons; if seventy men
-out of London’s seven millions understood what kind of
-peace had been made, I do not believe that seven men of
-the seventy cared by now whether it was a good peace or
-a bad.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Indifference! Indifference!,” Bertrand sighed. “If
-you compare this night with the day of the armistice .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-We said ‘never again!’; and we meant it. Now, though
-half the world’s still in mourning, we’re racing along a
-road that will put the other half in mourning.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose you can never repeat your emotions,” I
-ventured, as I followed his gaze over the packed restaurant.
-“The war ended at the armistice; people say
-‘All right! It’s <span class='it'>still</span> ended.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And they’re not interested to see whether the present
-world is built on quicksand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No one can say <span class='it'>we</span> haven’t done our best to warn
-people,” I said wearily, as the Daintons came into the
-lounge.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No one but a fool would say that any one had paid
-the slightest attention to our warnings,” Bertrand rejoined.
-“The harm’s done now. That phase is over.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we went in to dinner, Lady Dainton told me that
-the scene was quite like 1914. From a long and intimate
-acquaintance with her no less than from the ring of pleasure
-in her voice, I realized that this was her return from
-exile: for thirty years she had lived and laboured to enter
-what she considered the “right” houses and to secure the
-“right” people in her own. The war had thrown her
-out of work; but she could begin again now. One of her
-sons had been killed, the other wounded; her daughter
-had disappointed the family by marrying O’Rane and
-shocked it by running away from him; for the Daintons,
-who had worked as hard as any one, it had not been a
-pleasant or an easy war; and now Lady Dainton was
-dismissing it as a regrettable incident, least said, soonest
-mended. She was not wanting in affection for her dead
-son nor for the son who would be among the first to die
-if another war came; but she was by now too inelastic
-to remodel her daily life, still less to attempt improvements
-on the scene of 1914 when there were no
-‘profiteers’, no ‘temporary gentlemen’, no six-shilling
-income-tax, no bloated wages for insatiable domestic
-servants.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You think it will last?,” I enquired.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I feel sure it will,” she answered. “It’s to <span class='it'>all</span> our
-interests, don’t you know?, to keep the big houses open,
-to have plenty of employment, money circulating.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Of course, if the socialists had their way .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but I don’t
-think there’s much socialism in England, George. The
-war has thrown people together so much. The agitators
-simply wouldn’t be able to make a living if they weren’t
-paid from abroad. There’s a little book I must send you
-on the Jewish peril.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A new taste for spreading scares was the only change
-that I could detect in my hostess. Whereas she had occupied
-herself before the war by sitting on endless committees,
-she reached a larger public now by sitting at home
-and inundating her friends with pamphlets on bolshevism,
-prohibition, the white-slave traffic, secular education and
-every other danger that threatened, day by day, to sap
-the security of England. Sir Roger, I fancy, had changed
-even less. Whereas he had formerly jobbed in and out
-of wild-cat industrial securities, he now dabbled in the
-more chaotic of the European exchanges. Sonia danced;
-Sam had left his firm of contractors in Hartlepool for a
-vague “agency-business” of his own in London; Tom
-Dainton’s widow had married again; and I believe this
-single family could have been reproduced, in every detail
-of history and circumstance, in almost every town and
-county throughout Great Britain and Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“George not being pessimistic, is he?,” Sir Roger enquired
-genially, as we settled into our places.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I confess I don’t like the outlook,” I said; and for
-the life of me I could not imagine how any one enjoyed
-the prospect of a peace abroad that was nothing but a
-silent war. My volatile host had been sufficiently dissatisfied
-a few days before when the labour party, realizing
-that the government was properly contemptuous of
-its servile supporters in the House of Commons, threatened
-the “direct action” of a general strike. Dainton
-knew; and I knew; and every man with a smattering of
-economic history knew that the present boom would be
-followed by a disastrous slump. “Things seem too good
-to last.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The flow of geniality ran suddenly dry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’d be the first to complain if they did,” said
-Dainton; and his tone surprised me out of a reply till I
-noticed his flushed face and watery eyes. “My friend
-George has great qualities,” he continued, with malicious
-jocularity, to the table at large, “but he’s no great shakes
-as a prophet. Before the war he told us there would be
-no war; when it came, he said it could never end one way
-or the other; now that it’s ended, he says it <span class='it'>must</span> start
-again. Cheerful customer, George.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might have reminded him that in the nineties he was
-prophesying an inevitable war with Russia, in the nineteen-hundreds
-with France. I might have asked him to
-reconcile the treaty of Versailles with the fourteen
-points. I might have enquired whether he would keep his
-promises of the December election that the kaiser should
-be hanged and the whole cost of the war covered by a
-German indemnity. In the interests of a quiet dinner, I
-said nothing; Dainton, as a political barometer, was more
-valuable to me than Dainton as a political controversialist.
-I realized for the first time that the class which he represented
-would be our most aggressive antagonists when we
-worked to secure a sane peace. Thanks to the determination
-of the French prime minister and the vacillation of
-our own, he was enabled to go back impenitently to the
-mood of his election address. No longer speaking of
-“Wilson, <span class='it'>le bienvenu</span>”, he had discovered in the president
-an insidious agent for strengthening Germany and
-weakening France. Forgetting his earlier lip-service to
-the League of Nations, he paraded comparative populations
-and, in my hearing that night, based his hopes of
-enduring peace on “bleeding Germany white and keeping
-her white”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had not, for several months, mentioned the inflammatory
-fourteen points: had I done so, Dainton might have
-retorted that President Wilson had himself departed from
-them by throwing his lot in with M. Clemenceau and Mr.
-Lloyd-George. I did not discuss the equity of the peace
-terms. I discussed very little with Dainton; but I tried,
-as I had been trying all day, to envisage the new world
-which circumstances and the efforts of the peace conference
-were labouring to bear. Russia was in the grip of
-revolution, civil war and famine; Germany, Austria, Hungary
-and Italy might follow at any moment; the map of
-Europe was dotted with strangely named, new, self-governing
-republics, alike only in their complete ignorance
-of self-government; as we were soon to see, there was no
-European police to restrain the Italian who might be inspired
-to seize Fiume or the Rumanian who was tempted
-to march on Buda Pesht; the League of Nations had been
-invested with no power; and the world outside Europe,
-from India to Egypt and from Ireland to the Philippines,
-had been taught the magic word “self-determination”
-and had realized its possibilities more vividly than those
-who coined it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In an unguarded moment I did ask Dainton whether
-he imagined that the Germans could ever pay the indemnity
-which he had so sternly demanded. He believed it
-confidently. How, I asked him; but Dainton told me that
-he was not in the mood to split hairs: if they could pay
-it, they should (and the allies would remain in occupation
-till the last penny had been handed over); if the Hun
-ruined himself in the attempt, as I seemed to think likely,
-it would be something to feel that he would never again
-menace the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And if he ruins us too?,” I asked. “Economically,
-the whole world is knitted together. If the Russian revolution
-spreads to Germany?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It won’t spread here,” Dainton answered in happy
-forgetfulness of earlier speeches against the corrupting
-influence of those Russian and German agents who controlled
-British trades unions. “Our people are too sensible.
-You’re very gloomy, George! This won’t do at
-all. Drink up that cocktail and let’s begin our dinner.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I looked round on the scene of peace, now officially
-proclaimed, I reflected that five years, all but a few days,
-had passed since I strolled on to the valley-terrace at
-Chepstow, to smoke a cigarette between dances; it seemed
-less than five weeks since Colonel Farwell walked diffidently
-out of the darkness to say that, while war had not
-yet been declared, it was prudent for all officers to be in
-touch with their depots. They had gone, those first, in
-a spirit of routine enlivened by adventure; they were
-followed by men who went in a spirit of bewilderment
-clarified by sacrifice. The bewilderment passed; and the
-sacrifice turned to resignation. Soon the resignation became
-fatalism: every one went because every one else was
-going; none expected to come back, and, of those who
-went first, few were cheated of their expectation. Now
-we were celebrating the end of a war that dwarfed the
-campaigns of Napoleon to so many intermittent brawls.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I must have spoken the name, for my uncle caught at
-it eagerly:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Seventeen-ninety-three, eighteen-fifteen,” he murmured.
-“Nineteen-fourteen, nineteen-nineteen. Napoleon
-ended the middle ages and changed the map. Have
-we begun anything, ended anything, changed anything?
-We spilt a paint-box over the atlas; but will the colours
-stick? Germany and Russia cancel out; the rest of us
-have to play for pennies instead of shillings; but have we
-ended war, have we ended the nineteenth century, have
-we done anything but lose a few pawns in the first
-moves?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’d won <span class='it'>everything</span> at the armistice!,” I exclaimed.
-“The world was ready and willing to be disarmed, ready
-and willing to accept arbitration in place of war .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What election-cry has a chance against ‘revenge’?,”
-Bertrand demanded, with a glance of contempt towards
-the end of the table, when Dainton was arguing heatedly
-with the wine-waiter. “ ‘The red account is cast’; and
-Germany must pay. You and I know that we shall be the
-first to suffer. You and I know that these dolts are laying
-the foundations of the next war. You and I know
-that we have some misty world-vision and that we must
-work for a united states of Europe and a brotherhood of
-man. People won’t listen to us .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. yet. I shall be dead
-before you’ve cleared the first unbelievers out of the temple.
-<span class='it'>Si monumentum requiris</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. George, George,
-this is a blacker day in the world’s history than the
-fourth of August.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have forgotten almost everything about that dinner
-except the sense of depression that grew deeper with
-every advance to gaiety on the part of my neighbours.
-We were spared speeches; but at the end our host called
-us to our feet for some toast which I did not hear. As
-I sat down, a kite’s-tail of coloured paper floated to us
-from the next table. A giant bunch of air-balloons was
-divided among eager hands. Crackers exploded; and a
-blare of tin trumpets punctuated the cheeping of wooden
-whistles. Perhaps I had spent too many hours that day
-in discussion that led nowhere: I suddenly felt that I was
-not in the mood for such artless merry-making.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Si monumentum requiris</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Bertrand repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the table from which that tail of coloured paper had
-been thrown, I observed my old ally, Sir Philip Saltash,
-entertaining a party of friends. Dainton, in acknowledging
-a bow, informed us that Saltash had “done as much
-as any one to win the war”; and, in examining Saltash’s
-guests, I felt that the same tribute could be paid to each.
-Wilmot Dean, representing a government of new men
-and new methods, was resting a flushed face on the bare
-shoulder of a beautiful and, I should imagine, wholly
-brainless mannequin. Lord Lingfield, whose inclusion in
-the cabinet shewed that ministers were not indifferent to
-rank and lineage, was deep in conversation with a Balkan
-millionaire who had been naturalized in time to become
-private secretary to the needy holder of a sinecure. And
-any one with attention to spare had it unpityingly claimed
-by Mr. ‘Blob’ Wister, who had won the war by purchasing
-papers for the government.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I did not know the rest. I did not greatly want to
-know them. If I had been asked who won the war, I
-should have named David O’Rane rather than Wilmot
-Dean, Lord Loring rather than Lord Lingfield. Saltash’s
-guests may have given body and soul to victory; but their
-material position was founded on the war. After fine
-winnowing, we had arrived—in these ‘new men’—at
-the governing class of the immediate future: borrowing
-the name from ‘Blob’ Wister, they called themselves
-“realists”, and the coalitions of 1915 and 1916 had certainly
-intrigued the “sentimentalist” in politics to his
-extinction. Peace was too welcome for me to complain
-if it had been ushered in by ministers with more ambition
-than scruple. An obsolescent administration may have
-needed business brains to fit it for war; a democratic
-country cannot ignore its press-man and publicity-agent;
-and the rich hangers-on of a government only prove that
-bricks cannot be made without straw. Of the men who
-had won the war I only felt what Bertrand expressed
-bluntly:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They look as if they’d made a damned good thing
-out of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Seventeen-ninety-three, eighteen-fifteen,” I replied.
-“Nineteen-fourteen to nineteen-nineteen. We have
-changed our rulers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s about all we <span class='it'>have</span> changed,” Bertrand rejoined.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we stood up as a waiter begged leave to push our
-table away from the dancing-floor. Sir Roger, unexpectedly
-on his feet, exhibited symptoms of impending
-oratory, which was checked, at the instigation of Wilmot
-Dean, by a well-directed crust of bread from the hand of
-the mannequin. The band, for the first time in several
-years, played the national anthems of all the allies. Our
-host ordered more champagne and then called for his bill.
-Sonia led off the dancing with Lord Lingfield; and I
-invented an excuse to go home to bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The streets round the hotel were too crowded for
-driving. I told my chauffeur to get home as best he could
-and walked with Bertrand into the quiet backwaters north
-of Piccadilly. At the door of Loring House we met my
-cousin Violet, who insisted on our going the rest of the
-way in her car.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve missed all the celebrations,” she told us. “I’ve
-been unveiling the memorial to Jim at Chepstow.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve not missed very much,” I answered. “Are
-you satisfied with the memorial?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. It’s only a medallion in the chapel; and you
-can only see it from the corner where I sit. I have .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-rather a horror of the war-memorials that are being put
-up everywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re the easiest means of forgetting the dead with
-a good conscience,” Bertrand suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But not the only means,” I said, as a dishevelled
-vagrant steadied himself against the bonnet of the car
-and invited us to a confession of political faith.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Its form consisted of question and answer: “<span class='it'>What’s
-the matter with Lloyd-George? ’E’s orl right! And
-what’s the matter with Winston? ’E’s orl right. What’s
-the matter with Beatty?</span>” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That fellow is surprisingly like our friend Dainton,”
-said my uncle.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h3>PART TWO</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap06'>CHAPTER ONE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>THE NAKEDNESS OF THE LAND</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“Nothing except a battle lost can be half so</p>
-<p class='line0'>melancholy as a battle won.”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Duke of Wellington</span>: <span class='it'>Despatches</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the day after the peace-treaty had been signed, my
-uncle sent me to make a political survey of England.
-If it brought no benefit to England or to our paper, it
-provided me with a pleasant holiday and a welcome
-break.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Looking back on my two years’ labours in Fetter Lane,
-I feel that the first six months were given to creating an
-atmosphere. As Bertrand proclaimed at our inaugural
-dinner, no lasting peace could be established on a sense
-of grievance; and, until the terms of peace were published,
-we tried to deflect public attention from crude
-thoughts of triumph and cruder hankerings after revenge
-to a frank desire for mutual forgiveness and good-will.
-For twelve months after the treaty was placed in our
-hands, we laboured to demonstrate that it was unworkable.
-And in the six months during which the peace
-coalition was tottering to the fall I received my answer
-to the old question whether those who could neither keep
-peace nor make war were competent to make peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It won’t do,” Bertrand declared summarily, when we
-met to discuss our public attitude to the treaty of Versailles.
-“ ‘Revision’ must be our battle-cry. Revision
-of the treaty.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I fancy I was expressing what Spence-Atkins and Triskett
-and all of us had long felt, when I said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank God we have a battle-cry at last.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It will not be popular,” predicted my uncle, with his
-usual love for being in a minority. “The fools who
-shouted that we were ‘letting the Hun off’ will shout
-more than ever that we’re making the treaty ‘a scrap
-of paper’.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And yet, if we try to enforce it, all
-central Europe will go the way of Russia.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid it will be another unpopular cry,” added
-Jefferson Wright, “but it’s time we drew attention to the
-economic position at home. We’re pouring out money
-as though the war were still going on.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Our battle-cry, then,” said Bertrand, “must be ‘Produce
-more and consume less’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We shall be told we’re trying to enslave labour. And
-there’ll be no end to unemployment when the ‘consuming
-less’ begins.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re here to tell people the truth, even if it’s an
-unpleasant truth,” Bertrand rejoined with stern virtue;
-and our shorthand-writer looked up encouragingly to see
-if this also was to be a battle-cry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, as Wright and Spence-Atkins had been given
-their orders, he packed me out of the office to collect
-material for six articles on <span class='it'>England in Reconstruction</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The great pulse of the people,” he ordained as my
-objective. “London’s a hot-house: abnormal.”</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My last duty, before taking the road, was to attend
-little Ivy Maitland’s wedding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She had wasted no time, I thought, in consoling herself
-for the loss of Eric Lane; but the quick decisions and
-quicker changes of this period were a conspicuous part of
-the “abnormality” which my uncle found devastating
-London in the first years of peace. We attended the ceremony,
-on O’Rane’s entreaty, to support Ivy, who was out
-of favour with most of her friends; and we went on to
-the reception in the hope of comforting Mr. Justice Maitland,
-who was deriving a morose satisfaction from
-prophesying the inevitable misery which his daughter was
-laying up for herself. I seem to possess an irresistible
-fascination for elderly bores; and the first chapter in my
-survey of England might have been headed: <span class='it'>Maitland
-on the Decay of Faith and Morals</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It would break your heart,” he told me, “if you
-listened to some of the stories I have to hear in the
-Divorce Court. If young people thought less of themselves
-and more of their elders .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The churches have
-lost their grip. Young people don’t take us into their
-confidence.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did they ever,” I asked, “where marriage was concerned?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The judge pursued his denunciation without a check:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Headstrong children like Ivy rush into it quite cynically.
-Their deepest affections are not engaged, so they
-have little to fear from failure; as for the scandal, none
-of their friends think the worse of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a reaction from the cramping discipline of the
-war,” I answered. “The people who find their way into
-the Divorce Court are taking their revenge, in private
-lawlessness, for long submission to a machine that had
-neither body to be kicked nor soul to be damned.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If my explanation was heard, it was not answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One woman, my dear Oakleigh,” the judge recalled
-sombrely and unseasonably as his daughter drove away
-for her honeymoon, “actually asked me—in court—what
-was to be done with a husband who insulted her in
-public: it was not, she explained, as if they had not a
-home where he could do that. It’s terrible!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I agreed; but, as I could suggest no remedy, I took my
-leave and motored Barbara to Chepstow for a week before
-we set our hand on the great pulse of the people in
-Scotland. Most of the houses where we stayed had been
-closed for five years or turned into hospitals; and, as
-they opened their doors, I felt that the interrupted play
-of 1914 was being resumed on a stage from which all
-the old actors had departed. The new avenue at Loring
-Castle seemed no taller; if the dogs were older, they were
-for the most part the same dogs; but the present marquess
-was a four-year-old boy whose father was reported
-missing some eight-and-forty hours before he himself
-came into the world. The terrible emptiness of those days
-returned to me when I saw Violet walking by herself
-along the valley-terrace, where I had walked with her husband
-on the last night of peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wondered how much of Jim Loring’s world would
-survive into this child’s manhood. The servant who unpacked
-for me confided that he was marking time till he
-heard of an opening in the colonies. The house-carpenter,
-who had married one of the maids, told me that
-he was setting up in business with her savings from a
-munition-works. The stud-groom engaged me unexpectedly
-in a discussion of the Pyramids, which he had
-visited since last I stayed at Chepstow. At first I thought
-that in his blood, too, unrest was stirring; but I discovered
-later that the war had only changed his outlook by
-convincing him of the literal truth of the Old Testament.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Moses .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and them Pharaohs,” he murmured to
-himself, looking dreamily towards the junction of Wye
-and Severn as though it were the Red Sea waiting to
-pile up its waters and let the children of Israel through.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He at least had no desire to roam. Grandfather, father
-and son, the family had lived and died in sight of the
-Castle stables; and he would have repudiated his king
-before he defaulted in his allegiance to the Lorings. In
-Gallipoli, I gathered, there were frothy, worthless fellows—the
-scum of midland factories and the dregs of South
-Welsh pits—who were ready enough to criticize their
-betters. Firebrands and hot-heads, they maintained that
-their betters had muddled them into the war and that, if
-the politicians and the generals had known their job as
-well as the hewers and fitters, the flower of an army
-would not have been sent to its death in this way. Their
-“betters”, according to these critics, had been found out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I suggested that the French, in spite of their scientific
-training, and the Americans, for all their democratic upbringing
-had also made blunders; so, I added, had the
-Germans; but I was preaching to the converted. This
-criticism was the yapping of town-bred curs; and, if anything
-exceeded my friend’s devotion to his feudal head,
-it was his scorn and hatred for the thieving upstarts of
-city streets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you don’t think anything will come of all this
-talk?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not while their lazy bellies are full, sir,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How long that would be was one of the problems that
-Bertrand had sent me to solve.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So long as the price of wheat stops where it is,” one
-of Violet’s tenant-farmers told me, “I can make a living.
-Of course, if her ladyship raises my rent .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He
-complained of the wages that had to be paid nowadays
-to old men and boys for a third of the work that was
-done before the war. “I can’t reduce them,” he added.
-“Why, d’you know, sir, what a pair of good boots costs
-you in Chepstow to-day?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have forgotten the figure; but, when I had occasion
-to make a few purchases, the shop-keepers apologized for
-their charges. The cost of labour and materials had gone
-up; but you could not reduce them when living was so
-expensive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A loaf of bread nowadays .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” began the bootmaker
-who was oppressing the tenant-farmer’s labourer,
-who was keeping up the price of bread.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then he muttered something about “middlemen” and
-“profiteers”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the other end of the scale, Violet Loring deferred
-making any improvements on the Chepstow estate until
-her tenants paid a rent commensurate with the high cost
-of labour and material. She was a rich woman, by the
-standard of gross income; but she had three houses in
-England, a palace in Scotland and a derelict barrack in
-Ireland. The greater part of her income was derived
-from coal; and the latest strike-cloud was being illuminated
-terrifyingly with lightning-forks that spelt ‘nationalization’.
-In one paper I read that some Angevin king,
-with more generosity than geography, had granted to Sir
-Humfrey de Loringe certain lands that were his by right
-of seizure alone; the paper—and I with it—knew of
-no service by Sir Humfrey to the community at large
-that justified this grant in perpetuity; and, if right of
-seizure was the basis of the Loring estates in one century,
-right of seizure—it was suggested—might be the
-means of expropriating the Lorings in another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think there’ll be any confiscation in my time,”
-said Violet, “but I have to think of Sandy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And her surplus income was therefore being invested
-in various securities of various foreign countries, in the
-hope that all would not default at the same moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I moved to houses less well endowed than my
-cousin’s, I found the uneasiness more marked. The
-Knightriders, taking early advantage of the boom in real
-estate, had sold their house in Raglan to a rich colliery-proprietor;
-John Carstairs, when we went to stay with
-him at Herrig, said that, after this experimental year, he
-would have to let the shooting; and our visit to Philip
-Hornbeck in Yorkshire had to be cancelled because his
-wife had suggested a general reduction of wages and his
-servants had left her in a body without notice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Insecurity is the first, universal quality of the times</span>,”
-I wrote to my uncle.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the beginning of the autumn, a railway-strike assailed
-the country with partial paralysis.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>It may help</span>,” wrote Bertrand from the security of
-London, “<span class='it'>to bring people to their senses. They think
-they’re rich because the printing-presses keep ’em well supplied
-with depreciated notes. As usual, Spence-Atkins
-prophesies a tremendous slump; and that will be just as
-unreal as the boom. If people would think in terms of
-commodities and services instead of chattering about
-money!</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>But this is not the worst of the trouble. The triple
-alliance is a political engine. Direct action is a political
-method; the reply of organized labour to a government
-that represents no one in particular and organized labour
-least of all. This is the first protest against the 1918 election
-and I’ve been torn in pieces by the tory press for asking
-what else any sane man could have expected, when
-the present House never tries to control ministers.</span> ‘Vous
-l’avez voulu, Georges Dandin.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara and I turned south on the first day of the
-strike; and, by the time we reached Crawleigh Abbey, it
-was over. In the tone of my father-in-law, however, I
-detected a new rancour such as I had not met since the
-almost daily strikes and lock-outs before the war. Neave
-had been warned for duty; and, as he changed out of uniform,
-I fancied that father and son were like a pair of
-reluctant game-cocks, as difficult to drag out of a fight as
-to urge in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I regret nothing,” said Crawleigh on the first night,
-“that shews labour it can’t hold the country to ransom.
-If I’d been the prime minister, though, I’d have recalled
-every man jack of them to the colours .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And if they refused to come?,” I ventured to interrupt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“After being ordered to mobilize?,” asked Neave with
-the aloof patience of a Guards officer in teaching a civilian
-his A.B.C.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” I answered. “In 1914 the regular officer
-threatened to resign if he were ordered to put down rebellion
-in Ulster. That’s never been quoted, but you may
-be sure it’s not been forgotten. And if you ever try to
-use troops against an industrial strike .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should use troops to protect life and property,”
-Crawleigh interposed. “A very few days without trains,
-and the babies in every city would die for want of milk.
-One hopes that these drastic steps will never be necessary.
-One hopes the lesson’s been taken to heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hope so too,” I said; but I knew Crawleigh to be
-only one of many who regretted that the strike had not
-been fought to a finish.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I began my articles, I noticed sadly that neither he
-nor Neave, neither the capitalist press which called our
-paper “bolshevistic” nor the labour sheets which damned
-us with faint, patronizing praise suggested that strikes
-and lock-outs ought to be as impossible in a civilized state
-as a wheat-corner or that, whoever was to blame and whoever
-was punished, the noncombatant majority suffered
-most.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Human nature being what it is .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” began Sir
-Roger Dainton, with a fine affectation of political wisdom,
-when I put this view before him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had driven Barbara to luncheon at Crowley Court;
-and throughout the meal our host droned of high taxation
-without considering the capital loss of a strike.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Every one’s the poorer for a struggle that has
-changed nothing and proved nothing,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In time, perhaps, the agitators will see that,” answered
-Lady Dainton, who had been expatiating, from
-the other end of the table, on class-hatred and proving in
-alternate sentences that the man Thomas was responsible
-for all this unrest and that Mr. Thomas really seemed the
-only person who would stand up to these bolshevists.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was at this time that the secret funds on which
-labour disturbances throve were discovered—by her—to
-come from Irish organizations in America and Jewish
-societies in Russia; perhaps her brain was tired, but in
-the course of one brief conversation the Indian home-ruler,
-the modernist in religion, the eccentric in music
-and the individualist in dress were all found to be tainted
-with “bolshevism”. Their predecessors, I recalled, had
-all been anarchists.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I must send you a little book on <span class='it'>The Soviet Peril</span>,”
-promised Lady Dainton, who at other times and in her
-untiring search for whipping-boys had sent me pamphlets
-on <span class='it'>A Short Way with Profiteers</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I refrained from commenting on her husband’s incautious
-boast that he had increased his capital twenty <span class='it'>per
-cent.</span> since 1914.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are these agitators actually to be found in England?,”
-I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Dainton assured me that they were, though
-neither she nor any one she knew had actually met one.
-Not content with fomenting revolution on earth, they
-were unseating religion from on high. Communist
-schools were springing up to poison youthful minds with
-secularist literature. So far as I could make out, she
-accounted it for enlightenment when her own friends
-paraded their scepticism; but, if there had been no god,
-she would have invented one for the poorer classes. It
-was no defence that the secular propagandist might be a
-sincere secularist; so long as he was paid, he stood condemned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By the same test,” I asked, “would you call the clergy
-of the Established Church or the officers of the Employers’
-Defence League ‘paid agitators’?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Certainly not! Good gracious, why .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?” she
-asked in a voice that faded into the silence of stupefaction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The pulse of the Dainton family was the last that I
-felt before returning to London and presenting Bertrand
-with my report on the first phase of reconstruction.
-Looking over this review later, I noticed a <span class='it'>diminuendo</span>
-in the rather robust optimism with which I began. England
-was still enjoying superficial plenty; and yet I heard
-a mutter of misgiving. Some of the factories were over-producing;
-finished articles, of material bought at war prices,
-had to be sold at post-war prices; credit became
-harder to obtain from the banks; and, as the first year
-of peace hastened to its close, other people than the Daintons
-woke to the unpleasant discovery that income-tax
-would have to be paid as though the war were still being
-waged and that they had for a year, in disregard of Bertrand’s
-battle-cries, been producing less and consuming
-more than they could afford.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a time to draw in horns. Barbara and I had
-ordered a new car; and in a spirit of prudence we decided
-to cancel the order. Sam Dainton—I hope, without
-his mother’s knowledge—gave me £300 for my place
-in the waiting-list and made another £300 within two
-days by selling it to one of the Jews against whom I was
-so indefatigably warned. After this one experience of
-practical finance and of an “agency-business” as conducted
-by Sam, I went back to the unassailable heights
-of theory; and for the next six months, until other cares
-claimed my attention, I watched the unreal boom of 1919
-changing to the unreal slump of 1920.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The one was no better justified than the other. While
-the country clamoured for houses, the building trade
-clamoured for work; domestic servants were not to be
-procured, and the figures of unemployment rose steeply.
-Every other country, I read, was working overtime; and
-our own exports threatened to dry up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ever heard of a man called Keynes, George?,” my
-uncle asked on my return, tossing me <span class='it'>The Economic Consequences
-of the Peace</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. I sent my copy to your friend Dainton. It was
-the least I could do after the literature that his good lady
-has been pouring in on me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What Keynes preaches from inside knowledge is
-what I’ve been preaching to you since the armistice.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s what our worthy Wright and every other economist
-would have preached, if he’d had the figures before
-him,” I answered. “But have you seen Keynes’ reception
-in the press? This country’s still drunk from armistice
-night. <span class='it'>People won’t listen.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I told Bertrand of the psychological discovery
-that impressed me most in the whole course of my
-tour. On the minds of men who had taken part in the
-war the printed word had ceased to exert its old spell.
-In the first recruiting of 1914 the boys in my old Wiltshire
-constituency were forbidden to pluck the blackberries
-by the roadside, because a mysterious red car had
-been abroad, before daylight, sprinkling the hedges with
-what was believed to be a strong solution of typhoid
-germs. The story was printed in the papers and believed
-because it was in print. Five years later the same story—with
-a Russian or a Sinn Feiner in charge of the car—might
-have been believed until it was published; then
-it would have been relegated to the teeming limbo of
-“newspaper lies”. The captain of the Loring yacht, who
-had served for most of the war on an auxiliary cruiser,
-told me of his amazement on reading that the <span class='it'>Pelion</span>,
-which was at that time his home, had been sunk by a
-mine in the North Sea; he was less surprised, though
-more aggrieved, to read a year later that his ship, which
-had lately been sunk by a torpedo in the Irish Channel,
-was still convoying troopers in the Mediterranean. He
-accepted my explanation that the Admiralty was of malice
-aforethought misleading the newspaper-readers of England
-in the hope of misleading the German intelligence
-department; but his faith was shattered beyond repair.
-If the press lied to him on matters which he could check
-from his own experience, how much more easily it would
-lie about defeats and casualties, wages and prices!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And in future,” I told Bertrand, “we have to reckon
-with this incredulity in addition to all the apathy that’s
-been breaking our hearts.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>And</span> the misrepresentation,” he sighed with a sensitiveness
-surprising in so scarred a fighter to the charge
-of the Woburn press that he was selling the French for
-thirty pieces of German silver.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There are times,” I said, “when I feel that only the
-logic of events will convince people. Aren’t we wasting
-our energy, Bertrand? I’ve given the experiment more
-than six months’ trial; now I want to get away. Barbara’s
-going to have a baby.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could have piled argument on argument if my uncle
-had resisted me; but he sat without speaking, his hands
-crossing and uncrossing themselves tremulously over the
-ivory knob of his stick and his eyes set gloomily on the
-fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The logic of events?,” he repeated at length.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t believe we shall do any good here till we have
-a revolution,” I said, with bitter memories of my battle-piece
-in its three panels. “A revolution; or another war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Our intention was to avert it,” he reminded me.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Because Bertrand made no effort to detain me, I stayed
-in London—sullenly protesting that we only bored the
-converted and exasperated the inconvertible—till the end
-of the year. Looking back, I suppose the autumn brought
-with it the first signs of returning reason, though Sir
-Roger Dainton—more in sorrow than anger—burnt
-the <span class='it'>Economic Consequences</span> and left me—with anger
-and sorrow nicely balanced—to buy myself another copy.
-It was one thing, however, to concede that the peace terms
-were unworkable; it was something quite different
-to precipitate a general election in the hope of mending
-them. The coalition survived the Paisley election, when
-Mr. Asquith was drawn to Westminster through an avenue
-of cheering crowds; it survived the awkward questions
-which the average voter was beginning to frame.
-And, so long as it steered clear of another war, it could
-disregard the academic questions of sentimental leader-writers
-who asked if any one was a penny the better for
-war and victory.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve had a year to get your new heaven and earth
-into working order,” said Philip Hornbeck, when I visited
-him at the Admiralty on the anniversary of the armistice.
-“I’ve been tied here so much that I’ve entirely lost
-track of the millennium. It’s arrived, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A number of people haven’t heard of it yet,” I answered,
-with my thoughts on the filibustering expeditions
-of the last three months. D’Annunzio had revived memories
-of Garibaldi by seizing Fiume and defying the great
-powers to turn him out; admirals and generals of the old
-<span class='it'>régime</span> in Russia were being supplied by amateur strategists
-in England with arms to crush a revolutionary government
-in a country that had never been successfully invaded
-since the coming of the Tartars. “If the allies had
-an agreed policy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t have an agreed policy when you’re not on
-speaking-terms with a single one of your neighbours,”
-Hornbeck retorted. “I invited your friend Lucien de
-Grammont .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He won’t come if he knows I’m here,” I interrupted.
-“And I don’t know that I’m very keen to meet French
-people at present.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was twelve months, to a minute, since Violet Loring
-pointed out to her boy the men who had come from
-Rhodesia and Japan, Portugal and Vancouver to die in
-a common cause.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I offered van Oss as a bait,” said Hornbeck with a
-grin. “If you three high-minded idealists can’t make a
-millennium, you mustn’t get impatient with the rank-and-file.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a matter for congratulation that a party so
-rashly collected could meet and scatter without a scene
-of violence. Clifford expected, quite obviously, to be
-castigated because America would not sign the covenant
-of the League; Lucien, no less obviously, looked only for
-a chance of castigating me because I criticized the treaty
-in every issue of <span class='it'>Peace</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t quite know what we’re celebrating,” he muttered
-provocatively, with a morose eye on the gathering
-crowds in Whitehall. “The loss of the war?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We haven’t lost it yet,” I said, “but some of us are
-doing our best. I wish you’d explain to me, Lucien, how
-you expect to make Germany pay for the war when you’re
-standing with your foot on her throat.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am sorry if we are keeping you from trading with
-her,” he answered with icy politeness, “but security is
-as necessary to France as trade is to England. You
-made <span class='it'>yourselves</span> secure when you took the German fleet.
-Now, when France is left alone .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He glanced malevolently at Clifford van Oss and turned
-again to the window.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, hell, Wilson had no power to commit us!” Clifford
-protested. “If you’d any of you gotten down to the
-constitution of the United States .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I fancy America signed the treaty?,” said Lucian
-coldly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’d best quit talking about bad faith,” Clifford
-recommended, without, however, following his own advice.
-“Clemenceau and Lloyd-George let up on Wilson
-over the fourteen points; they let up on the Germans
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turned to Hornbeck, whose square face was alight
-with malicious enjoyment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What are you supposed to be doing nowadays?,” I
-asked, as we strolled up and down the room where we
-had worked so long together.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m adviser to the secretariat,” he answered. “What
-does that mean? Well, you may say, if you like, that I’m
-preparing for the next war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a pity there’s no one to bang all our heads together,”
-I murmured, as a new wrangle broke out between
-Clifford and Lucien. “The German menace has
-gone, but there’s a French menace coming. Nine or ten
-months ago I told Lucien in Paris that his people were
-at the top of their prestige; now they’re the most hated,
-feared and despised people in Europe. A mad war, a
-mad peace .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And nothing to prevent another war as mad,” Hornbeck
-began. Then we stood without speaking, in a silence
-that spread over London, freezing sound and movement.
-The customary rumble of traffic receded to a distance and
-faded away; the blare of horns, the ringing of bells, the
-click of typewriters, all the shouting, speaking and whispering
-that made up the unceasing drone of a great city
-now, for two minutes, ceased. Then, very far away,
-the rumble of traffic began again. I felt as if I were recovering
-consciousness after an anæsthetic. Nearer at
-hand I heard voices, then the scuffle of feet; a typewriter
-clicked interrogatively, as though wondering if the two
-minutes were over; then a telephone-bell rang; and the
-city heaved and roared its way back to life. “We’re no
-better off,” Hornbeck resumed. “Only you sentimentalists
-ever thought we should be.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had been indescribably awed by that sudden silence
-and by the spectacle of those many thousands all stricken
-motionless at the same time. The street was a solid
-block of devout, bare-headed humanity; from the Victoria
-Tower to the National Gallery a single mood of
-gratitude and reverence bowed those myriad heads. Far
-from Westminster, far from London, the same silence
-had fallen, the same devotion had risen from a myriad
-other hearts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Spiritually?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not in the very least! A great many people were
-very brave in an emergency; a great many people always
-are very brave in an emergency. A great many people
-have suffered .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. shall I say, on behalf of civilization?
-A great many people always suffer on behalf of civilization,
-which is a wasteful and cruel business, George, only
-one degree less wasteful and cruel than barbarism. This
-wasn’t the first war in history; people like you have
-always looked for a spiritual regeneration; you’ve never
-found it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should be content,” I said, “if one man in ten out
-of all that crowd would join me in making future wars
-impossible.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should be content if one man in all the world would
-tell me how that’s to be done.”</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I reached Fetter Lane in a chastened mood; and for
-the rest of the morning we talked of the year that had
-passed since Armistice Day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was to be no United States of Europe, still less a
-United States of the World. The peace-treaty, to the
-view of us all, indicated the swiftest and surest way to
-another war; and there was no influence, outside parliament
-or within, to modify it. Trade depression was attracting
-attention to unemployment and taxation; but, of
-a hundred men who said “We must cut down expenditure,”
-ninety-nine added “You can’t touch pensions, of
-course; or the army and navy; or the air force.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-And, after nine months, the one political organ that
-looked beyond the cheap scores and cheaper promises of
-the 1918 election was read by a growing literary public
-for the sake of its musical notes and dramatic criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are we addressing the right people?,” asked Jefferson
-Wright.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Any person who’ll listen is the right person for me,”
-said Bertrand sententiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why not speak to labour?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because it’s no more opposed to war than any other
-class,” grunted Bertrand. “If it were, there’d have been
-no war in ’14. When your German workman mobilized,
-the British workman had to mobilize against him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The labour party kept us out of a war with Russia,”
-Wright interposed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Would the labour party keep us out of a war with
-France if the French turned nasty? If you’ve the guts
-of a louse, it’s human nature to resist a threat,” said Bertrand
-with more rhetorical force than biological accuracy.
-“How can we stop people putting pistols to other people’s
-heads?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The discussion, like so many in these inconclusive
-months, ended with the evaporating discovery that we
-were all late for a meal. I drove to the O’Ranes’ house
-in Westminster with the now familiar feeling that we
-should waste our strength and temper until some force
-more potent than our mild and scholarly articles came
-to rouse the country out of its drunken sleep. My uncle
-reminded me that we had been through one period of
-incredulous apathy for half-a-dozen years before 1914.
-Then the only people to think a war possible were the
-militarists who, with the best intentions, precipitated it
-with their preparations and their talk of “inevitability”;
-the Disarmament League alone tried to make it impossible,
-as duelling was made impossible, by taking away the
-privilege and the means of private vengeance. What we
-had done then we must do now.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But in 1919,” I said, as we parted, “I am older and
-more easily discouraged than I was in 1909.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara had come up from Crawleigh Abbey to make
-the acquaintance of Sonia’s new baby; and, as I strolled
-up and down the long library with O’Rane, I asked him
-how he enjoyed being the richest commoner in England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t say I’ve noticed any difference,” he laughed,
-“except in the number of people who think they’ve a right
-to be supported by some one else.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And the millennium?,” I pursued in a fair imitation
-of Hornbeck. “The civic conscience? Man’s natural
-right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What would you do in my place?,” he asked. “I’m
-almost certain to follow your advice.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he spoke without irony, we beguiled the first part
-of luncheon with the sort of conversation that is affected
-by somnolent house-parties on wet afternoons. As at
-Cannes, each of us spent his money in dizzy flights of
-imagination; but now he brought us to earth with the
-criticism that we were not spending “for the good of
-humanity”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Which was Stornaway’s condition,” he reminded me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, in O’Rane’s hands, it was a condition that we
-could not fulfil. When Barbara spoke of the incurable
-cripples left by the war, he enquired why humanity should
-be relieved of its obligations. When I talked, as so often
-before I had talked with Deryk Lancing, of universities
-and institutions for research, of libraries and museums,
-of travelling fellowships and exploration funds, of subsidized
-opera and national newspapers, of model cities and
-a country made perfect, he applauded my enthusiasm and
-asked what I was doing to give it effect.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do my modest share,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And, if I take that responsibility off your shoulders,
-you’ll only have more money to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>waste</span> on yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I cannot recall that the tone or choice of language was
-more vigorous than I had long been accustomed to hearing
-from O’Rane. Certainly I should have taken up the
-challenge without concern, if Sonia had not rushed superfluously
-to my assistance. Her indignation, however, in
-demanding why personal expenditure should be called
-waste, warned me against taking sides in a family
-quarrel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“David’s <span class='it'>impossible</span> about money!,” she cried. “So
-long as I have <span class='it'>one</span> crust of bread, <span class='it'>one</span> dress that would
-disgrace a scarecrow .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If this is how the poor live, let’s join them!,” interposed
-Barbara pacifically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In spite of herself, Sonia laughed as she saw us admiring
-her frock. The house was unpretentious, but it
-was enviably comfortable. I never wish to be given
-better food or wine. And, on a lower plane of morality,
-whatever she lacked from her husband was made up
-by the munificence of her friends.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s so difficult, when every one thinks you’re
-rich .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” she began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But it isn’t our money,” O’Rane objected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Another explosion was threatening; and, at a sign from
-Barbara, I ranged myself beside Sonia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re entitled to pay yourself a salary,” I told him.
-“As chairman and managing-director of a trust-company
-with a capital of twenty-five millions, I think five thousand
-a year .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m pretty sure Sonia will do less harm with it than
-I shall,” he sighed. “Is that <span class='it'>all</span> the advice you can give
-me, George?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well,” I reminded him, “I told you at Cannes not
-to touch the money with a pole.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And, as I told you ten minutes ago, I should almost
-certainly follow your advice if you repeated it. Sonia
-won’t let me talk about that, though .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Tell me your
-plans for the winter. The south of France again?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the time we left, the last echo of discord was
-hushed. On our way home, however, Barbara warned
-me that new trouble would break out if some one did
-not create a diversion. I hardly know what difference
-Sonia and her friends expected O’Rane’s inheritance to
-make; but she was bitterly and undisguisedly disappointed
-by what she regarded as a life of wasted opportunities.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Get your mother to invite them out to Cannes,” Barbara
-suggested; and I sent an invitation that night on
-my own responsibility.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was refused, rather tartly, on the ground that David,
-as we might have known, would not leave his work and
-that Sonia, as we might have guessed, would not come,
-“trailing clouds of infants”, without him. I comforted
-myself with the reflection that, whatever her provocation,
-she would not try to repeat an effect by running
-away; and then I dismissed them both from my thoughts
-till the crisis in my own life should be passed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The word, I think, is not too strong for a moment and
-an event that were to test the union of two people who,
-on any reasoning, ought never to have married. Good
-friends though we were, Barbara had never pretended to
-be in love with me; I could judge of all that she was
-withholding when she forgot to hide her love for Eric
-Lane. Though he was five thousand miles away, she was
-still haunted by him; and I sometimes wondered whether
-anything short of his death would cure the obsession.
-Then, on the day when she told me that she was going
-to have a child, I took hope again; what I had never been
-able to achieve was to be brought about by our son. She
-had decided that it would be a boy; we had even chosen
-his name; and I had begun to love him, before he was
-quickened, for drawing us together.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Lady Crawleigh wanted Barbara in the country, I
-spent most of the early spring by myself in London; and
-at the end of April I went down for a week to be at
-hand if I were needed. It was the twenty-first of the
-month when I arrived; and, though the date is of no
-interest to any one, I am unlikely to forget it; my car
-crossed the bridge into the abbey precincts at twenty
-minutes past seven in the evening, and I am not likely to
-forget that either. I shall not forget the eerie silence in
-which the abbey was wrapped, nor the scared faces of the
-servants, nor the darkness of the rooms, nor the atmosphere
-of disaster impending. I hope I am as self-controlled
-as my neighbour, but I seemed to feel a hand of
-ice on my heart as the butler helped me out of my coat
-and murmured that he believed his lordship was in the
-garden.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Everything all right?,” I asked as carelessly as I
-could.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, sir. Lady Barbara is in her room. I believe
-her ladyship is with her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I went upstairs, Barbara was in bed. The blinds
-were down, and a closing door hinted that my mother-in-law
-was for some reason hurrying away to avoid me.
-As I crossed the room, Barbara told me to stop; and, as
-I tried to ask how she was, I was waved into silence.
-Then she covered her eyes and turned away:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve not been told? It’ll be a shock, but I wanted
-to tell you myself. I’m sorry, George .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-did my best. You mustn’t be <span class='it'>too</span> dreadfully disappointed.
-Dead .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. He was born dead. If only it could have
-been the other way round!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mercifully, as though she had been listening at the
-door, Lady Crawleigh came back to say that my father-in-law
-wished to see me. Together we drafted the announcement
-for the press; and I asked whether it would
-be prudent for me to go upstairs again. He said “yes”
-and “no” alternately, concluding on a “yes” in the frantic
-hope of getting rid of me. As I tapped on Barbara’s
-door, I heard Lady Crawleigh scuttling through another;
-and it was Barbara, undaunted and indomitable, who hid
-her own agony under a gentle concern for me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose people will want to sympathize,” she began.
-“May I have all my letters sent to you, George? Open
-them, answer them. I shall have to be here for some
-weeks, I’m afraid, but I’ll make up for deserting you
-when I come back to London. I’ll give some lovely parties
-for you. We shall be so busy we shan’t have time to
-think. I <span class='it'>want</span> to keep busy.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, on that word, her dead child, her suffering and
-her disappointment were banished from Barbara’s life.
-Three years have passed since that April evening of 1920
-when we made our compact of silence; and, with a single
-exception, we observed it with equal scruple on both sides.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap07'>CHAPTER TWO</h1></div>
-
-<h3>THAT WHICH REMAINED</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>No doubt, there’s something strikes a balance. Yes,</p>
-<p class='line0'>You loved me quite enough, it seems to-night.</p>
-<p class='line0'>This must suffice me here. What would one have?</p>
-<p class='line0'>In heaven, perhaps, new chances, one more chance—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Four great walls in the New Jerusalem,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Meted on each side by the angel’s reed,</p>
-<p class='line0'>For Leonard, Rafael, Agnolo and me</p>
-<p class='line0'>To cover—the three first without a wife</p>
-<p class='line0'>While I have mine! So—still they overcome</p>
-<p class='line0'>Because there’s still Lucrezia,—as I choose.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>Again the Cousin’s whistle! Go, my love.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Robert Browning</span>: <span class='it'>Andrea del Sarto</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before we settled in London for the summer of 1920,
-I asked Bertrand whether he was prepared to run our
-paper without me if I could persuade Barbara to dull
-the edge of her grief by coming round the world with me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll be leaving us,” answered my uncle rather
-blankly, “just at the moment when life is becoming
-normal after the war. We’ve hideous labour-troubles
-in store; unemployment .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. From all I hear, there’s
-going to be an explosion in Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And this,” I interrupted, “is what you describe as
-normal conditions after the war?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand nodded slowly over his clasped hands:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do. A peace-treaty you may regard as another
-aspect of war: the last chapter, if you like. Then you
-come to that which remains: the bill that’s still unpaid
-when you’ve counted your dead and disbanded your
-armies and dismembered your empires. All the complications
-of our spiritual convalescence are before us.
-Still .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might have spared him my importunity until I had
-approached Barbara. With the choice of six months in
-London and twelve on a steamer, she had no difficulty in
-making up her mind; and I soon found myself studying,
-in her company and from a somewhat different angle,
-“that which remained” in London after eighteen months
-of armistice and peace. If the life was a little bewildering
-and sometimes more than a little uncongenial, that—as
-Bertrand would have said—was part of the unpaid
-bill.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One swallow may not make a summer,” said my
-cousin Laurence, when his long-suffering sister banished
-him from Loring House to the admittedly inferior amenities
-of Seymour Street; “but one duchess is going to
-make a season. Eleanor Ross has decided that London
-is again to be the metropolis of England.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For that,” I said, “you must blame the prime minister.
-It’s one thing for her to keep open restaurant in
-Paris, it’s quite another to play round-the-world-in-eighty-days
-with an international conference. San Remo,
-Hythe .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a few months I might have added Boulogne, Brussels
-and Spa, so swiftly did one final settlement follow on
-another. The hangers-on, meanwhile, had abandoned the
-pursuit and returned to London. A season, of some kind,
-was opening; and poor Barbara was giving the first of
-those “wonderful parties” which were to make her forget
-our recent tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Any one who ever had any money seems to have
-spent it,” said Laurence with irrelevant regret and an
-appraising glance round the table. “I suppose <span class='it'>you</span> don’t
-know of a decent job? Something with a bit more money
-and a bit less work than the bar?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I had, I told him, I could have filled the position
-fifty times over with the men who were being thrown
-on to the labour-market as the last regiments returned
-home and the last war-departments were dismantled. I
-hesitate to say how many men like my brother-in-law
-Gervaise I helped into lucrative billets in the first six
-months of peace; I can say without hesitation that in
-1920 I looked vainly for a single position that I could
-recommend to the pathetic, unspecialized men and boys
-who sent me testimonials beginning: “<span class='it'>Public school and
-university ex-service officer</span>, 1914-1918, <span class='it'>wounded</span>.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-If others received half the appeals that came to me, the
-city was packed close with them; and the only man of
-my acquaintance who benefited by this congestion was
-the enterprising Sam Dainton, who expanded his agency-business
-into a colourable imitation of highway-robbery
-by making a corner in empty houses. The premiums
-which he imposed and the commissions which he accepted
-light-heartedly from vendor and purchaser would probably
-have landed him in the dock if he had remained
-longer in this kind of business; but vaulting ambition
-tempted him to compete with more experienced brigands
-in buying surplus stores from the government, and the
-blackmail which he levied on the homeless may have been
-balanced, with poetic justice, on the day when makeshift
-houses were erected below cost-price from the forced sale
-of his unmarketable stocks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nobody could want <span class='it'>less</span> work than you do at the
-bar,” Philip Hornbeck pointed out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I call that mocking a feller’s misfortunes,” replied
-my cousin with dignity. “I’ve a good mind not to tell
-you now.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. As we said nothing, Laurence pulled
-his chair close to mine and helped me to a glass of my
-own madeira. “These devastated areas, George: they’ll
-need the hell of a lot of building material. If you’ve
-any capital lying idle .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My trustees see to it that I haven’t,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ready money’s gone out of circulation since the millennium,”
-explained Hornbeck; and for once I almost
-agreed with him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In these months I was indeed reminded of the embarrassing
-first days of hostilities, before the Treasury began
-to issue its own notes. Houses, land, stock-in-trade were
-visible and tangible; we could have rubbed along somehow
-under a general system of barter; but no one seemed
-to be blessed with cash. The owners of big fortunes
-made in the war, so useful a year earlier in buying unmanageable
-estates, disappeared as suddenly as they had
-emerged: a few, I fancy, were frightened by talk of a
-retrospective levy on their profits, but most of them derived
-their wealth from industry; and industry at this
-time was being attacked by creeping paralysis. Sir John
-Woburn’s group of papers set up a cry for economy;
-the ‘coupon’ system of electioneering was thrown into
-its first practical discredit by the success of independent
-‘anti-waste’ candidates; and, when my political barometer
-told me that all this talk of ‘reconstruction’ was
-well enough, but that we must reconstruct the whole of
-Europe, I felt that the logic of facts had done what the
-pleadings of <span class='it'>Peace</span> would never do.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At my own table, though I had achieved an ingenious
-double revenge by placing Dainton, who feared my uncle,
-within earshot of my uncle, who despised Dainton, I did
-not feel justified in pointing political morals; and it was
-with outward cordiality that I listened to his diagnosis
-and treatment of international prostration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The <span class='it'>whole</span> of Europe,” he repeated. “No good
-tinkering. Take Germany. Take Austria. <span class='it'>Take
-Russia.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, with that, he lowered his voice conspiratorially
-and invited me to join a concession-hunting syndicate
-which the alert Sir Adolf Erckmann was forming. The
-proposal surprised me, inasmuch as a sense of personal
-unworthiness, stronger even than my impatience of Dainton’s
-politics, had frightened me away from Rutland
-Gate since Lady Dainton chose it for her second blooming.
-Whenever I failed in an excuse to dine elsewhere,
-I seemed to pick my way through the melancholy ruins
-of fallen European dynasties. Starting with refugee
-Russian princes, the Daintons extended the net of hospitality
-to catch expropriated Poles and were only waiting
-for a change in public sentiment before opening their
-doors to the crownless heads of Germany. All were
-welcomed with the ceremony which England accords to
-the runaway scions of a kingly house: Sir Roger received
-his guests in the hall with a braver display of decorations
-than etiquette warranted; Lady Dainton curtseyed till I
-felt giddy; and, if the throne of the Czars remained
-empty, that was only because Moscow was so far from
-London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had heard so much of the coming royalist counterrevolution
-that I fully expected to find Dainton smuggling
-arms into Russia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your foreign information is better than most,” he
-began darkly; and then the plans of the syndicate were
-laid before me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Listening with half of one ear, I seemed—with the
-other—to catch the thick tones of Sir Philip Saltash as
-he discoursed of the waters which he troubled and of the
-adventurous anglers who fished therein. My sleek tempter,
-I confess, appeared to me at this moment rather in
-the guise of a vulture; and, when I thought of the get-rich-quickly
-schemes that were discussed daily in my
-hearing, the heavens seemed to darken with these birds
-of prey. Sam, with his options on empty houses; Laurie,
-with his plans for holding the devastated areas to ransom;
-Dainton, with his gambling in marks and francs: all
-looked on Europe primarily as a place to loot. Yet two
-of these three had offered even their lives so few years
-before; and the third had given away his cars and sold
-his securities to fit out Red Cross ambulances!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you shaking the bloody hand of the soviet?,” I
-enquired, with shocked memories of Dainton’s attacks on
-‘bolshevism’.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The soviet? Good heavens, why .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?” he gasped
-with much the same perplexity as his wife had exhibited
-when I asked if ministers of religion should be regarded
-as paid agitators.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dainton would have nothing to do with the soviet.
-Lenin and his gang would, with the help of God, be
-brought to book by Admiral Kolchak; but, without waiting
-for that consummation, he was ready to help the
-commercial recovery of Russia by pouring in goods, machinery
-and the material of a new transport-system. As
-he could not hope to receive commodities in exchange, he
-would be content with gold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you’re recognizing the revolution?,” I asked,
-as we moved upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Recognizing .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?,” he echoed testily. “This is a
-business deal; politics don’t enter into it. And I shall be
-obliged if you’ll keep it absolutely to yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I promised readily enough for the sake of sparing him
-the embarrassment of explaining how he could accept
-confiscated Russian gold by day and monopolize the despoiled
-Russian nobility at night. I did not feel, however,
-that Europe had yet been made safe for the amateur
-financier. After their last international flutter the Daintons
-had let their house in Hampshire; and I imagined
-that they, like many others, were trying belatedly to
-economize, though Lady Dainton gave another reason
-that night for their retirement.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I honestly find no pleasure,” she told me, “in the life
-people are leading in London. Perhaps I’m old-fashioned.
-The people themselves, don’t you know? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-I’m not criticizing <span class='it'>this</span> party, of course; but the tone .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-A gigantic beanfeast.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If she had criticized the party in words, as she was
-criticizing it with her eyes, I should have been constrained
-to side with her. Old-fashioned or no, I was bred in an
-age of strict formality, when Loring House still bore its
-hatchment. When I first stayed at House of Steynes, old
-Lord Loring hunted us into smoking-suits at eleven
-o’clock and assembled us furtively in the billiard-room,
-where he plied us with “weeds”, negus and comments on
-current yearling-sales. My first London dinner-parties
-had the ceremony and pomp of a <span class='it'>levée</span>. In 1920 we had
-no time for the ceremony, no money for the pomp.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose a beanfeast is all that people can afford,”
-I said, as I contrasted this revel with the gaieties of a
-vanished generation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The opera and the ballet were trying valiantly at this
-time to make us feel that we were back in 1914; but there
-was no public for both. The Crawleighs and perhaps a
-dozen others gave their balls and receptions according to
-the old tradition; but people who wanted to dance found
-the Turf and Stage less troublesome and more amusing.
-Those who wished to see their friends could collect them
-by telephone at the end of dinner and return from the
-theatre to see their houses converted out of recognition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Twenty people can find money to entertain,” said
-Lady Dainton severely, “for one who can find time to
-be hospitable.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we drifted uncomfortably about the house, I found
-it expedient to leave at least this charge unanswered. The
-smoking-room was given up to bridge, the dining-room
-to an endless supper; musicians, whom in time I came
-to suspect our butler of keeping on a chain in one of
-the cellars, were imprisoned on a landing: and both
-drawing-rooms were cleared for dancing. “<span class='it'>Solitudinem
-faciunt: pacem appellant.</span> I’m off,” said Bertrand in bewilderment.
-“Promise you won’t invite me again!”
-And I shared his bewilderment. The success of the
-party, as of the late war, lay in unity of command. Our
-butler was <span class='it'>generalissimo</span>; and Barbara asked only that I
-would leave him alone. If the men could not find cigars,
-they appealed to Robson; when an uninvited guest strayed
-into the hall, demanding who the guy was who was giving
-this show, Robson introduced him promptly to his
-hostess; I saw him supplying powder and carrying out
-repairs to torn dresses; and, when our musicians knocked
-off work for the night, Robson obliged at the piano,
-apologizing for the slow, melodious waltzes of my undergraduate
-days and regretting that he had no temperament
-for jazz-music.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I <span class='it'>wish</span> I knew his history,” Barbara murmured plaintively.
-“I daren’t ask for fear of finding he has a wife.
-That would break my heart, because I’m determined to
-marry him if anything happens to you, George.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lady Dainton, meanwhile, was going from strength to
-strength of disapproval.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I would sooner give up society altogether,” she announced,
-“than countenance its present form. This, of
-course, is different,” she added vaguely and without conviction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mentally, I acquiesced in her condemnation. And it
-was not worth while to explain that I assisted at these
-beanfeasts because I believed they amused Barbara.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is what remains,” I told Bertrand, when he insisted
-on holding a <span class='it'>post mortem</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“These people don’t <span class='it'>amuse</span> you?,” he cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They interest me,” I answered. “Looking on, listening
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Since I had given up dancing on the outbreak of war
-and am one of the three worst bridge-players in London,
-I was thrown back on the delights of conversation; and,
-as every gathering included a contingent of Barbara’s literary
-friends, I tried to discover what inspiration they
-had won from the war. It was soon, however, made
-abundantly plain to me that the dangers of this quest
-were more apparent than the delights. I was welcomed
-at first—I hoped for my own sake—to the little circles
-of young writers, who—for want of better accommodation—camped
-on the landing and stairs outside my
-dressing-room. Soon, however, I found myself being
-used as a stick to beat my literary editor for having
-beaten one or other of my bitter-tongued guests. When
-I refused to help, they took the beating into their own
-hands. The “top-hat school of fiction” was flayed by
-the “sham-corduoroy school”, the “high-brows” by the
-“pin-heads”, the “best sellers” by every one. Shocking
-tales of self-advertising were exchanged for dire
-revelations of log-rolling; and critics who had been unanimously
-condemned a moment before were unanimously
-reprieved on condition of their taking service against yet
-another school that did not happen to be represented in
-our symposium.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Aren’t you perhaps exaggerating the importance of
-contemporary opinion?,” I asked as soon as I could make
-myself heard. “If the men who praised and blamed
-twenty, forty, sixty years ago could read their notices
-now, they’d find they hadn’t spotted one winner in five
-hundred. If you’re suffering at the hands of irresponsible
-reviewers, you’re suffering in the company of Meredith
-and Hardy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I left the rising generation of writers, who
-had slain more reputations in half an hour than my staff
-could hope to scotch in six months. Truth to tell, I felt
-rather unworthy of their too discriminating society.
-Hampstead was so suspicious of Chelsea; Chelsea was
-so contemptuous of Bloomsbury; and all three were so
-scornful of Mayfair that I thanked Heaven my house
-was two hundred yards north of Oxford Street. The
-few names that these exotics praised were always unknown
-to me; and I was ashamed to admire publicly the
-work which they damned so comprehensively. If the
-war was to produce a new Elizabethan splendour of
-imagination, I saw no sign of it at present: perhaps we
-should have to wait a generation till the stench of blood
-and the shriek of shells had been forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are your very modern friends doing any good?,” I
-demanded of Barbara, when our party had dispersed.
-“If you were analysing the effect of the war on
-art .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“D’you get any reaction from their work?,” she asked.
-“In art there’s no such thing as absolute good.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t understand it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I’m thrilled by it!,” she cried in unaffected rapture.
-“All the violence and horror and madness of the
-war are reflected in the art of to-day. It’s not pretty,
-but it’s true. This party, which dear Lady Dainton hated
-so much .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The restlessness, the hysteria .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Jazz,
-in itself .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That which remains,” I murmured, in Bertrand’s
-phrase.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was reminded of the days before the war when revues
-and ragtime first established their empire in London.
-Then, as the curtain prepared to fall, principals and
-supers, the latest beauty and the last comedian, a scene-shifter
-or two and the prompter all jigged and shuffled
-to the haunting syncopation of the <span class='it'>Honeymoon Rag</span> or
-<span class='it'>That Ol’ Mason-Dixon Line</span>. The audience jigged and
-shuffled up the gangways; the men were still humming,
-the women still working their shoulders when they drove
-away. ‘<span class='it'>Oh, honey, I feel funny when dat coon begin to
-play</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.’ Now they jigged and shuffled through the
-streets and into the houses; they could not stop; life was
-become an endless syncopation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wondered when our friends would settle down. If
-the art of the day seemed, in my philistine eyes, epileptic,
-it was at least faithful to the epileptic contortions and fitful
-mood of the times. Reviewing these stupefying parties,
-I see men and women in a high fever. The girls
-all wear the same short skirts and exhibit the same bare
-backs; they have achieved the same flat figure; and,
-granted an upturned nose, they bob their hair in the
-same way. Very young, very pretty and very full of
-high spirits, they think the same thoughts and express
-them in the same jargon with the same loud assurance.
-Their sameness makes every party the same. I see myself
-talking feverishly of films with some star from Los
-Angeles and being told, by little Ivy Gaymer, of the
-latest divorce; I see young poets discussing a recent
-lampoon and young actresses describing their last triumph.
-There are financial groups and political caves;
-my cousin Laurence, who has cultivated a knowing and
-shrewd manner, runs feverishly from one to another,
-nodding, whispering, waving a vast cigar and, I fancy,
-rather modelling himself on Saltash. Sam Dainton, who
-is beginning to look dissipated, engages in feverish pursuit
-of one woman after another. This fever has infected
-the women; the divorce-court does a flourishing
-trade; no one can remember who at any moment is allied
-with whom; and Sam makes overtures to all in the sure
-belief that some—and, perhaps, most—will prove to
-be complaisant. Sir Rupert Foreditch spreads the fever
-among the young politicians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I can understand that Lady Dainton is too inelastic for
-the universal syncopation of these days. I could wish, in
-this season of comprehensive toleration, that I were far
-more tolerant or far less, for many of these women would
-not be received by Violet Loring or my mother, many of
-the men would be roughly handled if their business
-records were examined by unsympathetic counsel. And
-no one can for long live comfortably in a state of delirium.
-The clatter from the dining-room and the din
-from the musicians’ corner are unceasing. Every one is
-moving, talking, smoking at top speed. And Robson
-holds all the threads in his capable hands; he is, to
-my house in Seymour Street, what Gaspard is to the
-Turf and Stage. My house is indeed a small and noisy
-club.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is to be hoped that our guests enjoyed themselves;
-I believe that they, like Barbara, were only concerned to
-be so busy that they could not think. I should not be
-surprised to hear that, like Barbara, some of them broke
-down before the end. We had intended to stay in London
-until I went to shoot with the Knightriders; but early in
-July Barbara collapsed suddenly and was ordered to the
-country. Though there was nothing organically amiss
-with her, Gaisford threatened to throw up the case if
-she remained in London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When I die, you can tell people I was the only honest
-leech you ever met,” he muttered with a frown. “I’m
-never afraid to say I don’t know; and I don’t know now
-what’s wrong with that child. She’s very ill indeed; and
-there’s nothing the matter with her. I have my suspicions.
-You’ll go with her?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I can arrange things at the office,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Office be damned! If she wants you, go!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>More than a little frightened, I took Barbara to Crawleigh
-next day and for a week tried to run our paper by
-means of special messengers and an indistinct telephone.
-Then I returned to London. The explosion which Bertrand
-had predicted four months earlier took place at a
-moment when the office was entrusted to the learned and
-wholly unpractical Spence-Atkins; and I judged—God
-knows how rashly!—that Ireland called to me the more
-urgently. I suppose our lives would have been different
-if Barbara’s rest-cure had been postponed till September;
-if Bertrand had taken his holiday in August, I a month
-earlier.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you <span class='it'>must</span> go, you must,” sighed Barbara. “Will
-you open all my letters, as you did before? I’m not to
-be worried; and my letters are always so uninteresting
-that they send my temperature up two points.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll do anything if you’ll only promise to get well,”
-I answered.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>London, on my return, was in what Bertrand called
-“its tadpole condition: all head and no body”. The residential
-streets and squares were deserted; the clubs and
-newspaper-offices were thronged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I had to cancel leave all round,” he explained, as we
-left our dismantled house for dinner at the Eclectic.
-“Now that the peace-treaty’s out of the way, the government
-is looking for fresh triumphs. Happy thought:
-an Irish policy! I felt it was time for us to define our
-attitude.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hasn’t it been defined for us,” I asked, “by the impetuous
-gentleman who invented ‘self-determination’?
-What’s good enough for Czecho-Slovakia should be good
-enough for Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you propose to apply it?,” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Literally, I told him: by electing a constituent assembly
-on universal suffrage and then by enforcing on all Ireland
-whatever constitution the assembly framed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But that,” said my father-in-law, who had invited
-himself to dine with us, “means coercing Ulster.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I felt we could hardly have too many opinions in
-our symposium, I urged Frank Jellaby and Carstairs to
-join us; and every party was represented by the time that
-Roger Dainton pulled a chair to the end of the table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I detest coercion,” I said; “but, if it has to be applied,
-I’d sooner coerce the few than the many. Because
-ministers refused to coerce Ulster in 1913, the rest of
-Ireland has been coerced ever since. And I never know
-why a thing should be called coercion in one country and
-‘maintaining law and order’ in every other.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Having propounded my own policy, I was free to listen
-while others propounded theirs. Our speeches, at this
-date, would make melancholy reading, for every one said
-precisely what was expected of him and precisely what
-he had said a hundred times before. Writing now at two
-years’ remove, I believe and hope that Ireland is on the
-road to a settlement; and this dinner two years ago lingers
-in my recollection as one more heart-breaking proof that,
-if the Irish were incapable of governing themselves, the
-English were no less incapable of governing them. Crawleigh,
-a former viceroy; John Carstairs, a retired diplomat;
-my uncle and Dainton, Jellaby and I, with some hundred
-years of parliamentary experience between us, all
-talked with the white-hot irreconcilability of Capulets and
-Montagues. It was this temper, I reminded myself from
-time to time, that kept me exiled from the County Kerry:
-it was this temper that tore me from Barbara’s side. In
-the years that followed, when I tried to mark the rock
-on which my life split, I always thought of this fatuous
-debate and of the pale, angry faces round our echoing
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was something, I suppose, that no one prayed for
-a new Cromwell, though I attribute this moderation to a
-doubt whether even Cromwell could now “reconquer”
-Ireland and to a fear that those who had drawn the
-sword might be the first to perish by the sword. In the
-last six years Ireland had made the dire discovery that
-the north had won an advantage by threats of violence
-and that, if the south wished to redress the balance, it
-must employ the same means.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Can’t we cut out ancient history?,” I suggested, as
-my patience wore thin. “We need a policy to meet the
-present position; and the present position is an evenly
-matched civil war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the phrase left my lips, I wondered whether the war
-was any longer an even match. Two days before, I heard
-from Hornbeck that a mail-train had been held up and
-the contents of the lord lieutenant’s bag forwarded, after
-perusal, with an endorsement “<span class='it'>Passed by the Censor
-I. R. A.</span>”; my agent reported that stores were being
-looted and ammunition seized. If attacks on private
-persons and on property were still rare, this was due to
-prudence on the one side and to intimidation on the
-other. Some one, however, would soon be shot because
-he refused to be intimidated; the shooting would be
-avenged; there would be reprisals against the avengers;
-and, worst fate of all, no one would be allowed to remain
-neutral.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s begun already,” said Dainton. “That man they
-murdered in Limerick .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That spy they shot?,” Jellaby substituted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You call a man a spy for saving British troops from
-being butchered in an ambush?,” Crawleigh enquired
-acidly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You called Flaherty a spy,” boomed my uncle, “from
-your place in the House of Lords. He gave exactly similar
-information to the republican troops.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who were in armed rebellion against the king,” said
-John Carstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whose king?,” asked Jellaby.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The dialogue tripped on with the ease that comes of
-practice; and most of us were tried players in the farce
-or tragedy of mistranslating an opponent’s terms. In the
-interests of peace I begged that we should avoid the more
-flagrantly question-begging labels; but by now, grown
-men though we were, each owed himself the satisfaction
-of just one more stab before he laid down his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know who’s at the back of all this?,” enquired
-Dainton, carefully avoiding my uncle’s eye.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The bolshevists?,” Bertrand asked indulgently.
-“You said it was the Germans in ’16. It was the
-Americans before that. Good God! I’m old enough to
-remember O’Connell: it always <span class='it'>has</span> been somebody else!
-Will you English never learn that an Irishman’s feeling
-is for his <span class='it'>own</span> country? The more you’re pleased to call
-a man ‘loyalist’, the more I’d call him ‘traitor’, as I’d
-say ‘traitor’ to a Pole who boasted of his ‘loyalty’ to
-Russia or Germany.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As your people <span class='it'>do</span> say ‘traitor’ to the loyalists who
-fought for you in this war,” muttered Carstairs. “You’ll
-hang them all as traitors, of course, when you’ve got your
-republic?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My uncle was understood to say that he wished to hang
-no one; but this laudable restraint won no favour from
-the rest.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should hang Carson and Bonar Law,” said Jellaby,
-as though he were ordering a well-considered dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you must hang Asquith and Birrell for not
-hanging them,” said Crawleigh, partly from proconsular
-devotion to firmness, but chiefly from hatred of liberalism.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I,” said Dainton, “should be quite content to shoot
-de Valera as Casement was shot. Like a dog. Hanging’s
-too good for him. President of the Irish Republic,
-indeed! It’s treason to the king.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’re going to hang for treason, you must hang
-for constructive treason, for constructive mutiny and for
-acquiescence in constructive treason and mutiny,” I
-pointed out: “that brings in the covenanters, the Curragh
-people and the Asquith cabinet.” Dainton, I knew,
-was a covenanter; and I wanted him to see the implication
-of his wholesale executions. “Personally, I don’t
-think hanging or shooting ever does much good .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It would have been a good thing,” Bertrand interrupted,
-“if you’d shot the entire 1914 House of Commons.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But as a policy for the government in 1920?,” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have thought over this dinner a dozen times since;
-and, when ministers were attacked for permitting the
-slaughter and reprisals that followed, I would sometimes
-ask their critics if they could do better than the reasonably
-intelligent, reasonably well-informed and reasonably
-sane men who shewed themselves so crass, ignorant and
-mad at this meeting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For all the good we’ve done,” I told Bertrand, as we
-walked home, “I might as well have been in the country.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t leave me yet,” he begged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And throughout the late summer and early autumn I
-was torn between Barbara’s entreaties that I should come
-back to Crawleigh and Bertrand’s reproach that I was
-deserting him when he most needed me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As a study in “that which remained” I suppose these
-barren passions claim their place: in our politics, as in
-our work and play, our gettings and spendings, our crimes
-and insanities, we lived more rapidly, more violently.
-The growing disorders of Ireland were ascribed to a
-“murder-gang”; in the spirit of the age, they were met
-by irregular troops, with general instructions to give at
-least as good as they received. Under the reign of reprisals,
-there was inaugurated an organized terror for
-which there had been no parallel since the first French
-revolution. Burning, looting, killing and torturing were
-paid back, with interest, in the same currency. Mysterious
-and fatal lists of names were passed up and down
-the country; the mails were now intercepted at will; and,
-when far-scattered, unsuspecting men and women were
-done to death by simultaneous blows, a whisper of “spy”
-and “counter-spy”—words that had lost their meaning—explained
-this opposing secret carnage which no man
-had power to stop.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Face to face with this slow bleeding to death, I could
-not shrug my shoulders and drift away for a holiday with
-Barbara. The peace of the world seemed a madman’s
-dream when we could not stop this butchery at our doors.
-Day after day Bertrand and I wrote and talked, interviewed
-and argued. On one set of lips or another, every
-public man was by now branded as a traitor who had
-threatened rebellion in Ulster or a traitor who had broken
-faith with the South.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If our own statesmanship is bankrupt, we must look
-elsewhere,” my uncle pronounced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a week he laid siege to the League of Nations, then
-to the Foreign Office. Simultaneously I went as a suppliant
-to Crawleigh in the hope that he would forward
-my petition to the Vatican. On the same day, in almost
-the same words, we were told that there was no precedent
-to guide a sovereign power in summoning an arbitrator
-to settle differences between a government and its
-subjects.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t run an empire on those lines,” said my
-father-in-law.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re not running an empire on your present
-lines!” I retorted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was impregnable. Until the republican leaders
-came, like the burghers of Calais, barefoot, in their shirts,
-with ropes round their necks, he would not parley with
-them; and, unhappily for him, no one was strong enough
-to compass an unconditional surrender.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I walked empty-handed away from Berkeley
-Square, I met Hornbeck returning home from the Admiralty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Making a nice, tidy world for heroes to live in?,”
-he enquired with a grin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though his tone was bantering, it was free from
-malice. Philip Hornbeck had no political predilections
-and less than no belief in the perfectibility of man. Government,
-for him, always came back to a whiff of grapeshot,
-which he was always ready to discharge, always
-without passion and always without error.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The problem’s <span class='it'>not</span> insoluble,” I maintained. “We
-settled Quebec; we settled South Africa. We could settle
-Ireland, if we wanted to; but, of a hundred men who
-talk of settlements, ninety-nine will only settle on their
-own terms.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On reaching Fetter Lane, I found my uncle at work
-on an appeal to the nation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Foreign Office,” he told me with frozen rage,
-“wanted to know what business this was of mine. Perhaps
-we can shew them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>While he wrote, I hardened my heart to the unpleasantest
-duty that had befallen me since my marriage.
-After the usual enquiries when I was coming down to
-Crawleigh, Barbara let fly such a cloud of reproaches
-that I was ashamed to finish her letter. A delicate wife
-was no doubt a nuisance; but ought I not to have thought
-of that before marrying her? Engrossing as my work
-was, did I—as a matter of academic interest—rate it
-higher than her reiterated request that I should come to
-her when she was more ill and miserable than ever in her
-life before?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was halfway to the station when my secretary overtook
-me with an hysterical telegram: <span class='it'>If you love me destroy
-letter unread</span>; and I should be hard put to say
-whether telegram or letter was the more disturbing.
-Crawleigh and the local doctor assured me that she was
-progressing famously; Bertrand urged me to go with a
-vehemence more inhibitive than the strongest veto; and,
-in the end, I lamely begged Barbara to be patient and
-promised to come at an hour’s notice if she really
-needed me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Peace,” I reminded my uncle, “is only another aspect
-of war. ‘The last chapter, if you like’ .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Please God it may be!,” he answered with emotion.</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And, as we spoke, the last chapter was opening.
-Though neither of us had paid much attention to the
-report that certain political prisoners were being removed
-to England, we awoke next day to find that public interest
-had been deflected to another part of the battle.
-As a football match is suddenly suspended at sound of
-the referee’s whistle and the players stand apart to watch
-one of their number who has been injured, so the armies
-in Ireland, the factions in England, the spectators all over
-the world now stood apart to watch one man slowly dying.
-The lord mayor of Cork, arrested and imprisoned,
-refused to take food. For a week or two, while life still
-ticked loudly, we debated over our dinners whether he
-had been rightly condemned, whether the government
-would let him die of starvation, whether he and his cause
-would not be made ridiculous if he were fed forcibly.
-Then the contest became more determined: the government
-would not yield to a hunger-strike; and Terence
-McSwiney, with life ticking now less clearly, would not
-yield to the government. It was a question of endurance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Do come here next week-end if you can possibly
-manage it</span>,” wrote Barbara. “<span class='it'>This business about the
-lord mayor must be decided one way or the other by
-then.</span>” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could give no promise. The papers were at this time
-recording the days of the fast and hunting for stories
-of men who had lived for three, four, five weeks without
-food. The ticking became feebler; and, one press-night,
-when I sat shuffling an obituary, an appeal and a face-saving
-leader on McSwiney’s surrender, we heard that
-the strike was over. The report was contradicted before
-I reached the composing-room. A week later, as the unwound
-spring stopped, jerked and stopped again, we were
-told that the lord mayor was dead. He was still alive
-next day, next week. Sympathy flowed and ebbed. The
-government was entreated to spare a game fighter; the
-public grew angrily unhappy at being made an accomplice
-in this slow torture. Then a gust of impatience blew
-against such crazy stubbornness; there followed a flash
-of illumination, and Dainton, who would have shot
-McSwiney out of hand two months before, asked dubiously
-whether an Ireland of McSwineys would be easy
-to “reconquer”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At length the dying prisoner became an institution.
-His name was tucked into inconspicuous corners of the
-daily papers. There were other claims on the public
-attention. At last he died; and we realized that, as the
-injured player no longer obstructed the field, the match
-must go on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the day of the funeral procession I received an
-unexpected call from O’Rane, white-faced and enigmatic.
-In all the years I had known him I doubt if we had talked
-of Ireland a dozen times; but this day stirred passions
-older than any he could remember, and I felt that the
-taut, bare-headed figure who gripped my arm was saluting
-McSwiney’s coffin in the name of his father, “O’Rane
-the liberator”. The Irish of London were present in
-thousands; but the English watched or followed in tens
-of thousands. Some, I well believe, came to salve a restless
-conscience; some in homage to a brave man; most
-to gratify an idle curiosity. The republican colours fluttered
-unfamiliarly in English faces; the way was lined
-with English police.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In any other country there would have been a riot,”
-murmured O’Rane, when I described the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There will be all the riots you can use when this is
-over.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You’ve been lying very low the last few
-months, Raney.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been thinking. All Lancing’s money .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And ‘the good of humanity’?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. I believe .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ve decided .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to save humanity
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. from ever touching it,” he answered
-slowly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the time he would say no more; and we spent the
-afternoon strolling along one embankment and back by the
-other. In the course of our walk, we had a good view
-of St. Thomas’ Hospital, if he wished to heal the sick,
-and of the Tate Gallery, if he cared to foster the fine arts;
-south of the river we walked through streets that were
-more sordidly grimed with poverty than any I wish to
-see again. There were, I pointed out, inequalities of
-wealth for a millionaire to adjust.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But is all this for the good of humanity?,” O’Rane
-asked, breaking silence for the first time as we pressed into
-his house. The side-door of The Sanctuary was like the
-out-patients’ entrance to a hospital; his writing-table was
-submerged in appeals to his charity. “You can begin
-by adjusting the difference between yourself and those
-people outside.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a sneer in his tone that roused my natural
-perversity. I distributed a handful of small change and
-returned to find him smiling.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What did you give them?,” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“About a sovereign. Whether they’re deserving
-cases .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re more deserving than you, George. And, if
-I’d given Lancing money, I should have been handing
-<span class='it'>you</span> a sovereign. That’s my difficulty. Every time I give
-to a hospital or a gallery, I’m relieving prosperous people
-like you of your responsibilities. If the material good is
-outweighed by the spiritual harm .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He broke off
-to stalk up and down the darkening library with shoulders
-hunched and head thrust forward. “There’s still plenty
-of wealth in the world. Places like the Turf and Stage
-stink of it. And, if people want things badly enough,
-they’ll pay for them. If London had a smallpox epidemic,
-we should press money on our neighbours to get
-them vaccinated.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, while you’re saving humanity from itself,” I
-pointed out, “the money’s increasing automatically.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can find outlets farther afield. You wouldn’t let
-those people starve under your eyes; but you’ll let people
-starve to their hearts’ content if you can’t see ’em.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With a million or two of unemployed here,” I began,
-“you won’t be popular.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I could afford to consider my popularity!,” he
-broke out with a joyless laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Sonia was in the country, I brought him to dine
-with me in Seymour Street. We gossiped until nearly
-midnight; and, when I had sent him home, I settled to my
-daily duty of opening Barbara’s letters for her. She had
-been right, three months before, in calling her correspondence
-uninteresting; and, until this night, I had not been
-troubled with any doubts which letters to send on and
-which to destroy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now I encountered a problem for which I was unprepared.
-The first letter referred to an occasion eighteen
-months before, when my wife—according to the writer—had
-invited him to run away with her.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap08'>CHAPTER THREE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>AS YOU SOW .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The morrow brought the task.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Her eyes were guilty gates, that let him in</p>
-<p class='line0'>By shutting all too zealous for their sin:</p>
-<p class='line0'>Each sucked a secret, and each wore a mask.</p>
-<p class='line0'>But, oh, the bitter taste her beauty had! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. A star with lurid beams, she seemed to crown</p>
-<p class='line0'>The pit of infamy: and then again</p>
-<p class='line0'>He fainted on his vengefulness, and strove</p>
-<p class='line0'>To ape the magnanimity of love.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>George Meredith</span>: <span class='it'>Modern Love</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hardly remember when the meaning became clear
-to me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was reading with but half my attention, when I met
-a reference to Croxton Hall, followed by familiar names.
-The letter was badly written, in pencil, and more than
-badly arranged. The writer had been ill; he was so ill
-at that moment that I could not make out the signature.
-I examined the envelope. There a different hand had
-traced the bold address; I noticed for the first time that
-the letter had been forwarded from the Crawleighs’ house
-in Berkeley Square; then I saw an American stamp and
-understood the faint pencil scratching.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was from Eric Lane; and he was dying as he wrote.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The shock numbed me; and I read again with so little
-attention that I had to turn back in the middle. Then a
-second shock drove the first from my mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Eric was dying: yes, I realized that. He was bidding
-Barbara farewell; and, in my first uncaring glance, I had
-seen so much that I must now see all. After losing Barbara,
-he had found little inducement to live; and, though
-he had once hoped to marry little Ivy Maitland, John
-Gaymer had returned—almost on the eve of the wedding—to
-establish again his empire over Ivy’s will.
-Eric had made his failing lungs an excuse to set her
-free:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Two years would have cured me; but I wanted her to
-choose for herself. And, when she too dropped out of
-my life, I didn’t try to get well.</span>” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There followed pages of apology, pages of explanation.
-Eric’s love for Barbara was consuming him; and,
-as the flame died to a pale flicker, he forgot family,
-friends and self in desperate prayers for her happiness.
-Once more the name of Croxton Hall fell like a black
-shadow across his mind. There was an agonized reference
-to some rebuff that he had inflicted upon her. Then
-came the reason for the rebuff.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was while I was in Ireland that Barbara had gone to
-the Pentyres. When the party broke up on the first night—Eric’s
-apology could not have been more damningly
-circumstantial if he had been indicting her—, she had
-concealed herself till he came up to bed, then invaded his
-room, finally begged him to take her, take her away. Her
-marriage to me was a mistake; I should not want to keep
-her when I realized my mistake; I loved her enough to
-forgive her.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I remembered, I now understood her distraught questions
-whether I should be broken-hearted if I lost her,
-whether I was prepared to sacrifice life, honour, everything
-to secure her happiness.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the heartlessness and abandonment of that moment,
-I knew, as well as if I had seen her, that Barbara was
-wholly mad. I recalled the telegram in which she said
-that she was missing me; I remembered her loving welcome,
-on my return; I heard again her promise that she
-was going to make a new start. And then I called up
-any self-control that remained to keep me from going
-mad too. The child that lay buried at Crawleigh was not
-Eric’s. His letter told me that; and, when I found myself
-believing his letter, I felt that I was still sane. Barbara
-was innocent of everything but a whole-hearted will
-and intention to betray me; and Eric had saved her from
-that. After he had repelled her, she was innocent of
-everything but calculated hypocrisy, sustained triumphantly
-for fifteen months. I could never believe her
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And what then?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A lust for revenge blinded me; and, though I could
-hardly hold a pen, I addressed an envelope to Barbara
-and thrust Eric’s letter, without comment, half inside it.
-Then I thought of him dying in California, by now perhaps
-dead. I burned the envelope. As it crinkled and
-scattered, I promised Eric’s letter the same fate; then I
-hesitated for fear that my lust for magnanimity might
-prove more deadly than my impulse of revenge. Was my
-life, also, to be a calculated hypocrisy?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I paced up and down the room till a clock struck midnight.
-I had lost the post, I realized.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I looked at the other letters. The first was from
-Barbara. If I intended to take a holiday at all this
-year, would I not come down to Crawleigh? Thanks to
-this Irish trouble—how remote it all seemed!—I had
-refused all my shooting invitations; but now that the
-McSwiney chapter was closed .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I knew, unreasoningly, that I could not meet Barbara.
-Whatever happened to us later, I must have time to think.
-I telephoned to O’Rane and asked him to accompany me
-on a motoring tour. I believe I told him—I, of all
-people!—that he seemed overwrought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No holidays for me, old man,” he answered with
-regret.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I doubt if you’ll find it a holiday,” I said. “I want
-to discover what the great public’s thinking about.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wish I could manage it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then my self-control left me:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Raney, you must!,” I said. “I’m going through the
-worst time of my life, something more awful than I
-thought could ever happen to me. If you <span class='it'>knew</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can lend me some pyjamas, I suppose?,” he interrupted
-in a changed voice. “I’ll have my gear sent
-round in the morning. I’m sorry, George. To the best
-of my poor ability, you know I’ll see you through to the
-grave and beyond.”</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I waited in the hall, I drafted a telegram to explain
-that I was being called away from London on business.
-O’Rane arrived in the middle; and I led him at once to
-his room. I could not unburden myself yet; and, as we
-drove out of London next day, I found it necessary to
-pretend that I was enquiring into unemployment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bertrand’s afraid the men will get out of hand,” I
-explained.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I might have said that in some parts of England the
-men were already out of hand. It was at this time that
-the “Homes for Heroes” campaign was launched: as
-the government failed to provide sufficient houses, a
-homeless band of Welsh quarrymen seized a public hall
-and announced that they would stay there until cottages
-had been built for them. They were led by a man, then
-unknown, named John Griffiths, who followed up his
-first success by organizing similar raids on any convenient
-unoccupied land. No one was paying much attention at
-present; as Bertrand said, we were resigned to unemployment
-in London, but danger would march hand-in-hand
-with winter, when the government declared its
-housing-policy and when the official leaders of labour
-indicated whether they supported “Griffiths’ landgrabbers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where are you making for first?,” O’Rane asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Until that moment I had not thought of any destination.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re half way between Reading and Hungerford.
-I don’t know.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ve had a bit of a shock; and you’ll
-find me rather disjointed.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. God! I don’t know what
-I should have done without you!,” I broke out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane’s fingers rested for a moment on my arm:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Old man, you knew I was always at hand if you
-needed me!” His unseeing eyes softened; and his voice
-fell to a whisper:</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>‘I cannot come to you—I am afraid.</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>I will not come to you. There, it is said.</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Though all night long I lie awake and know</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>That you are lying waking even so:</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And all the day you tread a lonely road</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And come at sunset to a dark abode.</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Yet, if so be you are indeed my friend,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>Then, at the end,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>There is one road, a road I’ve never gone,</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And down that road you shall not pass alone;</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>And there’s one night you’ll find me by your side—’</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>He paused; and I waited for the rime that should
-complete the couplet:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How does it go on?”</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>‘And there’s one night you’ll find me by your side—</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The night that they shall tell me you have died.’</span></p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>It’s .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Chinese, I was told. Two or three hundred
-years before Homer.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I drove on, staring drowsily ahead of me at the broad,
-unfolding ribbon of black road and the monotonous
-water-meadows on either hand. The tender warmth of
-the little poem made me forget for a moment the bleakness
-of the Kennet valley in late autumn; and, after a
-sleepless night, the rushing wind drugged my brain.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>Though all night long I lie awake and know</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>That you are lying waking even so.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'>I murmured the lines to keep myself from falling
-asleep. What had Barbara’s thoughts been when I lay
-waking the night before? Suddenly my sight was
-dimmed with a curtain of blood; and I stopped the car
-in twice its length because I could not see the road before me.
-If indeed I had fallen asleep, I had looked for
-a moment, through this red curtain, on a sun-washed
-verandah, where a dying man was gasping for breath.</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“<span class='it'>And there’s one night you’ll find me by your side—</span></p>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. The night that they shall tell me you have died.</span>”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='noindent'>The vision faded before I could make out whether Eric
-was speaking to Barbara or listening for her voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The unexpected jolt had flung O’Rane out of his seat;
-and, as he pulled himself back into place, he could hear
-me stopping the engine.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is anything the matter?,” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Eric Lane’s just died.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good God! When?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This moment. I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. pulled up to avoid him,” I
-answered without knowing what I was saying. “He’s
-gone now. Poor devil! Oh, poor devil!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I was shaken, O’Rane was in no better case:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Those lines .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I had them from him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’d heard him .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I heard him then .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. At least I think .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” The
-road was once more stretching firmly ahead of me to a
-belt of leafless trees. In the meadows on either side I
-saw deliberate cattle splashing up to their knees in muddy
-water. “It’s ten to two, Raney. Shall we see if we
-can find a place for lunch?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’ll wait. You’re not fit to drive any more at
-present.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You’d .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. better tell me everything, old
-man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But I’ve told you! I knew Eric was dead or dying
-because I had .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I saw a letter from him quite recently.
-My nerves are rather jumpy.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’ll break poor Lady Lane’s heart,” he murmured.
-“And it’ll be a shock for Ivy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Slipping his arm through mine, O’Rane led me into a
-field by the roadside. Though he must have guessed that
-Eric’s letter had something to do with my frantic appeal
-the evening before, I could not speak at present for fear
-of breaking down. ‘<span class='it'>Boyish to cry—can’t help it—bad
-fever—weak—ill.</span>’ For many moments my head sang
-with Mr. Jingle’s clipped phrases. A shock for Ivy?
-Some one had told me her marriage was all the failure
-that Mr. Justice Maitland had predicted. It would have
-been better if she had married Eric: she might have kept
-him alive. It would have been better if Barbara had
-married him, better if he had never left America, best
-of all if he and she and I had never been born.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Babs can’t be ill,” O’Rane murmured as though he
-were thinking aloud; “or you wouldn’t be here. Sit
-down and smoke a cigarette.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he returned with the basket, I was able to tell
-him. I wondered at the time, I wonder still, whether I
-did right; but I know that I could not help it. He let me
-talk myself out, only asking dispassionately at the end:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What are you going to do about it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And I talked myself out a second time, until the fever
-left me and I lay back on the rug, almost too much exhausted
-to move or think. Physical infidelity, committed
-in a moment of passion, stood in relation to this long
-infidelity of spirit as a blow struck in hot blood stands
-to a calculated and artfully concealed murder. Had Barbara
-left me and come back, as Sonia left and came back
-to Raney, I believe I could have forgiven her. After
-deceiving me once, she could deceive me again; to get
-what she wanted, in her own way, she would sacrifice me
-as she had sacrificed Jack Waring and Eric Lane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was all over. And I wanted her desperately. And
-it was all over.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hitherto, I had always pretended that there was something
-I did not understand in her tragic entanglements:
-Jack and Eric were straight as the day; if they both fled
-from the woman they both loved, I wished to think that
-they were parted by a lover’s quarrel which both were too
-proud or obstinate to heal; I refused to believe that they
-had run from her in disgust.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m here because Barbara will soon be coming back
-to London,” I told O’Rane. “I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. couldn’t divorce
-her if I wanted to; but I can let her divorce me.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She won’t be very .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. happy alone,” he answered
-reflectively. “When Jack Waring disappeared, she
-turned to Eric out of sheer loneliness and misery; when
-Eric went, she turned to you. If you go, George, she’ll
-turn to some one else. A married woman without children,
-without a husband, more lonely and miserable than
-ever before .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, you won’t have long to wait for
-your divorce.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Four-and-twenty hours earlier, I should have called my
-best friend to account if he had warned me that Barbara
-needed watching. Now she had convicted herself and
-robbed me of all temptation to defend her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t see much difference,” I said, “between the
-woman who runs away with a man and the woman who
-only stays at home because the man won’t run away with
-her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s still a difference between the woman who
-keeps her reputation and the woman who loses it. When
-women become reckless .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It’s a big responsibility to
-give them the first push down the slope.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The short sunlight of late autumn was fading; and I
-busied myself with packing our luncheon-basket. As I
-had not asked for sympathy, I could not complain if none
-was offered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I give her the chance of divorcing me,” I said,
-“I’m not accountable for anything she does after that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a long silence. Then O’Rane asked:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What will you do?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had not thought; but, in that moment, I had a vision
-of the blue water, the close-packed green woods and the
-vivid fuchsia hedges of Lake House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Go back to Ireland, I expect.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was making enough clatter with plates and knives to
-convince the least attentive that my patience was exhausted;
-but O’Rane lay with his hands clasped behind
-his head, frowning a little at his own thoughts and wholly
-unmoved by my demonstration.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Will divorce make for Barbara’s happiness?,” he
-asked in a maddening drawl. “You can’t quite wash
-your hands of a woman you’ve married. You weren’t
-content, you see, with somebody of your own mould.
-Your wife had to be brilliant, beautiful, romantic,
-tragic.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You married Babs when you knew she’d
-been shaken to the depths of her soul by Jack Waring,
-when she’d been broken to the bottom of her heart by
-Eric Lane.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I thought she’d had so much romance and tragedy
-that she’d be glad to settle down quietly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When she wasn’t in love with you? Has any one
-settled down quietly after gambling with death for nearly
-five years?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’d have forgiven anything if she’d told me!,” I cried,
-as we went back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We must have driven for an hour before he spoke
-again:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, George, if you want my advice, I should recommend
-you to burn Eric’s letter and pretend you’ve never
-seen it. Then begin again at the beginning.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You imagine I can forget it?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you think more of her and less of yourself. The
-bigger the crime, the more she must have been tempted:
-try to understand that instead of counting up the things
-a man has a ‘right’ to expect of his wife. Rights here,
-rights there! <span class='it'>Every one’s</span> thinking too much of his individual
-rights, George! Every group of nations, every
-nation, almost every man and woman.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After two years I can appreciate O’Rane’s patience
-better than was possible at the time. I know now that
-he was distracted by a civil war of his own; but I was
-too much preoccupied to enquire why Sonia and the children
-were in Hampshire; I should have been aggrieved
-if any one else had presumed to be unhappy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose it’s all the same to you where we spend
-the night?,” I asked, several hours later, as we paused at
-a sign-post.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the gathering dusk I could distinguish nothing but
-the gloomy contours of Stonehenge and the sharp, black
-outline of innumerable government huts. Then I saw
-O’Rane prick up his ears at the tramp of weary feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Anywhere you like,” he answered, as a white-faced
-army advanced into the glare of my lamps. “I was in
-camp here in ’14. It’s a dam’ bad step. Recruits, I suppose.
-We should have been given hell if we hadn’t been
-smarter than that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the column approached, I saw fifty or sixty men in
-tattered civilian clothes. Two or three wore medals; the
-rest had a brave line of ribbons on their coats. At their
-head marched two standard-bearers with the adequate
-device: “<span class='it'>Wanted in 1914. Not wanted now.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’ve had their hell; and they’re not through with
-it yet,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the first time that I had encountered the searing
-reproach of that device; and, as I described it to O’Rane,
-I recalled—as in a dream of some other life—that I
-was the editor of a political review and that I had been
-sent to study unemployment. There was an external
-world, then. At this moment my uncle was probably taking
-the chair at our weekly dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the tramp of feet grew fainter, O’Rane half rose in
-his seat and then subsided with a groan:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, I <span class='it'>can’t</span>! It’s <span class='it'>not</span> my business to pay other
-people’s debts. The state turned these men into soldiers,
-in a moment of blue funk; the state must turn them back
-into civilians. Sometimes I see so red that I want to
-hold this country to ransom. ‘You’ve no use for these
-fellows,’ I want to say. ‘Well, now I’m going to shew
-you what would have happened if they hadn’t come forward
-when they did.’ After a week of Belgian atrocities,
-there’d be a marked increase in popular gratitude! And
-I thought this war would produce a .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. spirit of fraternity!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had hoped for it, even if I had not expected it after
-the first months of 1915. Quick conversions are never
-permanent: and permanent conversions are never quick.
-Our drive that day, past great estates and big manufacturing
-towns, might have been chosen as an object-lesson
-in the aggressive competition that strangles fraternity at
-birth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That night, when we lay at Gloucester, and next day,
-as we drove through the soul-searching loveliness of the
-Stroud valley, we talked of education and the gospel of
-humanity, as we had not talked since our Indian summer
-at Cannes; and once or twice, for ten or fifteen minutes
-at a time, I forgot to think consciously of Barbara.
-H. G. Wells, after years of criticism, was turning teacher
-on his own account; and <span class='it'>The Outline of History</span> was conspicuous
-in every house and railway carriage I entered
-at this time. One man at least was pleading for the universal
-spirit; and his plea gave food for thought to the
-people who had shouted for blood and gold in the 1918
-election. The havoc which Keynes had made in the
-economics of the peace-treaty was completed by the havoc
-which Wells made of its history and its spiritual trend.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And yet,” I exclaimed in sudden reaction, “those
-books have left things where they were!” The treaty,
-which could not be enforced, had to be modified: the
-British representatives had to explain why their crazy
-election-pledges could not be fulfilled. At regular intervals
-Germany threatened to default; France retaliated
-with a threat of further occupation; a flustered knot of
-prime ministers collected at the first convenient watering-place;
-and a punctual press announced that the results of
-the conference were wholly satisfactory. “I sometimes
-despair of education.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. And, damn it, Raney, you
-haven’t told me what to do when I get back to London!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve not yet told me what you want to do.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-It’s strange how people can hold mutually destructive
-opinions at the same moment! Lucien de Grammont talks
-piteously about German ‘revenge’ at a time when the
-French are pouring Senegalese troops into the occupied
-area!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Roger Dainton will tell you that a restored Germany
-means a new war and that an unrestored Germany is losing
-us our best customer.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At O’Rane’s skilled prompting, we argued our way
-farther west and farther until, at the end of a week, we
-stalled the car and strolled on foot, because we had
-reached Land’s End. Surrounded by water, in the spray
-and wind of the last rocky outposts of England, I felt my
-sanity and self-control returning to me; but a single day
-without the distraction of driving brought back the obsession.
-I flung myself into a voluminous report on
-<span class='it'>Unemployment and Public Feeling</span>, only to discover that
-my four folios might have been compressed into the
-single word “indifference”. There was no question of
-class or party: every one flabbily deplored the breakdown
-of industry, flabbily pitied the unemployed, flabbily felt
-that somebody should do something. Accent and idiom
-might change, but the stale thought and worn expression
-changed only by becoming more stale: the wayside tap
-echoed the slipshod reasoning of an Atlantic liner; a benighted
-book-maker in a forgotten Cornish village talked
-of trades unions in a way that I had thought only possible
-in my father-in-law; and there were Roger Daintons
-manipulating beer-engines in every bar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I reminded O’Rane of his scheme for endowing schools
-and buying papers till the education of an entire people
-proceeded from a single pair of lips.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I still believe a press-monopoly is possible,” he answered,
-“but who’s to be trusted with it? Horatio Bottomley
-is a political messiah to several millions; but I’d
-never give a messiah the power of a messiah unless he
-were ready to die as a messiah.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Talleyrand’s advice to those about to found new religions,”
-I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Get yourself crucified’? Wasn’t he right? Since
-people began to doubt the old heaven and hell, the churches
-have been losing their power: they had less to offer, less
-to threaten; and their ministers became officials instead of
-martyrs. Christianity was born of one martyrdom; and
-it will only die when there are no more martyrs. There
-were martyrs in the war, if we could only make people
-remember them .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But the war’s over,” I interrupted. “How can you
-keep that exaltation alive in time of peace?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The question was unanswered when I turned the head
-of the car, next day, towards London. We were both
-shirking our private difficulties; and, though we argued
-endlessly about the world as we wished to make it, the
-shadow of our own narrow troubles darkened that free,
-generous concern for humanity which we talked so eagerly
-of inculcating in people whose narrow troubles engrossed
-them no less blindly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’d better tell Sonia we’re on our way back,” said
-O’Rane. “If you’ve any idea where we shall be to-morrow
-morning, I’ll say she can wire to the post-office.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is she at Crowley Court?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. Remember taking her down there the night
-Tom’s death came through? She’d put her eyes on sticks
-for you over that, George.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She was at her wits’ end, poor child,” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, whether or no he was spreading a snare for me,
-I thought of Barbara by herself at the Abbey, reading of
-a “well-known playwright’s death” and stumbling blindly
-through the dim, panelled rooms in vain search of some
-one to comfort her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We can go back by way of Crowley Court,” I said.
-“I’ll send Babs a telegram. If she’s still at the
-Abbey .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m entirely in your hands,” said O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That night we lay at Exeter; and next day we headed
-for Southampton. As we got into the car, I was given
-a telegram from Barbara:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>All well here hope you are enjoying yourselves can you
-possibly return by way of Crawleigh I need you.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only when I was committed irrevocably did I realize
-that I had not decided how I was to meet her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t pretend for five minutes,” I said. “I never
-could.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. entitled to see her own letters,” O’Rane
-suggested. “You opened this at her request .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, good God, man, she’s my wife!,” I broke out;
-and, remembering the sustained deceit of these fifteen
-months, I could not trust myself to say more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We drove our last stage with heavy hearts. Southampton
-was shrouded in the first fog of the year; and, when
-it lifted on the confines of the New Forest, I saw bare
-trees, dead leaves and all November’s decay. Every few
-minutes O’Rane asked me what point we had now
-reached; and I knew that for him too every turn of the
-road was marked by a memory and guarded by a ghost.
-Through eyes half-closed I could see Jim Loring and the
-Daintons striding, three abreast, on a leave-out walk from
-Melton to Crowley; I could see Eric Lane piloting me
-through Lashmar village to call on his father.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Strange! Though he was now dead, though I had almost
-loved him and though we had both been punished for
-trying to play a game according to its rules, I could not
-forgive him for flinging this last shadow across Barbara’s
-life, I could not whisper his name without a shudder.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we drove through a country that was haunted with
-the shades of our dead selves, I fell to thinking whether
-a man was happier in the discontent of eighteen or the disillusion
-of thirty-eight. I no longer aspired to Westminster
-Abbey and a nation’s gratitude; but, like other men
-on the threshold of middle-age, I made the discovery, incomprehensible
-to a schoolboy, that I had no heir to
-shelter himself under the trees which I had planted; and
-love seemed almost to have been left out of my life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Crawleigh village, my nerve broke and I headed for
-London; then, for very shame in the reproach of O’Rane’s
-silence, I turned, though I knew that no love was awaiting
-me here, and splashed through the floods to the Abbey.
-Neave was fishing perfunctorily by the bridge and volunteered
-to take the car up to the house if I wanted to look
-for Barbara.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The guv’nor’s in London for this Unknown Soldier
-business,” he explained. “So it’s only the four of us.
-Just right for a nice game of cards.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How’s Babs?,” I asked, as unconcernedly as I could.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, fit as a flea,” he answered. “She’s wandering
-about the park, waiting for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I made a pretence of hurrying forward as the car shot
-ahead; then, as it passed out of sight, I leaned against
-the parapet of the bridge till the low grey line of the refectory
-wall deepened to black and was gradually lost in
-the oncoming tide of darkness. I was still there when
-the first rare lights twinkled at the windows and paled as
-the curtains were drawn. Then I heard a distant whistle
-and turned to the house before my impulse to hurry away
-got the better of me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was halfway to the gardens when I saw the white
-coil of Barbara’s furs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Darling! I was expecting you hours ago!,” she
-cried. “Did you have a breakdown? I hope I didn’t
-upset your plans by asking you to come here, George: I
-wanted you most awfully.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could not see her face clearly; but her voice thrilled
-me till I had to bite my lip and look away. I wondered
-how I had existed without her all these weeks. The long
-rest had given her back her old vitality. Her eyes, when
-we entered the hall, were shining; and for a moment I
-fancied that I was seeing her in a vision or that I was
-emerging from twelve days’ delirium.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My <span class='it'>dear</span>!,” I cried; and she laughed with childlike
-exultation at my joy in her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pleased to see your deserted and ill-used wife?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Babs .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Her cheeks were pink from the biting
-cold outside; her hair and eye-lashes were spangled with
-tiny raindrops. As she flung her coat aside and twined
-her arms about my neck, a familiar, faint, warm fragrance
-rose from the carnations at her waist. As she
-clung to me and our lips met, I could have fancied that
-no other man had ever made her heart beat so quickly.
-“I’ve never <span class='it'>seen</span> you like this before!,” I cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been getting well .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. for <span class='it'>your</span> sake, sweetheart.
-I’ve been so patient, so good. And I <span class='it'>did</span> miss
-you so.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been thinking of you day and night,” I answered
-truthfully enough.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The next time you go away, I’ll tell your secretary to
-send me a daily telegram: ‘<span class='it'>Missing you dreadfully best
-love George.</span>’ You’d never do it on your own account.
-What’s the matter, darling?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Unconsciously I must have drawn away from her embrace.
-The delirium was returning; and I could only
-think of the telegram which she had sent me the day after
-she asked Eric Lane to run away with her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Some bad news, I’m afraid. I didn’t want to spoil
-our first moment together, but you’ll have to be told some
-time. I’ve not seen any papers .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara’s hands fell from my shoulders; and she
-walked slowly to the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>have</span>,” she whispered; and her head drooped
-as though I had struck her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mean .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. what .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. what <span class='it'>I</span> mean?,” I stammered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she turned, her eyes were blinded with tears; and
-her hands groped for support.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Darling, if it had been any one else, should I have
-had to say ‘I <span class='it'>need</span> you’? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. When I saw the great
-cruel headlines, I hoped and prayed that I might die .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-till I knew you were being sorry for me. You’re all I
-have; and I promised myself I’d repay you for all your
-patience.” She could go on no longer; and her terrible
-tearless sobbing shook her till I feared that her heart
-must break. “I <span class='it'>can’t</span> be brave any longer.” As she once
-more hid her face against my chest, I could feel her whole
-body trembling in the last vain effort to restrain her
-weeping. “When .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. when .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. when did you hear?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Twelve days ago,” I answered, as I led her to a chair.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The day he died. You .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. didn’t tell me, George.
-Did you think I shouldn’t see?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Strictly speaking, I didn’t hear for certain. I knew
-he was dying .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There was a long article in <span class='it'>The Times</span>. Oh, so
-<span class='it'>cold</span>! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I knew he was terribly ill. That’s what
-made <span class='it'>me</span> so ill this summer, though I couldn’t tell you
-before. I thought you might guess; the doctor did. I’ve
-been going up and down, up and down, as he got better
-or worse. The afternoon he died I fainted; and they
-all thought I was dead too. Now you understand why
-I wrote such horrid letters: as he slipped away, I couldn’t
-bear myself. I <span class='it'>did</span> try to keep it all to myself. I knew
-how I hurt you by talking about him. But no one told
-me anything! .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I couldn’t ask Lady Lane for fear
-she’d say I’d killed him. And he died before I could ask
-him to forgive me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara was no longer trying to control her tears; and
-I was no longer thinking of anything but a means of
-comforting her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He didn’t feel there was anything to forgive,” I assured
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, that was the way he talked!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was the way he thought, Babs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then he might have spared me this!,” Barbara broke
-out. “Just one word!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As her head fell forward, I knelt down and chafed her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He may have been too weak,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A message, then! I can’t <span class='it'>bear</span> it! I didn’t think he
-<span class='it'>could</span> be so cruel.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In furious self-scorn, I remembered telling O’Rane I
-could not pretend for five minutes that I had not received
-Eric’s letter. Very little more than five minutes had
-passed since Barbara and I met.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In justice to him,” I said, “there <span class='it'>was</span> a message. I
-was paraphrasing it. He never dreamt you needed his
-forgiveness, he was begging for yours. He loved you as
-much at the end as he’d ever done. His last words—so
-faint I could hardly read them!—were ‘God bless
-you’. And we must assume that he died at peace. You’d
-forgiven him so often, he said, that, if God was disposed
-to judge him, he believed you would intercede.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In her agony of spirit, Barbara’s thoughts were reflected
-as clearly as if she had spoken them. Her eyes
-lightened for a moment in unutterable relief; they
-clouded as she looked suspiciously to see if I was inventing
-this opportune comfort; then she stared through
-me and past me to Eric’s death-bed six thousand miles
-away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. wrote to you?,” she enquired after a long
-silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I half nodded; but, with Barbara’s eyes on mine, I
-could not put a lie into words.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The letter was to you,” I said. “I opened it with
-the rest.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a single piteous whimper. Then she looked
-at me in perplexity:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where is it? Why didn’t you tell me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s in my despatch-box.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I didn’t want to harrow
-you, darling. I think he was delirious part of the
-time.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Will you get it for me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve told you all that matters. It will only make you
-miserable to read it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She seemed not to have heard me; but a strangled
-laugh, more terrible than her crying, shewed the worth
-of my comfort:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“D’you think anything can make me more miserable
-than I’ve been these last twelve days?,” she asked. Then
-she tore herself from me and stood with her hands
-pressed to her temples, staring at me in mingled bewilderment
-and rage. “All the time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.? And you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?
-The last thing he ever wrote .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. oh, I might have
-reached him while there was still time! When did you
-get the letter?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just before I left London.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“While he was still alive .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Ah, God, the cruelty
-of kind people!” With the tears still wet on her cheeks,
-she forced a smile. “And you’ve been carrying it about
-ever since? George dear, you’ve punished me for all the
-crimes I’ve committed and all that I shall never have
-time to commit if I live to be a thousand.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. May I
-have my letter?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For an instant, as she stood limply drying her eyes, I
-thought of telling her that I had destroyed the letter;
-then I saw that this would never be forgiven me, even if
-I had not already told her that it was with my other
-papers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It will only hurt you to read it,” I said. “Forget it!
-Forget <span class='it'>him</span>, if you can. I’ve told you he had nothing but
-love for you .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why mayn’t I see it? George, I don’t understand!
-I’m not a child; and, if I didn’t know you were
-trying to spare me, I could almost kill you for your
-ghastly kindness. Pocketing it for twelve torturing days,
-as though it were a bill! Pretending he was too weak
-to write! Saying it was a <span class='it'>message</span>! You’ll send me mad
-if you’re not careful!,” she cried hysterically. “For the
-last time, please give me my letter.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For the last time please try to forget there ever was
-a letter. I’ve told you he must have been delirious when
-he wrote. I won’t answer for the consequences if you
-read it. All this time <span class='it'>I’ve</span> been trying to forget it.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My voice told her all that I was trying to hide. Her
-eyes were startled, then compassionate, then defiant. I
-thought I heard a whisper of ‘Poor George’. She raised
-her eyebrows as though to ask what I was minded to do.
-Getting no answer, she shrugged her shoulders and turned
-wearily to the fire:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Was that why you left London?” I said nothing.
-“You told me it was on business. And you’ve been .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-sitting in judgement on me ever since.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I took a step forward and tried to catch her hand:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It has made no difference.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Put it down to my curiosity!,” she taunted. “It’s
-not pleasant .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to be .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>condemned</span> unheard; but
-I couldn’t <span class='it'>bear</span> to be acquitted. Your despatch-box, you
-said?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Babs, I implore you!,” I cried, as she moved to the
-bell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re afraid of being certain?,” she interrupted
-scornfully. “I’m only afraid of sheltering myself behind
-a dead man.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, Henry, Mr. Oakleigh wants his
-despatch-box. And will you see that there’s a good fire
-in the tapestry-room and have his things moved in there?
-The .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. peacocks make so much noise on my side of
-the house,” she added.</p>
-
-<h3>6</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I finished dressing, Barbara tapped at my door and
-came in with Eric’s letter in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you want this, I must give it you back,” she began.
-Her voice had almost left her; and the radiant vitality of
-an hour before had flown. “I hope you won’t have to
-quote it, because these things are so terribly vulgarized in
-court. Do I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. have to be unfaithful? I wasn’t .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-with Eric,” she added carelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know you weren’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I meant to be, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. if I must use that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. unclean
-word. For one moment I had a vision of perfect happiness,
-I forgot everything else.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It would be generous
-of you to say you won’t use this. Eric’s dead. And
-people would think he was to blame.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I certainly shan’t use it. Barbara, why are you talking
-like this?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before she could answer, the letter had to be thrust
-into safety. Then, with one hand clutching it to her
-breast, as though Eric’s heart were beating against hers,
-she looked up and forced her mind on to my question:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because father’s coming down to-morrow, and we
-must decide what we’re going to do. We had to fight him
-pretty hard to get married, but we shall have to fight much
-harder to get divorced.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But no one has mentioned divorce.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I</span> have. You said you could never forget that letter.
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It was a great risk for us to marry; but you
-were so sweet and I was so miserable.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I see now
-that the thing never had a fair chance while Eric was
-alive. I heard his voice in the streets, wherever we’d
-been together, when I knew he was the other side of the
-world; and, as soon as I had a chance, I rushed to him.
-When he wouldn’t have anything to do with me, I <span class='it'>did</span>
-try once more to make a success of our life. You wished
-for a son; and I did my best, though Eric was the only
-man I wanted as father of my children. Perhaps that’s
-why I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. couldn’t keep him alive, poor mite.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-It’s funny that little things should cause such big troubles.
-If I hadn’t asked you to open my letters, we <span class='it'>should</span> have
-made a success.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a moment’s break in her terrible composure;
-and she turned away with a single dry sob.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why didn’t you tell me, Babs?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You wouldn’t have understood; you don’t understand
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I hadn’t understood .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a little, should I have
-come?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Unwittingly, I moved a step forward; and she held up
-her hand against me as though I were assaulting her:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’d understood, you wouldn’t have waited twelve
-days.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was goaded beyond discretion by the scorn in her
-voice. I had understood and forgiven too little, it seemed,
-when I fancied that I had forgiven and understood too
-much.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. a startling letter,” I answered in her
-own measure. “Whenever you told me you’d try to forget
-Eric .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You wondered for twelve days whether you could
-ever trust me again.” She did not trouble to look at me,
-but I felt myself flushing. “As though any other man
-could tear my heart out of me as Eric did! Why <span class='it'>did</span> you
-come?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because <span class='it'>I</span> needed <span class='it'>you</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara’s lip curled in derision:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your servant’s too useful to discharge, so you pretend
-you haven’t caught her stealing! When we met to-night,
-I noticed a difference. I thought you must have seen in
-the papers about Eric’s death. When you kissed me so
-tenderly, my heart leapt; and I thought you really understood.
-Now I know .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The incisive scorn cut deeper as her failing voice died
-away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You <span class='it'>need</span> me because I’m a woman. That’s why you
-insult me with your forgiveness. And that’s why you
-must divorce me, George. We’re divorced in spirit; and
-we should both be dishonoured if we put your <span class='it'>need</span> in
-the place of love.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the distance I heard the gong booming for dinner.
-Neave’s door opened and slammed. A cautious footfall,
-accompanied by a warning whistle, told me that O’Rane
-was making his way downstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall not divorce you,” I told Barbara, “even if I
-could. And I can’t. You’ll be as independent of me in
-Seymour Street as if you were on a South Sea Island.
-But we mustn’t do anything irrevocable till we’re more
-cool-headed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. this is impossible!,” Barbara cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we find it impossible, I shan’t try to keep you.”
-As I followed her down to dinner, I wondered whether
-we either of us realized what we were saying. “Coming
-here to-day,” I told her, “I was thinking that life only
-becomes intolerable when there’s no love in it. If I can
-get back to the state we were in a fortnight ago .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll never do that. You’ll be very kind and attentive,
-as you always are; but I married you because I
-thought you understood. Now you’ve become like any
-other man who puts a cushion at my back or tucks a rug
-round my knees. I’m utterly, utterly indifferent to you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On this, the first night of what she called for two years
-our “life in a gilded cage”, I was chiefly concerned that
-her indifference should be concealed from the sharp eyes
-of Neave and the abnormally sharp hearing of O’Rane.
-With the same intention or in her usual reaction to an
-audience, Barbara sparkled her way through dinner in a
-manner that set me wondering whether I had not waked
-from another nightmare; but, when we looked for her
-afterwards, she had disappeared; and, when I went—as
-a matter of form—to bid her good-night, she answered
-me through a locked door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Neave had asked me at dinner how long I was staying;
-and, when I reached my room, I found a note from Barbara:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>If I am to come at all, I had better come to-morrow.
-Mother has a big party this week-end.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I sat down in front of the fire and tried to picture our
-life on the day after to-morrow. Could Bertrand direct
-my paper if I found it necessary to live in Ireland? Was
-Ireland tolerable or even safe? Could I afford to keep
-two houses in commission if my wife refused to live with
-me. And how long would Barbara endure this spiritual
-starvation?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Utterly, utterly indifferent.</span>” I had never been the
-romance, the passion, the great love which she still demanded
-as of right; even with Eric Lane out of the
-way, I could not deck out my humdrum self as a fairy
-prince. If I failed in the “understanding” for which
-alone she had married me, how was her indifference
-ever to be overcome? The whole of our life must be
-such an evening as this, when she donned a brilliant
-mask of gaiety for dinner and discarded it when she
-locked her door against me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A sudden thought urged me from my chair and sent
-me pacing up and down my room. How many other
-masks did Barbara employ? She dramatized her life so
-richly that, though her grief for Eric was unfeigned, I
-doubted if she could resist the temptation to make a
-romance out of his death. Had she been still unmarried,
-she would have cast herself for a part of inconsolable
-bereavement; as I obtruded awkwardly into her scene,
-she chose a blend of remorse for the injury she had done
-him and of heroic endeavour to forget him in her devotion
-to me. Unconsciously, in that queer childish brain that
-could never separate sincerity from pretence, the phrases
-had formed themselves; the emotion that fed the phrases
-had been fed by them. Instinctively she had changed her
-attitude and improvised a new part when she heard of
-Eric’s letter; and this trick of dramatizing her life was
-now so much ingrained in her nature that within half an
-hour she was perfect in her lines, her expression and her
-whole reading of the part. Henceforward she would
-continue to regard herself as “a damned soul”, with the
-added damnation of being tied to a crass, unsympathetic
-husband and of conspiring with him to deceive her neighbours
-as she had deceived O’Rane and Neave at dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I readily believed that Barbara had forgotten half the
-agony of Eric’s death in the joy of playing her new part.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But how long is it to go on?,” I asked myself in
-despair.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The new part had in some sort been forced upon her;
-she could not relinquish it without abandoning her attitude
-of moral superiority to one who already believed her
-to be morally in the wrong and would believe her to be
-yet more deeply in the wrong if she admitted that even
-her grand romance had been a piece of play-acting. And
-play-acting it had been for half the time! She could have
-married Eric if she had dared to admit that Jack Waring
-was tired of her, instead of pretending that she was
-pledged to him.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next day the Crawleighs arrived in time for luncheon;
-and we returned to London in the afternoon. Our departure
-was on the border-line between farce and tragedy.
-Muffled in furs and bathed in the warm fragrance of her
-beloved carnations, Barbara took her place by my side;
-her eyes were shining as when I came back to her the day
-before; and her undemonstrative mother was stirred to
-exclaim: “My dear, you really <span class='it'>do</span> look very lovely.”
-Crawleigh, who had recently met my uncle at dinner
-and was overcharged with repartees that had not occurred
-to him in time, stood with one foot on the running-board
-and emphasized his endless rejoinders with
-excited cutting movements of a tremulous forefinger. In
-the background stretched the low grey walls of the Abbey,
-unchanged since the days when the first marquis criticized
-the treaty of Vienna, unchanged since Lord Chancellor
-Neave cavilled at the peace of Utrecht, unchanged since
-some nameless political abbot pointed the significance of
-Crécy and attacked the staff-work at Poictiers. I can no
-more reproduce my father-in-law’s arguments than I can
-reconstruct those of his predecessors; but I remember
-being told that now, two years after the armistice, we
-were in a more parlous state than when the war was still
-raging.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s what my uncle always tells me,” I answered,
-though it was not worth while to remind Crawleigh that
-this was what I had been preaching in despised <span class='it'>Peace</span> for
-fifteen months. “If you sow the wind, you must expect
-to reap the whirlwind.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reply probably bore no relation to the argument,
-but I wanted to get away; and I had not listened to the
-argument.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the car turned out of sight, Barbara flung aside one
-mask and pulled another into place. Her eyes lost their
-colour; her whole body seemed to grow limp. Appearances
-no longer needed to be maintained.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So we returned home, to reap a whirlwind. My trite
-phrase haunted me. I wondered who had sown the wind.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap09'>CHAPTER FOUR</h1></div>
-
-<h3>IN A GILDED CAGE</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>For remember (this our children shall know: we are too near for that knowledge)</p>
-<p class='line0'>Not our mere astonied camps, but Council and Creed and College—</p>
-<p class='line0'>All the obese, unchallenged old things that stifle and overlie us—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Have felt the effects of the lesson we got—an advantage no money could buy us!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:center;'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>It was our fault, and our very great fault—and now we must turn it to use;</p>
-<p class='line0'>We have forty million reasons for failure, but not a single excuse!</p>
-<p class='line0'>So the more we work and the less we talk the better results we shall get—</p>
-<p class='line0'>We have had an Imperial lesson; it may make us an Empire yet!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Rudyard Kipling</span>: <span class='it'>The Lesson</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My return home from Crawleigh Abbey brought to my
-mind the reappearance of the small boy in <span class='it'>Punch</span>, who,
-finding his running-away unremarked at the end of one
-whole day, drew attention to it by observing that his parents
-had the same old cat. For a single moment, as
-O’Rane and I reached Salisbury Plain, I had remembered
-that the world was revolving in sublime unconcern at my
-private tragedy; then a starless night of misery enveloped
-me once more. In London, a fortnight later, I was
-amazed to find letters and messages, proofs and manuscripts
-from people who seemed still interested in unemployment
-or reparations, in the fate of Ireland or the
-coalition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Now and for many weeks I thought only of new
-means to win back a woman who had become a stranger
-to me. After her first declaration of “indifference, utter
-indifference”, Barbara never weakened the effect of her
-action by talking about it; when I had influenza, she
-nursed me as she would have nursed any man who had
-the misfortune to fall sick in her house; when she caught
-my influenza and aggravated it with pleurisy, she allowed
-me to take her abroad to recuperate. No two acquaintances,
-sharing the same house, could have lived in greater
-harmony; and no woman could have devised a keener
-torment than by treating lover, husband or friend as an
-acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meanwhile, the external world was still revolving.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I want to see you about these articles of yours</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”,
-wrote Bertrand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’ll be a general election within six months,” Sir
-Philip Saltash predicted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I hoped to find you had knocked some sense into
-David’s head</span>,” Sonia lamented.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘I see you have the same old cat’,” I whispered to
-myself in astonishment.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It is a tribute, I think, to our loyalty in public that my
-marriage to Barbara was commonly quoted at this time
-as one of the very few successful unions in an age of
-confessed failures and desperate escapes. Had I imagined
-at the beginning that our unreal separation could drag
-on for two years, the myth of our blissful harmony would
-soon have been exploded. As it was, we drifted. I
-thought by day, I dreamed by night, of a romantic reconciliation
-that never came. There were moments when
-I fancied that Barbara, with her passion for dramatizing
-life, forgot her boredom in the excitement of martyrdom.
-On some plea, which I do not remember, she gave
-up entertaining; and, while the young “London of the
-restoration”—in Bertrand’s phrase—went leaderless,
-she had the barren pleasure of feeling herself wasted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By degrees which I cannot recall I was driven to spend
-more and more time at my office and to dine more and
-more often at a club. Her indifference spread beyond me
-to all the men and women who in other days had interested
-her; it culminated in her dispassionate efforts to
-interest her husband in some other woman. I returned
-home one evening to be told that Ivy Gaymer had fled to
-us for sanctuary and that Barbara was waiting for me
-to say whether we should send her back to her husband
-or communicate with Mr. Justice Maitland or wait helplessly
-for something to turn up. As Ivy was already in
-bed, we could hardly prick her into the street at midnight;
-and next morning she ruled out our first two courses by
-declaring that she would never again enter the house of
-a man who intrigued with other women under her nose
-and that her father’s advice and sympathy were limited
-to the triumphant question: what else could any one expect?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We decided to wait for something to turn up. I did
-not want to be inhospitable, but I wanted still less to hear
-Barbara talking about my “little <span class='it'>protégée</span>”. After a
-week or two I suggested that there were hotels in plenty
-and that Ivy was not without money. Barbara confined
-herself to saying that, as I had insisted on the creature’s
-staying on in the first instance, it was now my delicate
-task to evict her. Following the cowardly expedient of
-writing what I was afraid to utter by word of mouth, I
-sent a note to Ivy’s room one night, asking what her plans
-were; we should, I said, be going down to Crawleigh for
-Easter. By ill luck, she was still up; and her reply was
-delivered from the foot of my bed, where she sat, smoking
-cigarettes, in scantier clothes than women usually
-wear in public. If we kept the house open, she would
-not in the least mind staying on by herself; her solicitors
-were advising a divorce; it was saintly of us to take her
-in; and she would not have troubled us if she had not been
-in fear of her life. The interview was ended damagingly
-by Barbara, who came in to insist maternally that, if Ivy
-and I wanted to talk, she must put on a warm dressing-gown.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though my door was locked against similar conferences
-in the future, my next attempt was no more fortunate.
-Ivy agreed that she must go and then broke into
-piteous weeping. I comforted her as well as Barbara’s
-expression of scornful amusement permitted; and, when
-the weeping broke out afresh as Ivy began to pack, I
-recollected an overdue appointment at my office. On my
-return, our guest was still in possession.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s cried herself sick,” Barbara told me. “You
-can say she must go, George, or you can say she may
-stop on; but it’s cruel to keep making her cry.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I want her to go,” I said, without enlarging the field
-of debate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was a pity you asked her in the first place, if you
-were going to turn her out.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I fancy she asked herself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I thought she was a passion of yours,” said Barbara
-in faint surprise. “You made me go to her wedding,
-when I hardly knew her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At O’Rane’s request: because her father was being
-so difficult.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a pause; then Barbara shrugged her
-shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think she’s rather in love with you,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s very flattering,” I said, “but it doesn’t make
-things any easier. Her affections are quickly aroused.
-First it was Eric, then Gaymer; now .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t believe it? George, you’re sometimes
-rather unobservant. Why d’you think she came <span class='it'>here</span> of
-all places?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should think she was banking on the softness of
-your heart or of my head,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I hardly knew whether to be surprised or not when I
-found Ivy still with us next day, but I made no further
-attempt to dislodge her. At the end of the week Barbara
-went to Crawleigh and I telephoned for a room at the
-Eclectic Club. New developments in Ireland kept me
-tied to the office at the last moment; and I did not choose
-that my wife or Ivy’s husband should be able to say that
-the two of us had been alone together. After four-and-twenty
-hours’ solitude Ivy discovered that it was possible
-to live in an hotel without being tracked by her drunken
-and homicidal lord; and the incident closed when Barbara
-came into my room, on the night of her return from the
-Abbey, with a brief letter of thanks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’d get tired of her very soon,” she said judicially,
-as though I still needed to be saved from myself. “So
-would any man. That’s why I begged Eric not to marry
-her. I believe you’d be happier, though, if you found
-some woman who really interested you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That advice is more suitable for a bachelor than for
-a married man,” I pointed out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara walked to the door in silence, then paused with
-her fingers on the handle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And how long is this going on?,” she asked with a
-sigh of utter exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You alone can say that,” I replied.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tragic farce had been running for six months and
-was to run for another eighteen before the farce was
-eliminated and only the tragedy remained. Without
-regular employment, I should have gone out of my mind;
-and I am thankful that my uncle’s increasing infirmities
-threw ever more and more of our work on my shoulders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was in the spring of 1921 that he despaired openly
-and finally of the existing government; it was in the summer
-that he called for a change.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Though, mark you, there’s not another man who
-could have done what George has!,” cried Bertrand with
-the generous appreciation that Jack Sheppard might have
-exhibited towards Dick Turpin. “After two years of
-power he’s made a tumbledown peace that satisfies no one.
-He <span class='it'>hasn’t</span> hanged the kaiser; he <span class='it'>hasn’t</span> made Germany
-pay for the war. The League of Nations, which we were
-promised, <span class='it'>isn’t</span> functioning; he calls a new conference
-every few weeks to settle finally the problems which were
-finally settled at Versailles. If that isn’t an achievement
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, admitted!,” I said. “I’m thinking about the day
-of reckoning.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were walking slowly along Knightsbridge on our
-way to one of the weekly editorial dinners; and, as we
-approached the French Embassy, I crossed the road for
-fear of encountering Lucien de Grammont. My shoulders
-were not broad enough to support the load of obloquy
-which he kept in reserve for our few, uneasy meetings;
-and, though I stated candidly that the French were now
-the chief obstacles to peace, I could not persuade Lucien
-that it was the prime minister and not the humble editor
-of an obscure review who had coaxed the French to open
-their mouths and shut their eyes at Versailles. Now that
-no sweetmeats were to be had, the French were threatening
-to undertake the search themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was the first bill to be met on the day of reckoning;
-but I was not prepared to say that it would be the
-last or the heaviest. In Ireland, the practice of wholesale
-murder and destruction was being met with reprisals in
-kind. Of India and Egypt it is enough to say that we
-knew very little, that all we knew was bad and that we
-were not allowed to print all we knew.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s my point,” said Bertrand with cynical complacency.
-“Any one of these things would have brought
-down a government in old days. Take taxation! Take
-unemployment!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My one consolation,” I broke in, “is that <span class='it'>no</span> man,
-even if damned fools call him a ‘little wizard’, can cope
-with all that at the same moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll write you an article on <span class='it'>The First Duty of Government</span>,”
-Bertrand promised. “And that, some of these
-gentry may be surprised to hear, is .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. to <span class='it'>govern</span>.”</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My most vivid memory of my uncle’s subsequent diatribe
-was that I declined to publish it. In Ireland or
-France, where irony is understood, it would have gone
-with a swing; but we were unpopular enough already
-without assailing the cherished conviction of the English
-that they have a natural talent for self-government. And
-this is what Bertrand attempted with artful citations
-from any convenient speech in which an English publicist
-had asserted that Dervishes, Hottentots, Andaman
-Islanders or even Irishmen were unfit to govern themselves.
-Could darkest Africa shew such a record of misrule
-as we had at our doors? Had Egypt plunged to
-bankruptcy with greater recklessness than we displayed?
-By the standard of our Indian crimes and blunders, was
-not Abdul the Damned unjustly damned? The English
-were mistaken, but it was not too late to repair the mistake;
-and my uncle proposed in conclusion that the United
-States should lend Mr. Herbert Hoover for six months
-to organize and run the British Empire Protectorate.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It won’t do, Bertrand,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But isn’t it true?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s too true.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That, however, was not to say that the English had
-enough detachment to relish the truth underlying the
-irony. Roger Dainton, on the eve of signing the Ulster
-covenant, told me—as an Englishman—that the Irish
-would never be fit for independence till they had acquired
-respect for law; I had seen Violet Loring whiten to the
-lips at the report of a lynching in some southern state
-and then regain her colour in a spasm of indignation that
-a Quaker had not been shot for refusing to enter the
-army. Collectively, I had watched the people of London—and,
-for all I know, the people of England outdid them—exhibiting,
-at the time of the Pemberton-Billing case, a
-ferocious credulity that was not exceeded by the French
-in the Dreyfus trial.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, write your own damned article,” said Bertrand.
-“If you think you know these people .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I believe that in one respect I understand the English,
-among whom I was brought up, better than Bertrand, to
-whom they were always a race of despised aliens. What
-they lack in imagination they make up in a queer political
-instinct. Every one at the Eclectic Club was sublimely
-indifferent, in these days, to the case of Egyptian autonomy;
-the Amritsar sentences only provoked a desultory
-discussion whether “damned black men”, as I heard them
-described by Sir Roger Dainton, would not be all the
-better for “an occasional dressing-down”. When, however,
-national bankruptcy was threatened, I encountered
-an instinctive preference for solvency; and, when refugees
-from all parts of Ireland flooded England with tales of
-assassination and counter-assassination, the British liking
-for order at home grew clamant. I remember carrying
-back to Seymour Street an official poster in which
-recruits were invited to “<span class='it'>Join the Royal Air Force and</span>
-<span class='it'>See the World</span>”; an unofficial hand had appended the
-grim warning: “<span class='it'>Join the Royal Irish Constabulary and
-See the Next World</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s beyond a joke: that’s what it is,” said Robson,
-on whom I tried the last of my experiments.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For soul-deadening years, my butler’s sentiment had
-been expressed, from different angles, by Crawleigh and
-Bertrand, by O’Rane and Dainton, by <span class='it'>Peace</span> and the
-<span class='it'>Morning Post</span>. I believe, however, that no change of
-heart can be effected by one man or one paper. England
-accepted the reformation and acquiesced in the decapitation
-of Charles the First when the Robsons of those
-days—inarticulate and irrational, for the most part, but
-numerous and determined—decided that the unreformed
-Catholic Church or the divine right of kings was “beyond
-a joke”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve written my own damned article,” I telephoned
-to Bertrand. “I think it’s an improvement on yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You <span class='it'>would</span>,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think this government has very long to live,”
-I added.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The oldest trick in the bag of a political journalist
-is to find out what policy is going to be followed, to insist
-vehemently that this policy must be followed and to
-take credit for having forced his own policy on a vacillating
-and apathetic government. During the war, Sir
-John Woburn preached conscription from the moment
-when his chief spy in the cabinet had revealed that ministers
-were agreed to bring conscription in: the Press Combine
-advertised itself for months as the mouthpiece of
-that opinion which demanded conscription; and, when the
-first military service act was passed, Woburn stood forth
-as the giant who had forced the government, in his own
-phrase, “to give Haig the men”. I have to guard against
-the temptation to employ this trick in writing of our
-campaign in 1921. Independently of our prompting,
-every one was saying that ministers must govern or go;
-and I only realized how far opinion had swung, when
-I met the lately ennobled Lord Saltash at a public dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, things are moving,” he began darkly, as he led
-me to the Turf and Stage and pointed from an unobserved
-corner of the gallery to Lord Lingfield’s customary
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I needed a few minutes to penetrate the familiar externals.
-My cousin Laurence Hunter-Oakleigh was entertaining
-a party of American revue actresses; Sam Dainton
-was dancing with Ivy Gaymer; and the inscrutable
-Gaspard was watching and ministering with his wonted
-resourcefulness and address. It was like going back to a
-play at the end of a long run. I felt that they must all of
-them have been frozen in the same attitude since last I
-looked down on the top of their heads a year before. The
-band, which played unceasingly from the moment we arrived
-to the moment we left, might well have been playing
-for twelve months on end. It was impossible to think of
-these sleek heads and slim figures without their Turf and
-Stage frame, unless you thought of them as the brilliant,
-glossy chorus of mannequins and salesmen in a musical
-comedy at the Hilarity in old days. Had they homes?
-Had they private lives?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I see Wister is withdrawing the support of his
-papers from the coalition,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, he’s out for an all-conservative ministry,” answered
-Saltash. “Foreditch put him up to it; and you
-can see they’re trying to nobble Wilmot Dean for their
-new ginger-group. The rank-and-file tories don’t want
-to drive Ll-G. out, though, till they’re sure of keeping
-him out. And Lingfield, who’s leading the rank-and-file,
-doesn’t believe they can do it yet, unless Bonar comes
-back. That’s why he wants a centre party, to include
-Birkenhead, Winston and that lot. It’s interesting, devilish
-interesting! The dying lion ain’t dead yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What line are you taking yourself?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A wise man wouldn’t commit himself till the dying
-lion was much nearer his last kick,” Saltash answered
-with refreshing candour. “If Lingfield’s centre party
-falls down, he and Birkenhead and Austen won’t get any
-mercy from Foreditch and the men who want an all-conservative
-ministry; and, if Foreditch wounds Ll-G. without
-killing the coalition, his die-hard tories needn’t look
-for office from the centre party. It’s too early to say.
-When I give you the hint .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’m here most evenings,”
-he concluded with an affability that rather disquieted me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll remember that,” I said; and, when the last of
-many political crises ended fifteen months later in the
-prime minister’s resignation, I made it my business to
-dine nightly at the Turf and Stage. I was never a member;
-but Sonia, who also was not a member, introduced
-me to Gaspard; and Gaspard, bowing from the waist,
-assured me in the French of the Midi that Mrs. O’Rane’s
-friends were always welcome.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was not at the club on the night when Saltash
-took me to observe the signs of the times; but I found
-her husband talking to Barbara when I arrived home. He
-was armed with the notes of an article and wished to
-use my paper for an attack on the entire English system
-of inheritance and property.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re hypnotized by 1914,” he broke out stormily.
-“We treat the old world like a vast Pompeii, which we’re
-uncovering bit by bit. People won’t see that we’re repairing
-from copies of old models.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’d sooner live in old Pompeii than in new Turin,”
-Barbara murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If Pompeii had been paradise in 1914, it would be
-an outworn paradise now!” O’Rane, I thought, looked
-tired and old, as though perpetual opposition was gradually
-wearing him down. “The world changes in seven
-years, especially if the inhabitants have spent four of
-them withstanding a stream of molten lava. Can you
-tell me a single idea we’ve put forward, a single effort
-we’ve made to improve on 1914 so that Pompeii shall not
-be buried again?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I left Barbara to wrestle with his question while I
-glanced at the manuscript article. O’Rane’s own contribution
-to the ideas of the new age seemed to be that the
-hand of every man must be against his neighbour so long
-as unequal wealth made the one arrogant and the other
-envious. As human capacities were unequal, wealth must
-continue to be unequally amassed for a single lifetime;
-but to perpetuate this inequality was to perpetuate the
-friction that ultimately lead to revolution and civil war.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re at least consistent,” I said. “On the night
-Stornaway died, you told me there was no room in the
-modern state for these gigantic fortunes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I doubt if we have room for private transmitted
-wealth of any kind,” he answered. “It debilitates the individual,
-it demoralizes society. I’m seeing that every
-day in my own work.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The subject was too big to discuss at midnight; but,
-as his article was avowedly the preamble to a declaration
-that he was bent at all costs on saving humanity from the
-poison of the Lancing inheritance, I warned him that the
-unemployed might break his windows if they heard that
-a million a year was going to feed distant Russians when
-they themselves had not eaten a square meal for twelve
-months. I asked whether his wife approved of the article,
-but received no answer. Finally, I returned him his
-manuscript with a reminder that I could not stultify my
-weekly predictions of insolvency by proclaiming of a sudden
-that we were all suffering from too much money.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll try elsewhere,” said O’Rane without resentment.
-“I’m sorry, but I’m not surprised. You’re hypnotized
-by 1914, too, and you think you can avert another eruption
-by treaties and boards of arbitration. They didn’t
-stop the war in ’14, George; they never <span class='it'>have</span> stopped wars,
-they never will. If you’d change the course of history,
-you must change the heart of man.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The more I study the heart of man .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” I was beginning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It changes daily,” O’Rane cried. “It changed when
-man turned sick at gladiatorial shows and slavery and
-torture. It will change again when men find that cooperation
-is more comfortable than competition. But
-you’ll have competition always—the competition of the
-rich with the poor, among individuals and nations, the
-inevitable forerunner to every revolution and war—so
-long as you crystallize an unequal distribution of wealth.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Write me an article on that theme,” I said, “and I’ll
-publish it gladly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My invitation and promise were forgotten by O’Rane,
-I imagine, as quickly as I forgot his demand that I should
-find a new spirit moving on the face of the waters. When
-I reached Fetter Lane next morning, I was greeted by
-Spence-Atkins with news which made Saltash’s predictions
-obsolete and O’Rane’s researches premature. With
-or without our reminder that the business of a government
-was to govern, ministers were hatching a new Irish policy.
-Like most Irish policies, it could be guaranteed to divide
-England even if it failed to unite Ireland; and I felt
-then and later that the decay of the coalition set in on
-this day. Like all new moves in the Irish game at this
-time, it was certain to keep me in London when I wanted
-to take Barbara to Scotland.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The result of the new negotiations has passed into
-history; and from first to last I was narrowly preoccupied
-with their effect on my own fortunes. If the
-south-west of Ireland became habitable again, I was resolved
-to make it my home; and, at the end of many
-months’ parleying, I was wakened by a telephone-message
-from my uncle to say that a settlement had been
-reached. After threatening reconquest, the government
-had ascertained that to “reconquer” Ireland would cost
-as much and take as long as the last South African war;
-those who had preached coercion changed their text to
-conciliation; and, as I passed through Inverness, the king’s
-ministers were meeting the ministers of President de
-Valera on equal terms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The treaty,” Bertrand’s message ran, “was signed
-in the small hours. Outside a portion of Ulster, Ireland
-is to be a Free State.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And now,” I answered, “and now .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. now perhaps
-we may see home-rule for England.” In 1906 I had
-brought a young man’s ideals to Westminster; thirty
-years before me, my father had done the same; and ten
-years before him, though he might now call his ideals
-illusions, Bertrand had entered parliament with hope and
-vision. One after another, each in our generation, we
-had seen our vision clouded and our hope deferred by
-the shadow of Ireland. “May I go home now?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t spare you yet,” Bertrand sighed. “The
-trouble’s not over. There are thousands of Irishmen
-who’ve taken a solemn oath of allegiance to the republic
-for which their fathers and brothers laid down their lives.
-There are thousands of English who will say in every
-passing difficulty: ‘I <span class='it'>told</span> you so! Ireland is unfit for
-self-government.’ We must preach patience, George.
-We must try to sweeten the bitter taste that all this blood
-has left on our lips. Lake House can get along without
-you for the present.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I was only thinking Barbara and I should be the better
-for a change,” I answered with deliberate vagueness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I kept my disappointment to myself, I could not
-help being disappointed. This talk of peace had suddenly
-opened an unexpected vista of escape from the “gilded
-cage”; and my single glimpse of freedom convinced me
-that I could not continue the armed neutrality which Barbara
-had been imposing on me for a twelvemonth. We
-must be reconciled or divorced. If we could separate even
-for a short time, we might be able to decide what we
-wanted. I therefore told Bertrand that he must not count
-on me indefinitely; and the old man shewed the wisdom
-to give me my change by sending me to America for
-the Washington Conference.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“One of us ought to be there; and I’m too old,” he
-explained. “I don’t know what stuffing the new president
-has inside him; but this is the first serious effort
-to undo the harm of the Versailles treaty, and Harding
-is the first responsible statesman to say frankly that we’re
-all committing financial suicide. You’ll go?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will,” I promised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you’ll take Barbara?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll talk to her about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And that night I told her of my decision.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you expecting me to come with you?,” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It will be better for us both if I go alone. When I
-come back, you’ll have had time to think quietly .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can picture you talking to your clerks like this,”
-Barbara mocked. “ ‘Your last chance, remember!’ .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“To think quietly,” I repeated, “whether you would
-prefer me to live in Ireland. Conditions are becoming
-normal there .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must <span class='it'>really</span> decide for yourself where you want
-to live,” she answered, without hinting whether she
-wished me to live alone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A week later I sailed from Southampton.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I had expected to find any striking change on my
-return, I should have been disappointed; but I fancy that
-I had by now ceased to look for the romantic reconciliations
-of the film-world. There was little enough change
-anywhere. My father-in-law had given me a farewell
-dinner on the night before I sailed; he gave me a dinner
-of welcome on the night that I returned. Tempers, I
-thought, were a little shorter; nerves a little thinner. The
-vague feeling that something decisive must soon happen
-reminded me of 1914, when the world expected a cataclysm
-and almost hoped for it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And certainly the conference has done nothing to
-avert it,” I told Bertrand at the end of dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not the French show-down?,” he asked. “After
-this, we can talk frankly instead of gushing about our
-gallant allies. We all made grievous mistakes at the
-peace conference, George, but it’s the French who are
-keeping us from repairing them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Which will coerce which?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The question, I could see, was not palatable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’ve the best air-force in the world and could lay
-London in ruins within a week,” Bertrand growled.
-“It’s immeasurably superior to anything we saw in the
-war. They can hold Germany down with aeroplanes and
-niggers; and, when you ask them why they won’t reduce
-their submarines, you don’t get a satisfactory answer. I
-can give it to you. They’re going to make themselves
-masters of Europe before any one has time to stop them.
-They worked against us in Poland, they’re working
-against us in the near east.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you propose to make use of this knowledge?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It may lead to clear thinking. Why <span class='it'>we</span> should pay
-six shillings in the pound to relieve them of an income-tax,
-when they’re amassing armaments .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was very little change anywhere. Lady John
-Carstairs hoped vaguely that we were not going to desert
-our late allies; Violet Loring whispered that it was all
-very well for dear Phyllis to preach at us, but America
-had deserted every one. I provoked a passing storm by
-asserting that all international debts would have ultimately
-to be forgiven; and, had any one asked wherein the world
-was safer or happier than in 1914, he must have waited
-long for an answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An hour later, as we drove home, Barbara enquired
-expressionlessly whether I had enjoyed my holiday from
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wanted <span class='it'>you</span> to have a holiday from me,” I answered.
-“No, I missed you horribly. I should like to think you
-missed me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, why say that?,” she exclaimed with sudden petulance.
-“If I could have a holiday from myself so that I
-didn’t see how my life has been wasted, if I could lose
-my memory .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Dear God, if I could only die!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no change in her; and I was driven to issue
-my ultimatum:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’d like me to go away again, I will. And this
-time I shouldn’t upset you by coming back. I’ve done
-my best; and I’ve failed. We can part friends. If you
-want a divorce, you can have it now.”.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Somehow, I don’t see you in the divorce-court,”
-Barbara murmured half to herself. “I feel you’d bungle
-it. When I wrote and begged you to come back, you
-<span class='it'>would</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. by special train.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, the matter is now in your hands,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think you’ve a finer collection of worn-out phrases
-than any man I know,” she cried, again without answering
-my question.</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No change of any kind!,” I told my cousin Violet
-when we dined with her a fortnight after my return to
-England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara had not mentioned divorce again; and I believe
-we were summoned to Loring House with a view to mending
-the latest breach between Sonia and her husband.
-He, unchanging in stubbornness, had published the article
-which I rejected and was threatening to follow it with
-others; Sonia, unchanging in tactics, had announced that
-she would walk out of the house unless he yielded. Bertrand,
-unchanging in the beloved formula which he applied
-indiscriminately to cigarette-smoking, Christianity,
-<span class='it'>vers libre</span>, welfare-work, side-whiskers and “self-determination”,
-explained that this was only a phase, which
-one or other or both would outgrow. And Violet, whose
-kindness of heart nothing could change, was playing
-counsellor and friend of all parties.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We, I suppose,” said Barbara, “are to be the object-lesson
-in domestic felicity. When women have married
-the wrong men, as Sonia and I did, it’s rather a waste
-of time for any one to patch it up.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If there’s been a fair trial,” I said, “you should end
-what you can’t mend. Armed neutrality is intolerable.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Barbara’s thoughtful look I fancied she was
-wondering whether I wanted a divorce in order to marry
-some one else.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The trouble is,” she continued, “you never know
-who is the right man till you’ve married him. I always
-thought you had more perfect understanding than any
-man I knew .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Funny!,” she added, as I made no
-answer.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No answer seemed possible. There was now no change
-in our rare private passages, though I thought the reference
-to my want of understanding was dragged in to
-close the subject of divorce. There was no change in the
-atmosphere of this party. Nearly seven years had passed
-since Violet and I last dined together at Loring House.
-The noble line of portraits had been reinforced by a black-and-white
-sketch of Jim in uniform; Sandy was old
-enough for his mother to consult me about schools; but
-we were arguing now in the very mood and terms that
-we had used in 1914.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wish people wouldn’t talk so much about ‘the next
-war’,” Violet muttered with a frown in the direction of
-Philip Hornbeck. “I’ve lost my husband; I’m not going
-to lose my son if I can help it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The big, softly-lighted room reminded me of my interminable
-discussions with Jim and of his own admission
-on the outbreak of war that the old governing classes
-were played out. I was reminded, too, of the question
-that had haunted me in the first weeks of the armistice:
-if the order that was represented at this table could not
-keep peace or make peace, would it have to give way?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We talk about the next war,” I said, “because the
-combined wisdom of the world has done nothing in the
-last three years to prevent it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose the prime minister <span class='it'>is</span> the only man .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?”
-she hazarded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Every prime minister is indispensable,” I answered,
-“till he finds himself on an opposition bench, watching
-his successor taking command. Five minutes after
-George goes, every one will ask why he didn’t go before.
-Every one will discover then the vice of all coalitions:
-which is that there’s no one to oppose them. You don’t
-expect Curzon to admit that Lloyd-George’s foreign
-policy is dangerous?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Can nobody do anything from outside?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The press does its best, but this government is
-stronger than the press. Otherwise, Woburn and his
-combine would have had George out in the street a year
-ago. Your best hope is an intrigue from inside. Ll-G.
-was at least equally responsible for the shortage of high
-explosives in ’15; yet he put the blame on the others and
-broke the Asquith government. It may be done again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My voice carried to Bertrand’s side of the table and
-roused him from one of his now periodical lapses into
-slumber.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If the House of Commons contained anybody one
-half as clever, Ll-G. would not now be prime minister,”
-he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No change; and no prospect of a change until it was
-forced upon us by another cataclysm. It was the public
-temper that alarmed me more than any concrete problem
-of unemployment or proved blunders of policy. On my
-first appearance in Fetter Lane I asked young Triskett
-for a sketch of the political position; and the tone of his
-reply reminded me disquietingly of the recklessness and
-exasperation of 1914.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The prime ministers of the allies,” proclaimed Triskett
-with the pomp of a toast-master, “have been meeting
-in discord and parting in harmony, without settling
-anything. The public, however, me lords, ladies <span class='it'>and</span>
-gentlemen, has by now ceased to expect settlements. We
-have had a new policy once a week to bring Russia back
-into what the poet so felicitously calls ‘the comity of
-nations’; a protest once a fortnight against bolshevist
-propaganda in the far east; and winged words from the
-labour party once a month, when it thinks Winston has
-a new scheme for invading Russia. Reparations, my dear
-Oakleigh, are rather <span class='it'>vieux jeu</span>: we don’t remind Ll-G.
-of his promises to hang the kaiser or ‘make the Huns
-pay’; if we did, the French might try to catch us up
-for an invasion of the Ruhr. We’re rather short with
-the French since the Washington Conference. At home,
-you’ll find the prime minister has got a new wind, but
-everybody’s very sick of him. Gawd, and I’m sick of
-everything!,” he added with his first approach to sincerity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bitter, neurotic voice reminded me of a night,
-some eight years earlier, in my old room, a quarter of a
-mile away in Bouverie Street. Van Arden and Jack Summertown
-then burst in with the announcement that they
-were bored beyond endurance; we must break windows
-or light a bonfire in Trafalgar Square. “Sick of everything!,”
-they repeated at short intervals. I could not
-join in whatever debauch they arranged: it was press-night,
-for one reason; and, for another—unless my memory
-be at fault—, this was the Thursday following the
-Serajevo assassinations, when universal dissatisfaction
-sought practical expression. Arden and Summertown
-were now dead; but Triskett stood in their place. And
-Trisketts, multiplied to infinity, furnished the atmosphere,
-the fuel and the spark whereby the world was periodically
-set ablaze. The Triskett of an earlier generation had
-told his friends in Paris that a bit of a revolution would
-at least liven things; he had urged Lafayette to fire on
-the mob at Versailles “just to see what would happen”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I mentioned this fancy to Bertrand and O’Rane at the
-end of dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s the revolt against peace, after the incessant excitement
-of war,” said my uncle, who had been loudly
-regaled with private mutinies for the last hour. Ivy Gaymer
-was now in the precarious legal region “between the
-<span class='it'>nisi</span> and the absolute”; Sam Dainton had scandalized his
-parents by opening a cocktail-bar in Swallow Street; and
-Barbara was contemplating a volume of autobiography.
-“I’m afraid we’re drifting .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re refusing to admit there’s been a war,” Raney
-struck in. “You can’t expect anything to be the same;
-and it’s because I’m afraid to drift that I’m carrying out
-a new idea with this money.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were not encouraged by O’Rane’s tone to break the
-rather embarrassing silence that followed. I had noticed
-before dinner that he and his wife had not merely—in
-the language of stage directions—“come into the
-room”; they had “entered, conversing with animation”.
-As we drove home, I asked Barbara whether Violet had
-effected a reconciliation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If he publishes any more articles, Sonia will repudiate
-them,” she answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And if he repudiates her repudiation?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’ll repudiate him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Um. I rather hoped, when I saw them together .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Husbands and wives who get on well in public always
-arouse my worst suspicions,” said Barbara. “No,
-there’s no change.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was still pondering our hard-worked phrase when
-we re-entered our “gilded cage”; and Barbara had
-slipped away to bed before I could ask her whether a man
-erred more grievously by doing everything that his wife
-demanded or nothing.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap10'>CHAPTER FIVE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>“UN SACRIFICE INUTILE”</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. They say, the tongues of dying men</p>
-<p class='line0'>Enforce attention, like deep harmony;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Where words are scarce, they are seldom spent in vain;</p>
-<p class='line0'>For they breathe truth, that breathe their words in pain.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Shakespeare</span>: <span class='it'>King Richard II</span>.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“On the turf,” expounded my uncle Bertrand, “races
-are won by the intelligence of the individual backer. It
-is only when you lose that you divide the responsibility
-between the breeder, the trainer, the jockey and the horse.
-That is why the sporting tipster is the happiest of men.
-Why shouldn’t we call ourselves ‘the Brigadier’ and
-run a sporting column in <span class='it'>Peace</span>? You and I, George, get
-neither pleasure nor profit from seeing our political forecasts
-being fulfilled.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps, if we’d backed our fancy .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve backed <span class='it'>Peace</span>,” said my uncle grimly, “to a tune
-that would make an unsuccessful racing-stable seem like
-a safe investment. I pay tens of thousands a year for
-the privilege of casting myself for the part of Cassandra.
-We <span class='it'>can’t</span> be so much cleverer than other people .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we were,” I interrupted, “we might make them believe
-what we tell them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The world believes what it wants to believe,” said
-Bertrand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And is quite unabashed when it’s proved wrong,” I
-added, as I pocketed the article which I had brought to
-Princes Gardens for my uncle’s <span class='it'>imprimatur</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Many months had slipped away since we discussed the
-day of reckoning that awaited an opportunist government
-and an indifferent country. In the last four months of
-1921 and the first eight of 1922 every storm that we had
-foretold blew against our doors or broke through our
-roofs. By the time that the peace coalition fell, the great
-powers were at loggerheads, war was at a day’s remove
-and the mutter of social revolution was heard in England
-for the first time since the Chartist riots. No one heeded
-our jeremiads; and there is little satisfaction now in recalling
-our prescience. Indeed, before presuming to lecture
-the public, I might well ask myself what hearing I
-won from my friends and what attention I paid to my own
-warnings. Did O’Rane listen when I told him that his
-stubbornness had already alienated his wife and would, as
-likely as not, encourage the unemployed to break his windows?
-Did I listen when I told myself that, though I had
-sworn to have no scene with Barbara, the armed neutrality
-could not last?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Did I really believe that the conditions created by the
-Versailles conference could only be changed by another
-war?</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am writing so near to the times which I am trying to
-describe that I must occasionally invoke the judgement of
-posterity. I may be told that my facts are wrong, that I
-have distorted them by unintended omissions, above all
-that I worked in a false perspective. My only answer
-must be that I have written the truth as I saw it, that I
-have no thesis to maintain and that my conclusions have
-been reached without bias. At the armistice I believed
-that we had done with war; when peace was signed, I believed
-that another war was being made inevitable; and,
-when the peace-coalition fell, I believe that the sense and
-conscience of the country rose in revolt against a system
-that threatened it with another war. From this standpoint,
-the general election of 1922 closed the chapter that
-began in 1918 and the book that opened in 1914. If it
-did not answer my question whether the old governing
-classes could make peace, it gave an unmistakable answer
-to those who demonstrated that they could not. So far as
-the people of England are concerned, I feel that the
-diplomatic moves and counter-moves of this period, the
-division and regrouping of political parties, the influence
-of the party and press managers and the historical significance
-of the Irish settlement or the unemployment
-problem were all leading to the upheaval of 1922. If
-history admit of beginnings and ends, a system ended with
-the end of the 1918 parliament. In using the word
-“revolt”, which Louis XVI favoured, I wonder whether
-I should not use the word “revolution”, which de Liancourt
-substituted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>According to my uncle, the first responsible attack on
-the peace-treaty was delivered by President Harding; a
-counter-attack was opened by the French, when they stultified
-the Washington Conference; and an attack, in reply
-to the counter-attack, was launched by the Balfour Note
-on inter-allied indebtedness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the day after it was published, Clifford van Oss
-called in Fetter Lane to enquire whether the note was an
-overture to repudiation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should rather call it our reply to the French <span class='it'>non
-possumus</span> at Washington,” said Bertrand. “If we pay
-our debts to you, the French must pay their debts to us
-instead of building submarines against us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“From what I know of the French,” said Clifford, with
-the detachment that some of us found irritating in a
-country which had so disconcertingly washed its hands of
-European problems, “they won’t take it lying down.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The assertion was so intrinsically probable that I did
-not contest it; but, if I spent little time wondering what
-the French reply would be, that was chiefly because I was
-watching the fulfilment of another prophecy. The controversy
-that raged for six months over O’Rane’s articles
-in the <span class='it'>Democratic Review</span> is now public, if not ancient,
-history; and my chief memory is of his victory by silence.
-If one of his million critics had troubled to study his argument,
-he would have seen that the flamboyant gifts of
-embarrassed millionaires were attacked for their demoralizing
-effect on the recipients. Those who wrote to the
-papers or passed unanimous resolutions of protest laid
-emphasis on the crying needs of hospitals and the like;
-they assumed an almost impertinent right to tell other
-people how they should spend their money; but they did
-not meet O’Rane’s contention that every university could
-be endowed, every laboratory subsidized and every great
-work of art purchased for the nation from the money that
-was spent on luxuries.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I paid less attention to those who lectured O’Rane from
-expensive addresses than to those who heard, on the authority
-of a millionaire, that a great many people had a
-great deal too much money.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Any windows broken?,” I asked him on one of the
-rare occasions when we met in these months.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not yet,” he laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I did not dare to enquire whether any wives had been
-running away lately. Sonia’s threatened repudiation had
-not yet been published; but this, Barbara told me, was only
-because he had not yet stated in public that he would
-renounce his inheritance. The controversy imparted a
-transient heat to the chilly summer of 1922; and no
-doubt I should still be printing letters of protest if
-O’Rane’s theories of property had not been drowned in
-the thunder of a more urgent conflict. In August I took
-Barbara to stay with the Knightriders; and I had only
-reached Northumberland when my uncle recalled me to
-London with a telegram that revived for many days the
-agonizing fears and uncertainties of 1914.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I returned alone to find Bertrand breakfasting in bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve asked me more than once what we’ve done to
-prevent another war,” he began. “Here’s your answer:
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the last week I had seen but a few provincial papers;
-I had almost forgotten the diplomatic moves that led to
-this check. With all the suddenness of those August days
-eight years before, however, I stepped out of the train at
-King’s Cross to learn that Great Britain was being left to
-fight, single-handed, for the freedom of the Straits,
-against a restored and rejuvenated Turkey.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is the French reply to the Balfour note,” I said;
-“their revenge for our refusing to accompany them into
-the Ruhr.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’ll be good enough to tell me what it’s all
-about .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Bertrand thundered; then he lay back, spent
-and very old, until I suggested calling in Fetter Lane to
-see the latest telegrams.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was nothing to be learned there; almost nothing
-to be learned when I invited myself to dine with the
-Crawleighs, though I remember this night with pleasure
-as the only one on which my father-in-law and I looked on
-any political problem with the same eyes. Halfway
-through dinner, Neave entered in service-uniform. His
-battalion had received its orders for Chanak; he did not
-know why he was going; we could not tell him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Harington’s a cool-headed fellow,” said Crawleigh to
-keep his own courage up. “If he <span class='it'>can</span> avoid a conflict
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I remembered the days eight years before when Jim
-Loring and I kept our courage up by telling each other
-that Sir Edward Grey would prevent war if war could be
-prevented.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I <span class='it'>still</span> don’t understand,” muttered Lady Crawleigh,
-as though we were conspiring to keep some discreditable
-secret for her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No one does, ma,” Neave snapped and then left his
-father to reach the same conclusion in less few words.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>War was again at our gates; and we had not willed it,
-we did not want it. Stalking across Europe from that
-country which had been most completely vanquished, it
-hammered at our gates within four years of the war that
-was to have ended war. Whenever in the last three years
-I had urged that the incorrigible and blighting Turk
-should be forced into the hinterland of Asia Minor,
-Crawleigh had annotated my articles with the red-ink
-comment that we should pay for a peaceful Europe with a
-hostile India. Now, though he knew better than most
-men that Mohammedan India was not bound to us by ties
-of love, we awoke to find that, while the victorious allies
-were quarrelling at a distance, Turkey had set herself
-quietly to recover all that she had lost in the war. When
-British troops went unsupported to uphold the Treaty of
-Sèvres, they were to find their old enemies equipped with
-the arms which we had shipped to Russia and restored to
-fighting form by officers of the French army.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. but <span class='it'>why</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?,” Lady Crawleigh kept
-repeating with pathetic helplessness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Parliament, as represented by Crawleigh, the services,
-as represented by his son, the press, as represented by me,
-were not allowed to know all that was involved in this
-apparently aimless squabble about distant waterways.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nobody knows and nobody cares,” Neave cried in
-ungovernable exasperation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And this was all that I could report in answer to
-Bertrand’s request for news.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The first shot fires the magazine,” he predicted; “and
-we know from the Balkan wars that people can fight when
-they’ve no food and no money. Russia and Hungary will
-come in search of pickings. One will bring in another.”
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For once, however, my uncle was at fault. The political
-instinct of a somnolent people was again expressed by
-my butler in his favourite formula that another European
-war would be beyond a joke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If they can’t do better than that,” he decided, of the
-coalition ministers, “they’d better let some one else have a
-try.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I handed on this opinion to Bertrand next day, with the
-rider that he looked like winning an old bet on the life of
-the coalition. Before I went north again to bring Barbara
-back to London, the Lloyd-George government was under
-sentence; and, had Bertrand been at hand in October to
-claim his wager, I should have had to entertain him at
-dinner.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mindful of Lord Saltash’s invitation, I called without
-delay at the Turf and Stage to hear the latest movements
-of political parties. Now, as before, there was no one to
-turn the prime minister out if he could hold his cabinet
-together; now, as before, the insurgents were thrown into
-confusion by their cross-divisions. While Rupert Foreditch
-ran up and down in search of a conservative leader,
-the centre party counted its big guns.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>It is hard</span>,” the Lingfield press stated, “<span class='it'>to imagine a
-conservative administration without Lord Birkenhead,
-Sir Robert Horne and Mr. Chamberlain, all of whom, it
-is well known, have promised their allegiance to Mr.
-Lloyd-George</span>.”.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Recent events in the near east</span>,” retorted the Wister
-papers, “<span class='it'>have signed the death-warrant of the coalition</span>.”.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The organs of both parties combined to ignore the existence
-of liberal ministers; and I judged that the political
-wire-pullers on all sides were estimating whether
-the old but awkward conservative organization or the
-new but efficient coalition would be the harder to
-split.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I failed to see Saltash, I deduced that the tocsin was
-either not to ring yet or else had rung already in some
-other place; and my nearest approach to a party-manager
-was the trim and ill-informed Frank Jellaby, who demanded
-without preamble what line my paper would take
-in the election.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What line are the independent liberals taking?,” I
-asked in my turn. “And how many seats can you be sure
-of winning? I’d support the devil himself if he promised
-a homogeneous majority.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Our</span> line .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he began eagerly; and, as I turned
-from the things he had forgotten to the things he had
-never learned, I classed him unhesitatingly with those
-who—in O’Rane’s phrase—would not admit that a war
-had taken place.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I suppose a political whip can’t live without an abnormal
-endowment of optimism,” I said, more to myself
-than to him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jellaby forged ahead with growing enthusiasm. The
-local associations were solidly in support of the Asquith
-wing, solidly opposed to the Lloyd-George renegades.
-Much capital could be made out of the Safeguarding of
-Industries Bill (“which is pure protection; you’d have
-thought the tories had had enough protection in 1906”);
-more from the Black-and-Tan reprisals in Ireland; most
-of all from the unpopularity of the coalition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But have you considered why it’s unpopular?,” I
-broke in at last. “Not because its policy is faintly protectionist—the
-electors to-day don’t care tuppence about
-free trade—; not because it tried to put down murder
-with more murder. What people care about is taxation
-and the cost of living and unemployment and, above all
-else, my dear Frank, security. We’re in sight of another
-and a bloodier war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With a man like Lloyd-George .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” he began with
-a kindling eye.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I did not wait, however, for the end of the tirade. No
-one beyond Jellaby’s immediate circle of colleagues cared
-about the internecine feuds of exasperated factionaries;
-and I look back on this night as the time when so temperamental,
-congenital and impenitent a liberal as myself had
-to realize that there was at present no hope for liberalism
-in the liberal party. So far as the roar of his indignant
-rhetoric allowed me, I tried to formulate the demands of
-all who shared my own feeling of insecurity. The country
-was demoralized by the war and by the paralysis of
-government that followed it; instinctively the country
-wanted to be put into training, to have its muscles hardened
-and—still more—its nerves steadied. Though the
-heat of civil war had died down in Ireland, it had been
-replaced by the fitful blaze of individual assassination; the
-chief of the imperial general staff was done to death this
-summer on the steps of his house in London; the commander-in-chief
-of the Free State army was ambushed in
-Ireland. It was idle to bandy figures of murders and reprisals,
-when the country demanded a cure for its own
-demoralization.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“People feel it’s time to pull up, take stock, overhaul,”
-I said. “It’s the spirit of 1914, when the war did for us
-what we could not do for ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And that security is just what the liberal party
-offers,” said Jellaby. “Standing midway between a tory
-reaction and socialism .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’re going to be the safe, middle party,” I interrupted,
-“go all-out for that. In 1918 you had no
-policy; you have no living policy now. The only thing
-you’ve learnt since 1914 is that you have a score to settle
-with the coalition-liberals. While you’re settling that, the
-country will look for a government that will tackle unemployment
-before the unemployed get out of hand, a government
-that doesn’t bring us as near war as we are to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We argued inconclusively until the theatres emptied.
-As there was still no sign of Saltash, I judged that—in
-his favourite phrase—he must be troubling the waters to
-some purpose; and I was preparing to leave when Sam
-Dainton hurried up to demand why I had not yet patronized
-his cocktail-bar. He was followed—at an interval
-of time and space calculated to disarm the king’s proctor—by
-Ivy Gaymer, who told me that she expected her
-decree to be made absolute the following week.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“These six months have been hell,” she cried viciously,
-as she danced away with Sam.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marking her difference of outlook and appearance since
-she first sought from me an introduction to journalism, I
-felt that we were threatened by a worse spirit than that
-of 1914 and that we stood in need of harder moral training.
-Ivy’s reputation was hanging by a thread; her
-fingers and Sam Dainton’s were itching equally to snap it.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A mad world,” I said, as I parted from Jellaby. “A
-mad world,” I repeated, two days later, when I went north
-to bring Barbara home. “A mad world face to face with
-its madness,” I thought to myself, on reading an announcement,
-sandwiched between news of now greater
-moment, that Mr. David O’Rane was withdrawing the
-funds of the Lancing Trust from England.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On reaching Seymour Street I found a telephone-message
-from Sonia, begging me to see her at once. I replied
-that I would come; but, as I walked to Westminster that
-afternoon, I felt—as in the similar atmosphere of eight
-years before—that the individual had shrunk in importance.
-Barbara, shaken out of her usual aloofness,
-now only cared to know what chance of life I would give
-her brother; and, though I felt for Sonia as I should feel
-for a popular actress who married a country curate, I
-was mildly aggrieved that she should absorb my time
-when I wanted to explore the last frantic hopes of
-peace.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The case which I prepared for O’Rane was, I fancy, not
-unpersuasive; but I had no chance of putting it forward.
-If the inheritance three years before had been a nine-days’-wonder,
-the news of the renunciation seemed likely
-to cause, in some quarters at least, a nine weeks’ consternation.
-I blundered into the wake of a deputation and
-entered the library in time to hear the venerable Bishop of
-Poplar pleading for men and women whom O’Rane had
-kept alive for more than two years. Thousands, the
-bishop asserted, were on the verge of starvation; before
-the winter, they would be reckoned by tens of thousands.
-While Mr. O’Rane’s arguments might be unassailable in
-normal times, the aftermath of an unprecedented war demanded
-abnormal remedies.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“From half-a-dozen abnormally long purses?,” O’Rane
-enquired wearily. “I want <span class='it'>every one</span> to give and <span class='it'>every
-one</span> to feel it. If your few rich men go on strike, what
-will happen?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bishop was too old a controversialist to be trapped:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You would like me to say that some one will come
-forward in their place. I wish I could believe it. When
-the pinch becomes unbearable, the government will provide
-relief out of the taxpayer’s pocket. But, before that
-relief comes, many people will be dead; there will be
-rioting .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a nice question already how long we can keep ’em
-sweet,” interposed an anxious voice on behalf of the
-National Unemployment Committee.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a nice question whether you’ll get anything done
-till they turn nasty,” retorted a small man with a Cardiff
-accent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The bishop smiled and explained that, to make his deputation
-representative, he had included his friend Mr.
-Griffiths, with whose well-known bolshevist views we
-were no doubt already acquainted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What would you think, Mr. O’Rane,” he continued,
-“if I threw the bread of London into the Thames on the
-plea that it would be better for the people to eat cake?
-You are pronouncing sentence of death on the weakest
-section of the community.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the silence that followed I turned from O’Rane’s
-tortured eyes to the apostle of “bolshevism”. This was
-certainly my first, though not my last, meeting with the
-organizer and leader of “Griffiths’ Heroes”. I had expected
-a figure cast in the heroic mould, for there was a
-touch of the genius in the originality of his ideas and a
-hint of the commander in the obedience which he secured
-in carrying them out. Most strongly marked, however,
-was the fanatic; and his blended passion and cruelty made
-him something less than human. In thinking of him after
-all these months I am always reminded of an angry ferret.
-He was very small, very hirsute, very quick; though his
-eyes were brown, they seemed to shine red; and, as he
-looked scornfully round O’Rane’s warm library, I felt
-that his little teeth were seeking a hand to bite.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’d be less talk of bolshevism, if people knew
-what they were talking about,” he announced with a bluntness
-that was in painful contrast to the bishop’s courtly
-patience. “The government says it doesn’t know what
-to do; let’s see if any one else does. When folk are starving,
-they know what to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a threat in his tone; but he did not explain it,
-as Sonia came in at this moment and motioned me into
-the corner by the tea-table. Griffiths, to the credit of his
-consistency, refused tea: the men whom he represented
-had been out of work for eleven months; he lived as they
-lived and, if need be, would starve as they starved.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’re first on the list for looting, when the revolution
-comes,” she whispered cheerfully, while he examined
-her clothes as though he would have liked to strip her.
-Then, for a moment, she forgot to think of herself.
-“Oh, George! Babs has just telephoned for you. I’m
-so sorry, I’m afraid there’s bad news. Your uncle .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”
-I stood up; but she pulled me back, as the deputation filed
-out. “She’s sending the car here; she thinks you ought to
-go to him at once. If there’s anything we can do .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I shook my head. At Bertrand’s age, there was little
-that any one could do.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you told Raney?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hadn’t a chance. This deputation .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, David,
-what did you tell them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane dropped into a chair and pressed his fists
-against his temples:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I said .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’d think the thing over. It was really
-out of politeness to the poor old bishop. Nothing can
-make any difference.”.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Even when everybody tells you you’re wrong? People
-simply won’t believe it. I had four reporters within
-half-an-hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t know what they want to worry us for,” he
-broke out. “What did you tell them?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sonia weighed each word of her answer before launching
-it:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I said you hadn’t made up your mind. If you want
-to shew that you care for me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane walked to her with his hands outstretched in
-an attitude of entreaty:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If this accursed money had never come to me, you
-couldn’t have said that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The attitude of entreaty won no hint of yielding.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Of course, if you <span class='it'>won’t</span> be warned .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Sonia muttered,
-as she walked with me to the door.</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I got into the car, I was first frightened and then
-touched to find Barbara sitting half-hidden in her
-corner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid he’s very bad,” she whispered. “It’s not
-a stroke this time; but something’s broken inside him and
-he’s had terrible hæmorrhages. If he has another .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-I’m so sorry, George.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was good of you to come.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the darkness I heard a sigh; and Barbara laid her
-hand on mine:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ve always been good friends, even if we <span class='it'>have</span>
-made rather a mess of our lives.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could not hear what she said after that, for I had
-been caught unprepared by Sonia and was realizing now
-for the first time that it was a toss-up whether I saw
-Bertrand alive. My uncle was a man of almost fifty
-when I was born. For ten years I was frightened out of
-my wits by his huge stature and bellowing voice; for another
-ten I was humiliated by his brutal jests and blasting
-disparagement; then, as a young man, I rose in exasperation
-and trounced him till he roared with delight at my
-beating. From that unlikely beginning sprang a friendship
-in which Bertrand played the part of father, elder
-brother, political mentor and fellow-conspirator in my
-most impressionable years.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I .&nbsp;. simply can’t imagine life without Bertrand,” I
-told Barbara.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you want me .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”, she whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Did even she know how the sentence would have
-ended? I was stunned by the thought of losing Bertrand;
-I clutched at any one who would take his place, clutching
-literally with both my hands about Barbara’s wrists. And
-she, for the first time in my acquaintance, was frightened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Does this mean .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?,” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I won’t come into his room, of course,” she continued,
-in a superb recovery. “If you want me to fetch some
-one for a second opinion .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Does this mean that we’re going to make a new
-start?,” I persisted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll do all I <span class='it'>can</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though it was Bertrand’s imminent death that broke
-my self-control, I forgot him and forgot that we were
-driving to his death-bed:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The only good you can do is to tell me this ghastly
-farce is played out! Two years!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We all make mistakes,” she answered with composure,
-though she had winced at that word “farce”. “I
-can’t help you <span class='it'>much</span>. In these two years I’ve grown used
-to doing without love. I’ve lost everything, thrown everything
-away.” The silence that followed seemed to daunt
-her; and I felt my hand being pressed. “You know as
-well as I do all you’ve done for me. I’ll be your wife, I’ll
-bear you children if I can; but I can’t give you a love I
-don’t feel.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As though I had stepped aside, I saw myself lurching
-forward to demand satisfaction for the unuttered reproaches
-and contemptuous suspicions that had masqueraded
-so long as patience.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did you ever feel it?,” I heard myself asking.
-“Have you <span class='it'>ever</span> loved <span class='it'>any one</span>? You’ve been curious
-about many people; but it’s always been in your head
-and not in your heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I don’t let <span class='it'>myself</span> off!,” she moaned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wonder! You have tragic scenes; but, when other
-people are broken, you survive. If your heart had been
-brought into the play .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I broke off in stark horror. Never before had we held
-such language; and we were almost within earshot of
-Bertrand. Barbara was dumbfoundered at first; then she
-rallied and threw herself into the duel as though I were at
-last giving her an opportunity of which she had been unfairly
-deprived ever since our marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I never pretended to be in love with you,” she taunted
-me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve never been in love with any one. If you’d
-ever known the meaning of the word, you wouldn’t have
-married me on those terms.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara turned away and covered her face with her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s the way Eric said good-bye to me!,” she
-gasped. “George, I asked you to divorce me two years
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I wanted to make sure, for your sake. Well,
-let’s face reality for once! Imagine me to be dead.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With another unexpected turn, Barbara clung to me
-convulsively and laid her hand over my mouth:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t talk of death!,” she whispered. “I’m so
-frightened of it! And it’s very near at hand now. I’ve
-been ill so often, I’ve had to fight it so often. My dear,
-my dear, if I ever heard you were ill, it would bring back
-all my love: I’d nurse you; I’d shew you I <span class='it'>could</span> sacrifice
-myself. Never say that again!,” she cried hysterically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My fit of bitterness passed as quickly as it had come;
-and I tried to apologize. Then it returned; and I asked
-myself whether this talk of “sacrifice” meant more than
-that Barbara was living, as ever, in a world of emotional
-romance. Then the car stopped; and I stumbled up the
-steps of my uncle’s house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the hall Violet Loring told me there had been no
-further hæmorrhages. Only a few more hours of life
-could be expected, however; and this Bertrand realized.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I didn’t bother you before,” he began in his normal
-voice, “because I didn’t know whether I was going to live
-or die. I’m going to die, it seems; and I can tell you,
-George, it’s the most interesting experience I’ve ever had.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His grim chuckles rumbled till the vast Victorian brass-bed
-creaked. Involuntarily Violet shivered; but I felt
-that the last and least service I could do was to make my
-mood chime with my uncle’s.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad I’m in time to thank you, Bertrand,” I said.
-“You’ve been my best friend ever since we first set up
-house here together, nearly twenty years ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I knew the room of old, I was struck for the
-first time by the uncouth masculinity of a vanished era.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Odd business,” he grunted. “I always dropped a
-generation. I’m your <span class='it'>great</span>-uncle; but I always put you
-in your father’s place. You’ve kept me young.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-And now this is the end, the moment we wait for all our
-lives. The heart’s weak, thank goodness, so I shan’t
-make a fight; but I swear to you I expect to wake up
-again to-morrow morning! I’m not afraid of going out,
-but I can’t believe it. That’s why people persist in
-fabricating a future life. I’ll tell you one thing, George,
-that’ll comfort you: death’s only a terrible thing if it
-comes before you’re ready, and you’re only ready when
-you’re worn out. That was the terrible part of the war.”
-The leonine head turned with an effort that left him
-breathless. “Violet my dear, I bow humbly at the
-thought of boys like Jim who were killed before they had
-time to find the grasshopper a burden. I can’t believe I
-shan’t wake up to-morrow, but I don’t want to .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. here
-or anywhere. A silly old woman of a parson came here
-yesterday.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It cost me a hæmorrhage to get rid of
-him. Good God, I’ve outgrown <span class='it'>that</span> phase! Life
-eternal.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’m much more interested in the brief life
-that is our portion here. I’ve had nigh on a century of
-it; and I know less about it than I did when I was born.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He paused as the nurse came in to say that O’Rane was
-waiting downstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good of the boy,” he murmured. “Ask him to come
-up.” Then his eyes shone with their last gleam of mischief:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘<span class='it'>Never seen death yet, Dickie? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Well, now is
-your time to learn!</span>’ ”</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fit of coughing that followed caused my uncle to
-examine himself for injuries. The nurse made signs to
-Violet, who slipped noiselessly from the room; O’Rane
-came in, and I guided him to the bedside. Bertrand
-shook hands with difficulty; and his heavy eyes lightened.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re another of them,” he panted. “Always think
-of your father when I see you. I wonder what he’d have
-made of it all if he’d lived.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. George there?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m here,” I answered, as I pulled a chair to the bedside.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been thinking over what you said the other day
-about our prototypes in history. Triskett’s great-grandfather
-firing on the Versailles mob just to see what would
-happen.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I’ve known a good few historic figures:
-O’Connell; Mazzini; Lassalle. The great unspeakables.
-I believe I went to them for fear of being told by boys
-like you that I and my spiritual forefathers had been on
-the wrong side. Dam’ conceit! I hope I’ve outgrown
-that phase now; but, when that ass Crawleigh spluttered
-about rounding up conscientious objectors in the war, I
-felt that his ancestors had burnt heretics. Your friend
-Maitland sentenced a man to the cat the other day: he
-said it was the only remedy for crimes of violence. I
-asked him why he didn’t break the fellow on a wheel,
-as his forebears had done. Damn it, I gave up shooting
-for fear of finding myself in the same dock as the old
-cock-fighters. Conceit, if you like. I’ve been a radical
-because I couldn’t let posterity charge me with the savagery
-and intolerance which we throw up against our conservative
-predecessors. Time was on my side. I recorded
-my protest. What <span class='it'>good</span> it’s done .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.? That’s
-why you’d better keep the paper on, George. It’ll shew
-the next generation how superior you were to this.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The advice was rounded with a cynical, deep chuckle;
-and he lay long without speaking.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The world’s a gentler place than when you were a
-boy, sir,” O’Rane put in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand looked at him in silence for a moment and
-then shook his head slowly:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You say that, with your experience of the late war?
-<span class='it'>Does</span> human nature change? .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. We shan’t have that
-dinner, George, but I wasn’t far out in my date. The
-present government is falling to pieces.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what’s going to take its place?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Bertrand ruminated in silence for some time; then his
-face lighted for the last time in a reflective smile:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A restoration government! We’ve given a million
-men and heaven knows how many thousand million
-pounds to keep things .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>just as they were</span>. Nurse
-says we’re shipping troops again to the Straits: to defend
-the graves we’ve already filled there, I suppose. In ten
-years the great powers will be balanced as they were ten
-years ago; there’ll be the same competition in armaments,
-the same scares, ultimately the same universal war .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-on a vastly different scale. At home we’ve fallen back
-into our old social and financial grooves.” Bertrand’s
-eyes turned fixedly to the ceiling in a strained effort of
-concentration. He was speaking very slowly now and
-studying his articulation. “We’re .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. going on .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-from 1914 .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. without break of thought .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. or mend
-of heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he paused, O’Rane stood up and walked cautiously
-to the bed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll leave you now, sir, unless you want me,” he said.
-“I expect you’d like to talk to George. I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. want to
-thank you.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve nothing to thank me for. Don’t go unless I’m
-depressing you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s not encouraging,” O’Rane laughed. “You remember
-Anatole France’s story of the woman who tried
-to save her lover in the Terror? She gave herself to one
-of the judges and was told afterwards that she had .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-rather misunderstood his assurances. <span class='it'>On fera le nécessaire</span>,
-yes; but what then? ‘<span class='it'>Je t’ai dit, citoyenne, qu’on
-ferait le nécessaire, c’est-à-dire qu’on appliquerait la loi,
-rien de plus, rien de moins</span>.’ Most unfortunate misunderstanding!
-‘<span class='it'>Elle sentit aussitôt</span>’,” he quoted slowly,
-“ ‘<span class='it'>qu’elle avait fait</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. <span class='it'>un sacrifice inutile</span>’.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Bertrand looked from O’Rane’s scarred hands to his
-sightless eyes, I saw that he had no answer ready. I do
-not know what answer either of us could have given such
-a man at such a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Until the nurse came in with the doctor, my uncle lay
-silent and, I think, half-asleep. Towards midnight he
-roused with a start and seemed at a loss to explain why
-we were there. Then he remembered that he was dying;
-and, with the slow effort of failing strength, one hand
-was dragged painfully from under the bed-clothes. I led
-O’Rane to him and then shook hands myself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That place of yours .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Lake House. I heard you were selling it. Don’t .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-unless you must. I was brought up there. Your grandfather
-and I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You’re too young to remember the
-orangery .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. When I was twenty, our nearest neighbour
-was a girl called Cathleen Nolan .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” He
-paused for breath, and I tried to find out if he wanted to
-send her a message. “She’s been dead for more than
-sixty years,” said Bertrand with a twisted smile.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If that was his romance, he could tell me no more of it;
-and the smile gave place to a quick contortion of pain. I
-sent O’Rane for the nurse; but, before he reached the
-door, my uncle gave one long sigh and the slight movement
-of his breathing ended.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane carried the news to Barbara and with it a note
-to say that I should stay at Princes Gardens until the
-funeral. On the heels of the first letter I sent a second
-to beg her forgiveness for my mad words in the car. She
-replied that she had forgotten everything.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<h3>PART THREE</h3>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap11'>CHAPTER ONE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. In the dark there careers—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;As if Death astride came</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;To numb all with his knock—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;A horse at mad rate</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Over rut and stone.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;No figure appears,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;No call of my name,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;No sound but “Tic-toc”</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Without check. Past the gate</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;It clatters—is gone.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Maybe that “More Tears!—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;More Famine and Flame—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;More Severance and Shock!”</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;Is the order from Fate</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;That the Rider speeds on</p>
-<p class='line0'>To pale Europe; and tiredly the pines intone.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Thomas Hardy</span>: <span class='it'>A New Year’s Eve in War Time.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The days that followed my uncle’s death stand out in
-my memory as a vivid and wholly disconnected dream between
-two normal periods of waking-life. At one moment
-I was living in the midst of vast, conflicting noises;
-there followed complete calm, during which I was indeed
-as busy as ever—as busy as one seems to be in a
-dream—; then the tumult broke out afresh. Though
-nothing had in fact been suspended, though nothing had
-greatly progressed in my short spell of unconsciousness,
-I felt at the time that I had two personalities, one on either
-bank of the dividing stream.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I believe Bertrand’s death saved my life or at least my
-reason. I remember feeling almost bitterly that I could
-not support his illness in addition to my work for our
-paper, the hourly exasperation of my life at home and the
-storm of calamities that were bursting on us from the
-four corners of heaven at the same moment. The shock
-of losing him gave me the break I needed. When I
-awoke in an unfamiliar bed, I recalled that we were overshadowed
-by a new war, that a general election was imminent
-and that unemployment was a problem which we
-could not solve “by pulling long faces”. Then I recollected
-the venomous, red-eyed author of that phrase; and
-the scene in O’Rane’s library was flashed on my brain
-like a scene in a film. I remembered Sonia’s jejune
-sympathy. I remembered finding Barbara in the car. I
-wondered dully how we stood after that bitter, mad outpouring;
-and, despite her note, I was thankful that we
-should not meet for a few days. Then I realized that for
-a few days I should have a respite enforced: from the
-paper, from war and unemployment, from everything that
-seemed at the moment more than I could bear.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My first duty was to arrange for the memorial service
-at St. Margaret’s; and, as I watched the congregation
-arriving, I felt that the respite was extending, for an hour,
-to all of us. The obituary notices, the memoir which I
-was writing for one of the quarterly reviews, most of all
-this solemn tribute to a man, perhaps great, of an undeniably
-great past turned our thoughts backward to a
-time when France lived under a citizen-king and disunited
-Germany declaimed ineffectually at Frankfurt. Of the
-two former prime ministers who attended the service,
-both were hardly more than boys when my uncle first
-entered the House; the oldest head of a foreign mission
-had found “old Bertrand Oakleigh” an established institution
-when he was first accredited to the Court of
-St. James; and the journalists, the lawyers, the men of
-business, the bees and butterflies of society who moved
-sombrely to their places could not remember a time when
-the truculent Johnsonian figure had not been one of the
-familiar sights of London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A great landmark gone,” whispered Dainton, as I
-waited for Barbara to arrive with the Crawleighs. “I
-didn’t always agree with him. Indeed, if you took a
-poll of the people here he <span class='it'>hadn’t</span> quarrelled with .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I turned to watch the cars emptying and the new arrivals
-dodging or seeking out the reporters. My mother
-had come over from Cannes; my sister and her husband,
-Violet Loring and Laurence represented the family; and,
-if we had all tingled from the old man’s lash, that was
-long ago and inextricably in the part he chose to play.
-The older generation in the House of Commons and the
-younger generation in Fleet Street—men who won his
-respect by standing squarely up to him—came unurged
-to prove their regard for his fighting qualities and his
-generosity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I deplore his politics,” said Crawleigh, “but he was a
-great public servant.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At such a time I refrained from suggesting that Crawleigh’s
-father had deplored the politics of Bright and
-Cobden. It is one curse of the party-system that an opponent
-must be dead before we admit that he may possibly
-not be damned. I was brought up to regard Lord Salisbury
-as a monster wherewith to frighten naughty children;
-my father, if he had been required to expose the
-Antichrist, would have pointed his finger unhesitatingly
-at Lord Beacons field.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I thought over Crawleigh’s belated tribute as I took
-Barbara to our places. This imminent election might
-purge the House of those to whom the war—as Saltash
-told me frankly—had come as a god-send; but, if the
-adventurers into public life were not sent back to their
-counting-houses and newspaper-offices and bucket-shops,
-I feared that, with Bertrand, there would die an unparalleled
-tradition of integrity and devotion. My uncle
-had prepared himself for politics by half a lifetime of
-study, as Gladstone and Salisbury, Morley and Rosebery
-prepared themselves; of the men under thirty who entered
-the House with me in 1906, hardly one had not tried to
-equip himself by travel, by settlement-work, by experience
-in business or by the management of an estate. There
-seemed to be fewer servants of the public in 1918.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If he had scoffed less,” said Lady Dainton, “he
-would have done more.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I agreed privately, though I think his cynicism covered
-a disappointment of soul: he had come to England, as a
-brilliant, ambitious and sanguine boy, to reform the
-world; and the sluggish-witted, slow-speaking English
-had worn him down. To begin as an O’Connell and to
-end as “a great public servant” would have roused him
-to savage merriment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How he would have despised all this!,” I whispered
-to Barbara, as the people whom he would not admit to his
-house hurried importantly into the more prominent seats.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ministers of the present and past, divines and pressmen,
-authors and diplomats poured in till every place seemed
-to be taken. A crowd began to collect at the doors; there
-was rather more noise than I thought seemly; and I was
-glad when the organ began to play.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sixty years of public life. I was trying to remember
-whether Bertrand had known Westminster before the
-new Houses of Parliament were built, when Spence-Atkins,
-who was acting as an usher, touched my arm and
-asked if we had room in our pew for two more. I made
-way for Sonia, who crushed past me with scarlet cheeks,
-and for O’Rane, who allowed himself to be guided by a
-verger. His face, I thought, was white and set, with a
-suppressed anger which I had seen more often at school
-than in later years. I asked if anything was amiss; but
-he would only reply “Afterwards.” Then I relapsed
-into the past and forgot my surroundings until the last
-notes of the Dead March throbbed into silence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Outside I was surrounded by sympathetic friends; but,
-in the complete detachment of my anæsthesia, I was
-thinking only that I had time to see my solicitors before
-luncheon, when I found Sonia the centre of an agitated
-little group which O’Rane was trying alternately to soothe
-and to disperse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, I insist on telling George,” she proclaimed. “Did
-you hear what happened when we arrived? I don’t like
-being called a murderer!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The word—and, still more, the tone in which it was
-uttered—disturbed my dream of past days.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then O’Rane, with mounting irritation as some queer
-sense warned him that a crowd was collecting, felt for
-my arm and led me away.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We don’t want a scene,” he whispered. “I’m sorry,
-George: I wouldn’t have come if I’d thought for a moment.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Our
-excellent friendship the Bishop of
-Poplar is unintentionally at the bottom of this. You remember
-his saying something about my condemning innocent
-people to death if I stopped the money I’ve been
-giving him the last few years? Well, that’s been taken
-up by Griffiths’ gang. We’ve had sandwichmen patrolling
-The Sanctuary all this week: O’RANE’S SENTENCE
-OF DEATH or something of the kind. I didn’t care; I
-wasn’t going to be blackmailed. Then, to-day, one of
-the reporters at the door asked my name; and somebody
-in the crowd overheard it. A few idiots thought it would
-be amusing to shout ‘murderer’.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Where’s Sonia?
-It’s time we got back.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I led him to his wife, I observed that her cheeks
-were no longer flushed; she looked, indeed, unpleasantly
-scared, and her eyes were fixed on the avenue of loiterers
-between whom she must pass on her way home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We’ll drop you,” Barbara suggested, with a quick
-movement towards the car.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sonia hurried gratefully to her side.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thanks, Babs, I’ll walk,” said O’Rane obstinately.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then I’ll walk with you,” I said. “This business is
-frightening your wife,” I added when we were alone.
-“Why don’t you tell the police to clear these sandwichmen
-away?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I really haven’t had time. This is going to be the
-worst winter of all, George; we must raise every penny
-we can.” His lip curled contemptuously at the booing
-which greeted us in Palace Yard. “I’m free to beg now;
-if people want to know what I’m doing myself, I can say
-I’m giving every last shilling I can spare and they must
-do the same. We’re <span class='it'>all</span> responsible for relieving this distress;
-it’s part of the war, and we must volunteer as
-freely as we volunteered in ’14. And, if that doesn’t
-bring the money, we must try other means. The smug,
-secure people were glad enough to have conscription of
-men. Their money’s less than a man’s life; we must have
-conscription of wealth if they won’t volunteer. If it
-amuses the people I’m working for to call me murderer
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Will you come in?” he asked, as we reached The
-Sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m already overdue at my solicitors’,” I answered,
-though I made time to call at the Admiralty on my way to
-the City.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I thought that Philip Hornbeck, who amassed “intelligence”
-of all kinds, should have a first-hand account
-of this ugly little scene; and I wanted to hear his opinion
-of Griffiths. Though he promised to keep on eye open
-for the O’Ranes, he clearly considered the temper of the
-country less dangerous than in the big strikes after the
-war. The unemployed were numerous enough, but they
-were kept scattered; Griffiths had the ability and the will
-to make mischief, but he was disowned by the official
-labour-leaders.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The people of this country have no experience in
-revolutions,” said Hornbeck. “When you have a riot,
-it’s always the rioters who need police-protection.”</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The tumult, which had seemed to be so mysteriously
-suspended, broke out anew on the day when I sent my
-memoir of Bertrand to the printers and walked out of
-Princes Gardens into the traffic of Knightsbridge. Clamorous
-contents-bills at the street-corners reminded me that
-I was come back to a world where new wars were imminent;
-the Guards had sailed for Chanak; a general
-election could no longer be averted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>My ultimate duty to Bertrand was fulfilled when I persuaded
-my staff to carry out his last wishes for <span class='it'>Peace</span>.
-Though he mocked the empty conceits of recording protests
-and demonstrating moral superiority, he was not
-scheming to stand well with enlightened posterity when
-he lay murmuring: “<span class='it'>Un sacrifice inutile? Un sacrifice
-inutile?</span>” O’Rane’s question was an affront to him; he
-was wishing himself fifty years younger, to make an answer
-that would satisfy him; and we must take up the
-burden which his hands could no longer hold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As soon as I had their promise of support, I left my
-colleagues and set out for Berkeley Square to learn the
-secret history of the long-threatened conservative revolt.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This menace of war had done what the grotesque treaty
-of Versailles, the organized anarchy in Ireland, the paralysis
-of government in every limb had so far failed to do.
-Others, besides my butler, were saying that the long
-record of misrule was beyond a joke; and the party-managers,
-in concert with the independent wire-pullers who
-were now an established part of our public life, had decided
-to wreck the coalition. ‘Blob’ Wister had already
-spoken; and Saltash told me that Woburn and the Press
-Combine would speak next day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I found my father-in-law engaged on a letter to <span class='it'>The
-Times</span>, protesting against the exclusion of peers from the
-Carlton Club meeting; and for a long spell he reiterated
-like a sulky child that he could tell me nothing because he
-was allowed to know nothing. Then he relaxed and informed
-me that the fight was taking place over foreign
-policy in general and, in particular, over the prime minister’s
-dictatorial habit of conducting his foreign relationships
-through his own secretariat over the head of the
-Foreign Office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If I’d been Curzon, I’d have thrown the whole thing
-up years ago,” said Crawleigh with that eagerness for
-resignation so often exhibited by men who have not been
-invited to hold cabinet office.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He may feel he’s more useful as a brake on the
-prime minister,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If the prime minister goes, the foreign secretary
-must follow .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. unless he precedes him, when he sees
-how the cat’s jumping,” said Crawleigh with ill-concealed
-malice. “Well, it’s quite simple; Chamberlain has
-pledged himself to support the coalition; Birkenhead and
-Horne are with him; and the rump is meeting to see if
-it can overthrow Chamberlain.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who’s to be put in Chamberlain’s place?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No one knows yet. No one has the least idea how the
-meeting will turn out. If I were in the confidence of my
-party .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Nowadays the unhappy accident of being a
-peer .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Feeling that I should hear no more, I drifted to the
-Turf and Stage, where Frank Jellaby thickened the mist
-in which Crawleigh had enveloped the Carlton Club.
-After a denunciation of the coalition-liberals which reminded
-me of Cato’s punctual fulminations against Carthage,
-he explained that the new crisis had been engineered
-by ‘Blob’ Wister and that its outcome depended
-on Wister’s success in finding a leader:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He had no difficulty in persuading people like Dean
-and Lingfield to come out for an all-tory government
-when his papers were marching ahead to cover their advance.
-If he can get Bonar Law to stampede the meeting .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hear Lingfield and the rest of George’s tory ministers
-are swearing allegiance to him with one hand,” I
-said, “and writing him letters of resignation with the
-other.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>They</span> don’t know anything .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. except that some of
-them will be badly left.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But no one,” I encouraged him, “will be left quite
-so completely as your coalition-liberal friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jellaby’s face darkened:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They sold the pass in ’16, they’ve had their reward;
-if there were another pass to sell, they’d sell it; and they
-mustn’t complain if they can’t find one.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You won’t join forces,” I asked, “to keep the tories
-out?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“After 1916 I could never trust a coaly-lib again,” he
-answered. “Now, if your paper would help us into a
-position where we could hold the balance .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That,” I said, “is simply overturning one coalition to
-make way for another. And you’ve no more programme
-to-day than you had in 1918, when you let Ll-G.’s mad
-promises pass without a protest. We’re paying for your
-silence to-day, at Chanak and wherever the French can
-hit us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before Jellaby had time to answer, we were hurried
-one stage farther along the ever unfinished road of contemporary
-politics. Lord Saltash, whom I had observed
-moving from table to table with the manner of a conspirator
-rather far gone in wine, raised his eyebrows suddenly
-as ‘Blob’ Wister hacked his way across the dancing-floor.
-There was a quick nod; and Saltash lurched
-towards the telephone-boxes, only pausing to whisper
-thickly in my ear:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s going! Bonar, I mean. Meeting to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you betting on the result?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s not coming back politics sake being losing side,”
-Saltash answered telegraphically, laying a squat index-finger
-against one side of his nose. “Last kick dying
-lion. Wash-out George. Number up.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jellaby was silent for a few minutes; then he smiled as
-one who had waited patiently by the mills of the gods.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Had Zimri peace, who slew his master?,” he demanded
-at large.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is the end of the liberal party for a generation,”
-I said; which was not the answer expected of me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And then I stood up to say good-by. There is little
-difference of age between Jellaby and myself; but he has
-been nurtured more strictly on the official hatreds of a
-whips’ office. I was born and bred a liberal, whereas
-Jellaby embraced that faith as he embraced agnosticism,
-the poetry of Arthur Hugh Clough, the painting of
-Manet, the æsthetics of Pater and, for a time, total abstinence.
-They were all fashionable among the members
-of one coterie at Balliol in his day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For some years .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” he conceded with regretful
-solemnity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And,” I pursued, “what happens to liberalism, which
-is more important to me than the liberal party?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jellaby had no answer ready; and, if he had not been
-my host, I should have asked him whether a liberal
-whips’ office cared for these things.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next day the conservative wing of the coalition seceded,
-after a brief debate, on the strength of a single, brief
-speech. The prime minister resigned; and the king invited
-Mr. Bonar Law to form a government. As soon as
-the conservative party had accepted its new leader, the
-date of the election was announced. Those of my
-friends who were nursing constituencies became, of a
-sudden, very important and excited; I received invitations
-to speak from people who must have forgotten, if
-they ever knew, how bad a speaker I am; wagers were
-offered freely; and all parties predicted confidently that
-they would return with increased numbers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I spent much time at the Eclectic Club in these days,
-wondering what line my paper should follow in the election.
-No new policy was being put forward; and, if the
-old policy stood condemned, I did not understand why
-ministers who were responsible for it were kept in office.
-Nor, at a season when everybody speculated how long the
-patience of the unemployed would endure, did I understand
-why the order of the county was entrusted to a
-man who had preached the sacred right of rebellion so
-few years before in Ulster. I wondered, too, what would
-happen to the floating wreckage of the coalition; and,
-more bitterly than ever before, I missed old Bertrand’s
-caustic humour in the hours when he sat with me here in a
-window of the smoking-room, defaming the passers-by
-and pretending that we were studying trends of opinion
-and “the great movement of men”.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He it was who said that politics were desocialized
-when Mr. Asquith left Downing Street. For six years
-the political stage had been occupied by statesmen, demagogues,
-shy scholars, blatant adventurers, advertising-agents,
-unemployed millionaires, newspaper-proprietors,
-dukes, international Jews and merchant-princes. Cabinet
-control had been replaced by the personal domination of
-one man who miraculously held this heterogeneous company
-together; considered policy had yielded to a succession
-of brilliant and incongruous improvisations. On
-no day could an outsider foretell who next would pull a
-wire; and, as I looked round the crowded rooms of the
-Eclectic, I wondered what all these long-faced, out-of-work
-pressmen and financiers, these confidential secretaries
-and hangers-on would now do for a living or a
-career.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, as the ministry was completed and the first
-election-addresses appeared, I recalled Bertrand’s last
-verdict.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Without break of thought or mend of heart .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='it'>Were</span> we going on from 1914? Had the war, in which
-most of my generation perished, really achieved nothing?</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we slid noiselessly into the least passionate general
-election of my experience, I wondered whether we were
-going on from anything so good even as 1914. If the
-German peril was at an end, no man could say what new
-trouble might come out of the east, when demoralized
-Russia and Austria joined hands with resentful Turkey
-and Prussia. The mark had collapsed; and, unless it
-could be rehabilitated, the trade of central Europe must
-come to a standstill.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After that, it was a toss-up whether famine or revolution
-came first. Against this tidal wave of hunger,
-disease and the reckless savagery of hopeless millions,
-the only powers with strength and means to build a rampart
-were France, America and Great Britain.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If Lucien de Grammont and Clifford van Oss fairly
-represented the first two, the simple faith of the French—embodied
-in M. Clemenceau—was being betrayed by
-every one else at the very moment when M. Clemenceau
-was betraying the simple faith of President Wilson. Recalling
-that the world was to have been made safe for
-democracy, I wondered if another war must be fought
-before democracy was made safe for the world. According
-to one or other of us, it was the greed and bad faith
-of Great Britain, America and France which was wholly
-and solely responsible for our present perils.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In these days of misgiving the most persistent optimist
-of my acquaintance was my father-in-law. To him—in
-common with most of my conservative friends—public
-life had been a bad dream from the moment when Sir
-Henry Campbell-Bannerman and his <span class='it'>sansculottes</span> usurped
-power. Crawleigh was genuinely convinced that all electors,
-at all times and in all places, were conservative born
-and bred; and, to him, a liberal victory could only come
-by low cunning. Now that the spell had been broken,
-he looked forward to “going on from 1906”; and, in
-listening to him, I understood, as Saltash had never made
-me understand, the all-conservative movement in the late
-coalition, the Carlton Club meeting and the loathing of
-the party for those who still tried to keep it in bondage
-to its old associates. So a Bourbon might have felt
-towards a legitimist who took office under Napoleon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sir Roger Dainton, when I dined with him on the
-night after the polling, was even more outspoken. Some
-one had taught him the word “impeachment”; and he
-was for impeaching the fallen members of the old cabinet
-as light-heartedly as his wife, in other days, had consigned
-“agitators” to the nearest firing-party.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You think there are further depths they can still
-reach?,” I asked. The brush of a professional moralist
-would be needed to paint the difference between this election
-and the last, between the power of a prime minister
-in being and that of the member for Carnarvon Boroughs.
-“Come and see the results.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By its rules the Eclectic Club is constituted a “place of
-social intercourse for officers and gentlemen, irrespective
-of politics”. Any demonstration, other than occasional
-groans when a labour victory was announced, would have
-been ill-received; but I was struck chiefly by the absence
-of all desire to demonstrate except when objects of personal
-venom appeared at the bottom of the poll. Dainton
-thumped my back with furtive violence when two rich
-and rather questionable private secretaries, from his own
-party, were at last “put out of harm’s way”, as he expressed
-it; and Jellaby became almost hysterical as one
-coalition-liberal after another was edged into the cold;
-but it was left to my father-in-law to express the rapture
-of his associates in a series of satisfied grunts. Without
-looking at the board, I could recognize a conservative
-gain by Crawleigh’s long “A-a-ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The entry of the first French troops into their recovered
-provinces,” I murmured to Jellaby.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And yet .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. they don’t seem as much pleased about
-it as I should have expected.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps these fellows feel that it’s the same board,
-the same problem, and that it becomes no easier by a
-shuffle of the pieces. Perhaps they’re wondering what
-more they can do than the coalition to prevent a world-revolution
-or a new world-war.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Jellaby looked contemptuously at the lengthening tale
-of ministerial successes:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps they realize that these results don’t represent
-the true strength of parties.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You mean it’s a moral victory for you?,” I asked.
-“I said the same thing to you when I was beaten at Cranborne
-in 1910. With respect I think the feeling of the
-country is admirably represented in this club to-night:
-nobody cares.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>With that I left him. Seven men, I think, said good-night
-to me as I crossed the hall; six of them added:
-“Well, thank God <span class='it'>that’s</span> over.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a further spasm of excitement as the new
-parliament met; and for me, though I was preoccupied
-with Barbara’s return, a stab of regret when the liberal
-party had to surrender its historic claim to lead the opposition.
-Then one of the shortest sessions on record
-opened and closed; the foreign secretary set out for
-Lausanne to find an escape from the threatened war
-in the near east; and the country gave its undivided
-attention to the most popular murder-trial of the
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Save for a moment after Bertrand’s memorial service,
-I had not been alone with Barbara since our scene in the
-car. I fancied that she was hardly less embarrassed than
-I was, though she talked easily enough of her plans for
-being painted by Edmund Wace and of my work on
-Bertrand’s papers. We both felt that nothing could be
-quite the same after that explosion; but I at least had no
-idea what she wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There was a touch of brutality about your uncle,”
-she said after dinner the first night, in criticism of my
-sketch. “I’m not sure that you bring it out. Any one
-who disagreed with him was treated with such obvious
-contempt.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Unless he happened to like the person,” I said. “I
-can’t imagine a single point on which he agreed with you
-or Violet or Amy, but he was devoted to you all. On the
-other hand, I’ve heard him trouncing poor Sonia for
-holding exactly the same views, simply because he thought
-her second-rate.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He thought all women second-rate. So do you,
-George,” she rejoined without malice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So sweeping a misstatement I could not allow to pass
-unchallenged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll leave you out for fear of embarrassing you
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara laughed sadly and turned, with a shrug, to
-the fire:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, my dear, you’re leaving me out because you despise
-me. Not <span class='it'>cruelly</span>, but just in the Oakleigh way:
-as a tolerant Turk would despise me. In your eyes,
-we’ve never grown up; and sometimes you shew us the
-tenderness you’d shew to a child. You think we’re creatures
-who’ve failed to be men; you don’t imagine that
-we’ve never tried to be men.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You smile benignly
-on our little foibles and follies and frailties just as I
-smile at a kitten chasing its own tail. ‘Kittens will be
-kittens,’ I say; ‘women will be women,’ you murmur to
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The trouble is that you speak the same language
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But we don’t think the same thoughts. D’you remember
-my telling you I’d forgotten certain things you’d
-said?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As her eyes turned slowly to meet mine, I thought I
-could see a gentle new light of friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wished at the time you’d said you had forgiven
-them,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There was nothing to forgive. You were right, from
-your point of view. May I speak of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If it will help us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara turned once more to the fire and sat with her
-cheek resting against her hand:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s just two years since Eric died. You think I’m
-not in love with him and never was. Well, I’m not now,
-but I was once; and the <span class='it'>whole</span> of my heart went into it,
-George. Do men ever realize that women can be in
-love with them and yet know all the time that it’s a
-mistake? When he left me, Eric thought I’d been taking
-all his love for my own selfish, greedy enjoyment. I
-hadn’t. I took it because I couldn’t help myself; but I
-always knew it would be a mistake for us to marry. We
-were too much alike, too highly-strung. If you can
-imagine two great musicians marrying .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If only I’d
-been strong enough to refuse his love! I couldn’t help
-myself .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. It was wrong of me, by any standard, to
-do what I did at Croxton. If I’d told you at the
-time .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should have thought nothing of it, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara laughed mirthlessly and crossed to my chair,
-where she seated herself on the arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s what I feared,” she whispered. “I knew I
-was wrong, I knew it would have been hell for us all
-if Eric had agreed, I’d had the worst rebuff that can
-come to a woman, I was still in love with him. All that,
-you’d have said, was nothing. A perfect Oakleighism!
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Yet I wish now I <span class='it'>had</span> told you. Eric’s letter
-must have been a cruel shock.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her hand stole timidly to mine; and I raised it to my
-lips:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s all over now; but, Babs, I did <span class='it'>not</span> spend twelve
-days wondering whether you would run away with any
-one else. What hurt was that you’d pretended to love
-me when you didn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And that’s what you’ve been urging me to do for
-the last two years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Silence fell between us. Then I said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been hoping that you could love me without
-pretending. I forgot those twelve days the moment I
-set eyes on you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. You were as much in love with me as I was
-with Eric. But love didn’t give you much understanding,
-dear. For two years you’ve been waiting for me to confess
-that I did something very wrong: you’d then be able
-to commit another Oakleighism by forgiving me. You’ve
-been waiting for me to say I’ve outgrown my love for
-Eric, so that you could tell me—Oakleigh-fashion—that
-you’d always known time would cure all things.
-Well, I <span class='it'>was</span> wrong; and I <span class='it'>have</span> outgrown my love. Does
-it help you to know that? The difficulty is, George, that
-I don’t want to be forgiven. I’m not a child, I’m not an
-unsuccessful attempt to be a man; I’m a woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And being a woman .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara laid her hand over my lips:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shall I say it for you? ‘Being a woman, you don’t
-know what you <span class='it'>do</span> want.’ It’s quite true, even though
-all the Oakleighs in history have said it. I know you so
-much better than you know me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And better than you know yourself?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know myself better than I can explain myself.
-Women feel so much more and express so much less than
-men. Words are clumsy. When a man frames a sentence,
-he imagines he is shewing a thought to the world;
-a woman feels that the thought is being imprisoned, perhaps
-mutilated.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you know why you married me?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before she could answer, Barbara stared long at the
-fire.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. But I’ve never put it in words. I couldn’t now.
-I wasn’t in love with you, but you gave me something
-that I needed.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Women marry sometimes because
-they’re frightened of themselves. Sonia did. And I remember
-how my beloved aunts gloated over Jack Waring,
-as the one man who could keep me in order. Strange
-to say, I didn’t want to be kept in order; and I wasn’t
-frightened of myself. I’m only frightened of death and
-of waste: a wasted life, with all the love and the beauty
-left out of it. You gave me the feeling that you had
-something I needed to keep my life from being
-wasted.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And do you feel that no longer?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have I needed you these last two years? I’ve ceased
-to look for happiness.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you’re not yet thirty!,” I groaned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara glanced at her watch and stood up:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s time for me to go to bed. I’m afraid I’ve talked
-a great deal about myself. It was thinking about Bertrand
-that started it. The world is divided into men,
-women and Oakleighs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I believe you’ll find, as you go on, that every husband
-begins as a man and ends as an Oakleigh. That is
-one of the major tragedies of life.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For the first time in eighteen months, Barbara bent to
-kiss my cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“To marry an Oakleigh and find him a man would be
-the greatest romance life could offer,” she laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then I’m afraid you must look elsewhere for your
-romance,” I sighed. “You can only give out what’s
-in you. I’m sorry our marriage has been a failure. I’ve
-honestly done my best.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning at the door, Barbara came slowly back and
-kissed me again:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know you have. And I’ll do mine. I told you the
-day poor old Bertrand died that I’d be your wife, I’d
-bear you children if I could .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In spite of her kisses, in spite of the strange new light
-in her eyes, I had to be told in words that our two years’
-tragedy was over:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear one, you said we should be dishonoured if
-we put anything in the place of love .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I waited to hear that terrible verdict reversed. Barbara
-looked at me in amazement and then gave a single
-tearless sob. She regained her composure immediately
-and walked again to the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You have a good memory, George,” she threw back.
-“Have you saved that up for two years? Do you want
-me to say that I’ve suddenly found you irresistible? The
-Oakleighs are very true to their own type.”</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the door closed, I saw my last chance being shut
-from me. The house was in darkness when I went into
-the hall; there was no answer when I called to Barbara,
-though I could see a light in her room. I came downstairs
-again to brood of men, women and Oakleighs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I tried next day to explain, but Barbara refused with
-cold courtesy to understand what I was trying to explain.
-I had been patient, too patient; in her turn she was trying
-to meet me. She was ready to give anything I asked, if
-she had it to give; and the false sweetness of her complaisance
-was a deadlier bar than any refusal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I feel I was ungracious,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ungracious? You?,” she mocked. “I must go now,
-or I shall be late for Mr. Wace.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shall I see you after the opening of parliament?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But of course! For another eternity! Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rest of that morning I spent in Fetter Lane, reviewing
-the achievements of the peace-administration.
-The only visible traces of the war, when I walked down
-to Westminster, were the cenotaph in Whitehall and the
-long army of unemployed that was trying to get past it
-to the precincts of parliament. While I waited for the
-crowd to disperse, I heard a familiar voice asking my
-neighbour what was happening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Raney! Here, you’d better let me see you home,”
-I said. “There’s an appalling mob everywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thanks, I’ve had to acquire a sixth sense,” he answered.
-“What are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Looking on and thinking of that week-end in August
-when the Anti-Intervention people pursued me down to
-Loring Castle. I’ve been wondering if we shouldn’t have
-done better to keep out of the war at all costs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We should have been dishonoured if we’d let Belgium
-down,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we’d told the Germans we would stop the moment
-Belgium was evacuated, the war would have been over in
-’14. And we shouldn’t have an unemployed army marching
-through London to-day,” I added savagely.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We squeezed our way forward till a sudden thinning
-of the crowd enabled us to escape into the park.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think we’re individually the better for the sacrifices
-we all of us made,” he answered slowly. “For one moment
-there was a real spirit of fraternity; and, when the
-reaction has run its course, I hope to see that again. I’m
-recruiting people now, with quite fair success: reminding
-them what they did once and asking them to give up
-everything for one month or six or a year for the service
-of their country. I’m only asking them to do what I’ve
-done myself. I tell them, as I tell you, <span class='it'>that’s</span> the new idea
-that we must capture from the war. Fraternity .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your new idea is at least as old as Christ and
-Buddha,” I objected. “Will you succeed where they
-failed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Had they ever such a chance as we have? We’ve
-seen the quality of modern war. We know that, if
-there’s another, it will bury civilization under a sea of
-lava. Men, women, sheep, cattle, the very blades of
-grass. Another war is synonymous with the end of the
-world.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But how does one set about being fraternal?,” I
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane walked for some distance without answering;
-and I thought he had not heard my question. Then he
-laughed and gave my arm a squeeze:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By realizing the alternative, as every one’s had every
-chance of doing in this war. By seeing that, if we
-trample on people weaker than ourselves, there’ll be people
-stronger than ourselves to trample on us. When I first
-saw ‘fraternity’ shining in front of me like Constantine’s
-Cross, I was a very small, very young, very miserable
-boy. I went through hell till I learnt how to defend
-myself. And then .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. many years afterwards .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I
-began to think .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. about the poor devils who couldn’t
-defend <span class='it'>themselves</span>. I saw that we must make a world in
-which man wasn’t always measuring his strength. Yes, I
-admit Christ had made the discovery before me,” he
-ended with another laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I forebore to ask whether the second discovery was
-likely to change the hearts of men more than the first.
-The rule of force, I pointed out, had to be repudiated by
-every one at the same time:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we’d been fraternal when the Germans were
-marching on Calais .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we’d been fraternal rather earlier, perhaps they’d
-never have marched there. Some one has to make a
-beginning. That’s one reason I had to give up this
-money. Fraternity can’t exist side by side with vast
-differences of wealth, among nations or individuals. It’s
-our sense of possession, George, that stands between us
-and our souls.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Unfortunately, ever since man appeared on this
-planet, it’s been the instinct that keeps soul and body together.
-Will you be the first to strip for the plunge?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>I’m</span> ready.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you take that dive, Raney, your wife and children
-won’t follow. They also are a part of humanity, which
-I think you sometimes forget.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Who is my mother?’,” he murmured.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap12'>CHAPTER TWO</h1></div>
-
-<h3>THE TEST</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='it'>King Henry</span>:</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>The sum of all our answer is but this:</p>
-<p class='line0'>We would not seek a battle, as we are;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Nor, as we are, we say we will not shun it .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Shakespeare</span>: <span class='it'>King Henry V.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Since the first tragedy cast its shadow on the first
-man, philosophers have taught, in the jargon of their
-choice, that the past is unalterable, that it is no use crying
-over spilt milk and that it is a waste of time to job backwards.
-Unphilosophic man has then returned to the
-twilit dreamland of might-have-beens.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Daily, since the tragedy that darkened my life in the
-last weeks of 1922, I have asked myself whether I could
-have done anything to prevent it. I am sane enough to
-realize that I contributed nothing by what I did; the
-philosopher blandly assures me that questioning comes too
-late; and, in spite of all, I continue to wonder what would
-have happened if I had made a firm stand here or a
-graceful surrender there. If only, as I walked with
-O’Rane to The Sanctuary after the opening of parliament,
-I had thrown my weight into one scale or the other .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-If only, at any time subsequently, I had shewn myself
-to be what nature failed to make me, a man of action,
-strong and silent, rapping out decisions like Napoleon
-disposing an army .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had not intended to come into The Sanctuary, but
-O’Rane insisted that Sonia would be disappointed if I
-turned back at the door. We found her in the nursery,
-playing with her elder boy, while the baby was packed
-protesting to bed in the next room. I had not often been
-privileged to catch Sonia in a domestic attitude and was
-ill-prepared for her efficiency. This child in her lap was
-a beautiful creature, in radiant health and exuberant
-spirits, with his mother’s brown hair and eyes. There
-was a lusty crow of delight when O’Rane came into the
-room; and, as I shook hands with Sonia, the child demanded
-shrilly that the interrupted tale of the day before
-should be resumed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Will you say good-night to David junior?,” she
-asked me, as Daniel surrendered to the spell of O’Rane’s
-story.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If he’s not asleep,” I said; and she conducted me into
-the presence of a wide-awake and fierce Japanese doll,
-who gripped two of my fingers and demanded truculently
-what I was doing in his nursery.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At three years old, the child had his father’s flashing
-black eyes and imperious manner. Sonia added that he
-had also more than his father’s indomitable obstinacy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is he equally fearless?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For answer she pointed from a green bruise on the
-child’s forehead to a padlocked grille over the window:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“David had a fire-escape fitted the other day. He
-went down it himself just to learn the way; and this infant
-must needs follow. He’d never been on a ladder
-in his life, but he climbed cheerfully out of the window
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Trusting to the special providence that looks after
-all O’Ranes,” I put in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By the mercy of heaven a policeman caught him; but
-if he behaves like that now .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He looks like keeping you fully occupied.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can do what I like with him at present,” she answered,
-“because he realizes I’m only a woman, and I
-can get on the soft side of him. When he’s old enough
-to see that women can be more easily bullied than men,
-more easily hurt .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t envy his wife. I don’t
-envy any wife.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yet if all marriages were dissolved by act of parliament
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” I began, as she led me downstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Should I take David on again? I wonder! He’s
-the only man I’ve ever loved.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. What fools we women
-are! And what fools men are! They don’t want
-a woman to have a will of her own; and, when she echoes
-their will, they find her insipid. And what a fool I’ve
-always been! Once I thought it would be wonderful
-to run away .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. as I did. But that was only a wonderful
-fit of bad temper,” she added with the candour that
-she always employed in discussing herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And one that you’ll never repeat.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No. In those days I was so hungry for children
-that I thought myself quite immodest: if I’d had my first
-one earlier, we should never have had our great tragedy.
-Now that I’ve got two, you need never be afraid I shall
-run away again even if David ties me to the bed and beats
-me. I honestly, honestly don’t think of myself any longer
-except through them. I want them to have the best
-chance in life: all that you and Jim and my brothers
-had. They must go to the best schools, the best universities;
-they must never be driven down the wrong road
-like so many boys because they haven’t the money to go
-by the right one. They must be <span class='it'>secure</span>.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Her face
-darkened; and she turned to the fire. “David won’t
-promise me that. My father can’t afford it.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I believe that, if her husband could have seen Sonia
-at that moment as I saw her, he would have compromised
-with his insurgent conscience. Once before, when he
-came back from France, I had seen her, as now, on her
-knees; pleading, as now, for the privilege of serving him
-and, as now, wholly forgetful of her too insistent self.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s not easy to move when he’s made up his mind,”
-I said, with memories of our conversation earlier in the
-afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Sonia shook her head ruefully:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t I know that? You remember when that unemployment
-deputation came to see him? We’ve had
-about three a day ever since. Does that influence him?
-The press camps on our doorstep. He’s besieged in his
-office. This afternoon that man Griffiths came here
-again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What did you do with him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her patience suddenly deserted her:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I sent him to Hampstead. This <span class='it'>is</span> a private house,
-when all’s said and done. I don’t suppose he got any
-satisfaction there, but I thought the walk would be good
-for him. Odious little creature!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was now that I feel I might have done some good
-by speaking strongly. Neither Griffiths nor any other
-grown man deserved to be sent on a fool’s errand; in
-cooler moments Sonia would have been ashamed to play
-such a trick. Her answer, I suppose, would have been
-that Griffiths and her husband were too much for any
-one’s coolness; and I feared—no doubt, weakly—that I
-should lose my slight influence over her if I sided with
-her husband. When he came down from the nursery,
-she was still indignant enough to retail Griffiths’ visit and
-to ask O’Rane whether the deputation had reached Hampstead
-in time to find him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I had to say I could do nothing for them,” he answered
-a little wearily. “I’ve given all I can spare of
-my own money; and I’ve collected as much as I can from
-other people. If they come again, you might tell them
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must tell them yourself,” Sonia replied stiffly.
-“<span class='it'>I’m</span> not going to make myself responsible.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I only wanted you to save them a useless journey.
-When you sent them to me, you gave them some sort of
-hope; and that makes it so much harder when I have to
-turn them down.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Perhaps in time you’ll find it so hard .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” she muttered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t go back on what I’ve said. It’s only unkind
-to give them a long walk for nothing. Promise me you
-won’t do it again, Sonia.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let’s hope they won’t come again. If they do, I
-shall <span class='it'>again</span> send them to you.” Then, without disguise,
-her temper broke. “I’m not consulted about what you
-do with this money, so I wash my hands of it. This is
-not your office; and you can’t blame me if you refuse to
-give them anything for their trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can only repeat that you make my task more difficult,”
-O’Rane answered patiently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Before I’ve done, I hope to make it impossible,”
-Sonia retorted defiantly, as she hurried out of the library
-and up the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had a second opportunity of speaking strongly, this
-time to O’Rane; and I failed to press it. The papers
-that night gave long accounts of the opening of parliament
-and longer, less hackneyed descriptions of the demonstration
-by the unemployed. I detected for the first
-time a note of uneasiness as, for the first time, unemployment
-passed out of the realm of abstract statistics and
-incarnated itself in ragged armies of hungry men. I
-remembered Philip Hornbeck’s blithe assurance that Griffiths
-could do little harm so long as the armies were scattered;
-well, their banners shewed that they were scattered
-no longer. One nervous leader-writer compared this
-march with the advance of the Marseillais on Paris and
-asked angrily how the police had allowed it; another,
-more valiant, rehearsed the history of the Fascismo movement
-in Italy and warned the proletariat at large—without
-considering whether the proletariat was likely to read
-such a paper—that England would never yield to mob-violence.
-A third, mentioning O’Rane by name, exhumed
-the controversy of the summer and enquired whether
-those who had voluntarily undertaken a national responsibility
-could abandon it at such a time in satisfaction of
-a “doctrinaire whim”. In less blunt terms than the
-sandwichman had displayed, O’Rane’s ‘sentence of death’
-was brought up against him; and it was with some muddled,
-premonitory feeling of an isolated conflict between
-Griffiths and the O’Ranes that I uttered my warning.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Suspend your sentence,” I said, “until the new government
-has declared its unemployment policy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane replied with the entirely logical and utterly
-irrelevant thesis that unemployment was a consequence
-of the war, that the community had called the tune and
-must pay the piper, that one government had imposed
-conscription of men’s lives and that another could impose
-conscription of their wealth. The state had turned prosperous
-civilians into soldiers; the state must turn these
-soldiers back into prosperous civilians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His cold reasoning and neat phrasing reminded me
-of a speech at some undergraduate debating-society.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can only hope,” I said, “that you won’t have to
-say ‘no’ again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Hungry men had no time for debating-society arguments.
-I hoped, too, that Sonia would not be forced to
-say ‘no’ again. Hungry men had no taste for being
-ordered to walk from Westminster to Hampstead as a
-move in the game with her husband. I said no more.
-And, amid my self-reproaches, I find a barren comfort
-in the knowledge that neither Sonia nor her husband
-would have listened, though one rose from the dead to
-warn them.</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thereafter, like every one else, I waited to see the
-policy of the government proclaimed. The debate on
-the address gave rise to some acrimonious passages between
-the two front benches; a programme of rather remote
-public-relief work was fluttered in the face of the
-labour party; and the prime minister ostentatiously reestablished
-departmental responsibility and dissociated
-himself from the improvisations of his predecessor by
-refusing to receive a deputation of the unemployed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then the interest of the public sought a new stimulus.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I am inclined to think that modern journalism, with
-its craving for daily excitement and its acquiescence in
-the superficial, has incapacitated us for patient study.
-Few subjects unconnected with sex or bloodshed can hold
-the attention of a newspaper-reader for more than three
-days; and, when the men with schemes for employment
-had been photographed as they walked to Downing Street
-and when a popular novelist had protested passionately
-that the unemployed were not really bolshevists, the eyes
-of the nation were allured by pictures of Lord Curzon
-entering his train for the Lausanne conference, and
-controversialists with uncertain memories enquired
-rhetorically the name of the last woman to be hanged
-in England for complicity in murder. Like the peace
-negotiations, like the war, like the domestic and international
-unrest before the war, like the Irish problem,
-this unemployment business became a bore: the public
-was accustomed to the variety of a “continuous performance”
-in its cinematograph theatres, it expected a “new
-programme weekly” for its political stage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I myself was compelled for professional reasons to
-study problems of public policy even after they had
-ceased to be fashionable. The only excuse for continuing
-our paper was to be found in my uncle’s warning that,
-after four years of peace, we were in at least no better
-position than at the outbreak of war; at his death, we had
-cut our last party-ties and were standing behind the
-government as friendly critic. If the new administration
-shewed no improvement on the old, we should have to
-consider—as I told my colleagues—whether we were
-to throw in our lot with labour, whether we should lay
-our paper in its overdue grave or whether we must extend
-to our own country the verdict of revolutionary Russia
-that the old machine of national and international
-government had broken down.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That verdict was pronounced in my private hearing
-by Griffiths himself, with a warning that he would repeat
-it publicly if the government failed to give him instant
-satisfaction. Our second interview was no more
-of my seeking than the first. When the House rose without
-curing unemployment then and there, he made it
-known—first of all at a mass-meeting in Trafalgar
-Square and then in handbills which were distributed about
-the streets—that he would instruct ministers in the meaning
-of unemployment by confronting them with the unemployed.
-This, in the vague phrase which he favoured,
-would “put things to the test”. The demonstrations at
-the opening of parliament had been hardly more than a
-parade. “Hunger marches” were now to be organized
-in every part of the country, converging on London at
-the same moment. After that .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.? I noticed that
-Griffiths carefully refrained from saying what would
-happen when fifty, or a hundred, thousand disappointed
-men found themselves empty-handed, empty-bellied, foot-sore
-and resentful at the closed door of an impotent office.
-And I pointed out this sinister omission in the next number
-of <span class='it'>Peace</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was nothing, Hornbeck told me at this time, in
-the speech or the manifesto to justify police interference;
-but any one who remembered Griffiths’ share in organizing
-the land-grabbing campaign could imagine how this
-new demonstration would be conducted and how it was
-likely to end. I went farther than most of my <span class='it'>confrères</span>
-and denounced the manifesto as deliberately provocative.
-Griffiths called to inform me that, if I chose to print lies,
-he could not stop me, but that, if I was interested in the
-truth, I might perhaps be not too proud to hear it from
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I professed a prompt eagerness for truth in any form,
-though I was more interested to know what amusement
-or instruction he derived from so painfully academic a
-journal as <span class='it'>Peace</span>. I wondered how he came to associate
-me with its direction and why he visited me in Seymour
-Street rather than in Fetter Lane. My curiosity on this
-last point was satisfied when he ran a practised eye over
-the dimensions of the house and asked me how many
-the establishment comprised.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You? And your wife? And six servants?,” he
-recapitulated. “No kids? A car and a man to drive it?
-Four meals a day? You don’t call <span class='it'>that</span> provocative?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we had fewer servants, you’d have more unemployed,”
-I pointed out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It takes three men and four women to keep the two
-of you alive. The house is half empty. You waste more
-food in a day than my people eat in a week. You drive
-about in your jewels and fine clothes among people who’ve
-been cold and hungry for months. And then you tell me
-not to be .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. ‘provocative’!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I reminded him that we were supposed to be discussing
-unemployment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shan’t remedy that by going about in rags,” I said,
-“or by shutting up half the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you were in Germany, you wouldn’t be allowed to
-have empty rooms. And, if you were in Russia, you
-wouldn’t be allowed twenty coats when the next man has
-nothing but a shirt between him and the rain.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I reminded him that we were in England and that he
-had called to demonstrate how little provocation his
-manifesto contained.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If the government orders me to find accommodation
-for people without homes,” I said, “if I have to clothe
-them and feed them, I’ll do it to the best of my ability.
-I put obedience to the law above all things.” The little
-red eyes glowed in anticipation of an attack. “My criticism
-of you is the criticism I’ve brought before now
-against the people who preach a general strike for political
-objects. That’s not the way to proceed in a constitutional
-country. There’s no end to it short of revolution.
-You object to the word ‘provocative’.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did you <span class='it'>read</span> what I said?,” he interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Every word. It was admirably phrased. A single
-letter more would have had you prosecuted. You’re careful
-not to provoke anybody in words; but I tell you that
-you’re inciting people to violence by your actions. You
-know their temper far better than I do. You know what
-you’ve taught them to regard as the minimum standard
-of housing, feeding, wages and out-of-work pay. Do
-you believe you’ll get it by bringing a hundred thousand
-men to London?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Griffiths hesitated perceptibly. If he said “no”, he
-condemned himself for inflating his followers with false
-hopes; if he said “yes”, he was confessing himself the
-prophet of intimidation in its crudest form.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In time,” he answered at length.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do your men realize that they’ll have to wait?” He
-hesitated again for fear of admitting that he had taught
-them too well or not well enough. “No government in
-the world can submit to the dictation of a mass-meeting.
-You know that. If it surrendered to-morrow, you’d
-have another mass-meeting the day after. I think you
-know that too.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And still they wouldn’t have all they’re entitled to,”
-he murmured.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s another question. My charge is that you’re
-bringing thousands of men to London on false pretences.
-They’re probably not in the sweetest of moods; and small
-blame to them. They won’t get what you’re promising
-them; and they’ll turn on you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The red eyes flashed defiantly:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can look after myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So far, we had kept fairly free from personal attacks,
-but something in Griffiths’ manner or voice exasperated
-me. I had not admitted him in order to be lectured about
-the number of servants who were needed to keep me alive;
-the angry, ferret’s eyes gave me a curious feeling that I
-must bite before I was bitten; and, seeing him—perhaps
-quite unjustifiably as a vindictive, treacherous little animal,
-I fixed a quality of untrustworthiness on the man.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will look after yourself,” I prophesied, “by putting
-the blame on the government and rousing your people
-against law and order instead of telling them there
-was never a hope of their getting any of the things you
-promised.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though my antagonist betrayed his feelings in an angry
-flush, he affected to dismiss my prediction as something
-unworthy of his notice:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They said that at Woolhampton,” he answered,
-“when we seized the Town Hall. I’m always stirring
-people up, it seems .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Provocative .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. because I
-put the blame where the blame should go! You haven’t
-called me a paid agitator yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve no intention of doing so. I say to your face, as
-I said in print, that you’re provoking something which
-may end in a revolution. I take the purity of your motives
-for granted. You’ve volunteered to tell me the
-truth and to shew that you’re not organizing constructive
-revolution.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Despite the dislike which I could not help feeling, there
-was no doubting the man’s passionate sincerity. He felt
-for the people he championed the same frenzied protectiveness
-and lust for revenge that I should have felt if
-my sister had been hacked to pieces before my eyes. Argument
-was out of the question; warnings were idle. I
-reconsidered the phrase I had used in likening him to a
-spiteful ferret, for he was touched with the greatness
-that is inseparable from fanaticism. Self-advancement
-and self-advertising had no place in his thoughts, though
-he was arrogantly confident of his authority as a popular
-leader and of his power to cut knots that had baffled every
-other hand. In a conversation that extended over two
-hours I learned nothing of his private history; at the
-end I realized no better than at the beginning why he had
-singled me out for his aggressive apologia. The resonant
-blows of our blunt swords echoed emptily on our impenetrable
-harness; and, when I saw him to the door, I
-was saying for the fiftieth time: “You’re trying to stir
-up a revolution”; and for the fiftieth time he was retorting:
-“If your precious government can’t do anything,
-some one else had better have a try.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we crossed swords for the last time, Barbara drove
-up to the door. She had been giving another sitting to
-Wace; and her appearance, in an ermine coat and a diamond
-star, was not wasted on Griffiths, who bowed ironically
-and looked her up and down as though he were
-assessing her in terms of daily meat-meals.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I must be off,” he said; and I know he was recapitulating
-again: “<span class='it'>You. And your wife. And six
-servants .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad to have had this talk,” I said, “even though
-we’ve not convinced each other. If you think I’ve misrepresented
-you, I can only offer you equal space in our
-columns to put yourself right with our readers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shan’t have time,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can do it in two lines. If you’ll answer my
-charge that you’re working, consciously or unconsciously,
-for a revolution .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m answering it now,” he interrupted. “From here
-I go to King’s Cross and from King’s Cross to the north.
-Putting things to the test. I shall be back again in just
-the time that it takes us to walk here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he disappeared from sight, Barbara commented admiringly
-on his exit:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For a third curtain, it was unsurpassed. I <span class='it'>do</span> want
-to know what’s going to happen in the last act.”</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I did not know then, I had a strength of conviction
-that amounted almost to knowledge. There was going to
-be public excitement; there was going to be loose speaking;
-there was going to be bad blood. And, after that,
-there might well be rioting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have replayed the game a hundred times since that
-day and asked myself what I could have done to change
-the issue. Before the war I should have talked to Bertrand;
-and, if he had shared my apprehensions, he would
-have spoken a word to the responsible ministers. With
-this new government of men unknown to me, with this
-new House no longer even in session, there was no one I
-could approach. During the war, when we broke down
-most of the interdepartmental walls, a telephone message
-from the Admiralty would have stirred sympathetic
-chords in Scotland Yard or the Home Office. Now I
-had long severed my connection with the public service;
-Philip Hornbeck was my one remaining link; and, if I
-bothered him again, I ran the risk of being told that Griffiths
-was become a bee in my bonnet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This notwithstanding, I did ask Barbara to arrange a
-dinner; and I am only sorry that I did not make the invitation
-more urgent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is anything the matter?,” she asked in some surprise,
-for Hornbeck had dined with us only two or three nights
-before.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not at the moment; but there may be trouble if some
-one doesn’t spike that fellow Griffiths’ guns. In his way,
-the man’s right: as the government <span class='it'>has</span> no remedy, you
-can’t find an answer to people who say they’ll take the
-remedy into their own hands. But the common sense of
-the world won’t allow that. Griffiths will be refused a
-hearing; the mob may break a few windows; and then the
-police will clear the streets. It’s not worth marching an
-army three hundred miles to learn that old lesson.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Until they’ve learnt it, they’ll go on believing in men
-like Griffiths,” said Barbara.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But it will be a more costly lesson than they realize.
-With the best intentions in the world, he’s marching them
-into a trap. I want Hornbeck to stop the march and
-break up the units before they can collect in force.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We telephoned to the Admiralty; but Hornbeck had
-left. When I got in touch with him next day, he was
-engaged for several nights ahead. Rather shamefacedly,
-I told him my fears; and he promised to enquire what
-steps were being taken, though I felt I had wholly failed
-to communicate my dread of the wasted little fanatic
-Griffiths. In the middle of the following week I read that
-the great “hunger-march” had begun; and, when Hornbeck
-dined with us, he explained that Griffiths was being
-given enough rope to hang himself, but no more. One
-army had reached Nottingham, a second was on the outskirts
-of Coventry and a third was halting on the east
-side of Newbury; but they would not be allowed to reach
-London. Since my interview with him, the leader and
-spokesman had abandoned his former caution; and Hornbeck
-told me that the police were waiting to prosecute
-him for inciting to crime.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a pity to wait,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What else can one do?,” asked Hornbeck.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Perhaps my memory is biased by the events of the
-following week, perhaps my instinct was right in warning
-me that Griffiths was one of the most dangerous firebrands
-that I had ever met. He haunted me, as the
-shadow of Marat must have haunted the well-to-do citizens
-of Paris; and I felt an equal, unreasoning impatience
-with the departments that ignored him and with the papers
-that advertised him. For two or three days the great
-march was reported mile by mile, with a list of the victories
-won by “Griffiths’ armies” over the powerless
-custodians of such county halls, municipal libraries and
-public baths as they occupied on their way. For the same
-period the government maintained a calm and dignified
-silence. Then new interests demanded attention and
-space.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By the time that the various units joined forces in the
-open country beyond Neasden, hunger-marching commanded
-no price in the ever-changing tariff of news-items.
-London was shopping for Christmas; the Lausanne conference
-was becoming every day more firm and ineffectual;
-Signor Mussolini was in England; Germany had
-defaulted again; and the prime ministers of the late allies
-were discussing with their financial experts new and final
-methods of settling the problem of reparations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I only learned that the army was at hand when I read
-that the government policy for combating unemployment
-had been fully explained and that, in the opinion of one
-private secretary, “<span class='it'>no useful purpose would be served by
-a meeting between the Minister and the leaders of the unemployed
-now collected in Wembley Park</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is the moment I’ve been dreading,” I told Barbara.
-“Griffiths has made fools of these people; and
-he can only recover his authority by fighting the government.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I read next day that the leaders of the unemployed insisted
-upon sending a deputation to the minister of labour.
-A public demonstration was announced later; and
-from an evening paper I learned that, while the police
-would not interfere with an orderly march through the
-streets, it must not be conducted in the neighbourhood
-of Westminster. As I walked home that night, I was
-given a handbill in which I read, over the signature of
-Griffiths, that the hunger-march would be resumed next
-morning and would be directed first to Buckingham
-Palace, then—as a concession to constitutionalism—to
-the Home Office and finally—for a reason I could not
-guess, since parliament was no longer sitting—to the
-House of Commons. It was not for Scotland Yard to
-say who might or might not have access to the king or
-his responsible ministers; and the problem that chiefly
-vexed the spirit of Griffiths was to discover who in fact
-was responsible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now,” I told my colleagues when I reached Fetter
-Lane through a double line of police, “there’s going to
-be trouble. The only thing that can stop it will be a
-downpour of rain.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And there is in fact a hard frost,” yawned Triskett.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This fog may do as well,” said Jefferson Wright.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s pretty serious,” we all agreed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Did any of us believe in the warnings and predictions
-which we uttered? I cannot say. Everything that happened
-in these days is coloured by the memory of what
-happened afterwards. I may conceivably take credit for
-explaining before other people that these demonstrations
-were on a different plane from the coal strikes and railway
-strikes that aroused our uneasiness after the war;
-on the other hand, I may only have been suffering from
-disordered nerves. It was the end of the year; I wanted a
-holiday; and the self-control which I had to exercise at
-home sometimes deserted me when I was at my office.
-Accordingly I claim no praise and feel no shame in saying
-that I was nervous. The long lines of police-pickets
-had not been stationed about the streets without some
-purpose; and the news that trickled in throughout the
-morning was not of a kind to allay anxiety.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Philip Hornbeck did indeed repeat by telephone his
-customary assurance that Griffiths could be discounted.
-When the marchers entered Regent’s Park, they were
-warned that they would not be allowed to approach Downing
-Street; and, as Hornbeck walked to the Admiralty,
-he passed half-a-dozen columns of dejected, leaderless
-men who were standing easy or trudging slowly under
-banners of ineffectual protest. Even the bands, he said,
-were dispirited. After one glance, the passers-by paid
-no heed to a sight that was now wearisomely familiar;
-and, in Hornbeck’s eyes, the gaunt, ragged army found
-its best friends among the constables who tramped in
-a protective and restraining cordon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did these fellows seem disappointed?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I think they were too tired, poor devils, to feel anything.
-If it hadn’t been for the bobbies, you might have
-thought it was another retreat from Moscow. I believe
-there <span class='it'>was</span> some plain speaking when they found their
-Napoleon had left them, but I hear he’s only gone to see
-about billets. The police are helping him all they can.
-That’s the way we stop revolutions in England,” he
-chuckled.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was reminded again of the day now long distant
-when O’Rane and I had stood in a crowd of many thousands
-to watch the body of Terence McSwiney drawing
-through the respectfully silent streets of London. The
-English, I felt, behaved sometimes like characters in a
-comic opera: consistent only in their inconsistency, they
-could not rise to a revolution. With a longer leap into
-the past, my memory fastened on a moment in O’Rane’s
-first year at Melton, when he watched a half-hearted attempt
-at a May Day demonstration and, in disgust at
-the apathy of the demonstrators, instructed them in the
-Marseillaise. I wondered if he recalled that day, which
-was also nearly his last as a scholar of Melton. I wondered
-if he and Hornbeck were right in discounting this
-threat of revolution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I thought of the weary crowds that were pouring
-into London.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’d put a spoke in his wheel at the beginning
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You can’t stop peaceful pedestrians from walking
-along the king’s highway,” Hornbeck rejoined, “and
-Griffiths arranged that the armies should only <span class='it'>become</span>
-armies when they were too big to turn back.”</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had intended to lunch at the Eclectic in the hopes of
-hearing what steps the government was taking to house
-and feed the hunger-marchers, but, when I was halfway
-to St. James’ Street, I turned north and walked home
-with a vague feeling that I must see how Barbara was getting
-on.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Spence-Atkins asked me point-blank if I thought
-there would be any outbreak, I had replied with conviction
-that I did not. That, however, was in the office;
-and, as I walked west, I was disquieted by the sight of
-these silent columns, marching aimlessly, halting and
-dissolving into little knots of stragglers too weary to
-march longer. In Waterloo Place and Regent Street,
-the police imposed an order which the men themselves
-had been unable to maintain; but from Hanover Square
-to Park Lane the army split into its elements. Through
-the settling fog I saw men sitting on the kerbs and clustering
-on the island-refuges; they dropped in a shapeless
-heap on the first convenient doorstep; and the good-humoured
-constables who said “Now then, you must
-move along” found themselves addressing ears that were
-already deaf with sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Half of them are no more than boys, sir,” one policeman
-pointed out to me. “Tired out, that’s what they
-are. They don’t mean no harm.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>By a damnable irony, the men had chosen for their collapse
-a moment when Brook Street offered a tantalizing
-blend of warm, savoury smells. I, who had never known
-the meaning of hunger, found my appetite quickening.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re tired out and <span class='it'>hungry</span>,” I said. So far as I
-am a judge of accents, some of these boys had come from
-the Black Country, others from Lancashire, others again
-from Northumberland. “I live near here. Is it any good
-trying to raise some soup .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The constable shrugged his shoulders and waited while
-an old man, who had fainted, was lifted on to an ambulance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If once you begin, sir, you’ll have the whole lot of
-them at your door. It’s more than one man can tackle.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I walked on to Seymour Street with a growing sense
-of despair. All this had been prophesied to Griffiths in
-forcible language ten days before; but my meagre powers
-of imagination and description never came within miles
-of actuality. I had not realized the dishonour to humanity
-which a man commits when he no longer hides a
-broken spirit; I had forgotten the disfigurements of starvation
-and the sickly stench of neglect. The policeman
-was entirely right: half these fellows were only boys;
-and I felt the blood mounting to my head when I thought
-of the way they were victimized and their ignorance
-exploited. During the war I had seen them and their
-elder brothers trotting obediently to the slaughter-house
-and bemusedly offering their lives for a cause that was
-never explained and for objects that they never understood.
-Now, no less obediently, they trotted in answer
-to a voice that promised them a quick millennium.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I should have caught some hope, for all my denunciation
-of violence, if they had torn Griffiths limb from
-limb; but the patient credulity that collected them under
-his leadership accepted uncomplainingly the fate to which
-he led them. Griffiths, as he had boasted to me, could
-look after himself; providence, the police or the devil
-might look after his followers, who sprawled about the
-misty streets like slumbering cattle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If I had expected to find Barbara sharing my own
-anxiety, I might have known better than to expect any
-sign of it. She greeted me with faint surprise because I
-had not warned her that I should be lunching at home;
-then the surprise turned to relief as she recollected that
-she was a man short.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s a family party,” she explained. “Father and
-mother and Charles. I asked the O’Ranes; but David
-can’t get away, so you must take his place.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. You’re
-not ill or anything are you, George?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, no, thanks. <span class='it'>Depressed</span>, if you like. London’s
-a horrible sight with all these hunger-marchers dropping
-down on every side from sheer exhaustion. I don’t
-know what’s to be done about them. I only hope there
-won’t be a scrap.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara looked out of window; but the fog was now
-so thick that she could not see across the street.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Was that why you came back?,” she asked with her
-head averted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I wanted to see that you were all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Thank you.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. As though afraid that I might
-take advantage of her curt gratitude, she broke into a
-laugh. “Some one—I think it was Jim—once said
-that, when the revolution came, there’d be keen competition
-between Sonia and me for a place in the first tumbril.
-If it begins to-day, we shall be able to drive down together.
-I suppose we <span class='it'>are</span> two of the most useless human
-beings in creation.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I hope the mob doesn’t break
-in while father’s here: I know he’d struggle with the
-executioner, and I think it’s unfair to hinder a man who’s
-simply trying to do his duty.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I feel Robson would probably save us,” I answered.
-“He’d tell the mob, very patiently, that it was out of the
-question for them to have a revolution in Seymour
-Street.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You don’t really expect any trouble, do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I believed Barbara to be entirely fearless, I did not
-mind speaking frankly:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It all turns on what’s likely to happen in the next
-few hours. The men are too tired at present even to feel
-hungry. When they wake up, they’ll be like ravening
-wolves.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On Crawleigh’s arrival, I was distantly comforted to
-find that he shared my own view and had indeed spent an
-hour trying to get it accepted in Downing Street. During
-his viceroyalty he had been ultimately responsible for
-the relief-works in two famines; and, for once, I found
-him pregnant with constructive proposals. Three or four
-of the biggest catering-firms, he urged, should set up
-kitchens in the London parks; every public hall should be
-turned into a dormitory; and, if supplies ran short in the
-shops, there must be a house-to-house visitation to collect
-bread and blankets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’d punish the ring-leaders without mercy,” he added,
-“but we must do one thing at a time. This is December,
-these men are starving; and for the next forty-eight hours
-we must simply suspend our ordinary laws. Why the
-government ever <span class='it'>allowed</span> such madness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We were still discussing emergency measures when
-Sonia came in very late and apologetic. Every approach
-to Westminster, she reported, was barred with lines of
-mounted police; St. James’ Park was closed, Whitehall
-and Victoria Street were barricaded. She herself had
-crossed the river at Lambeth and come by tube from
-Waterloo.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are things still quiet?,” Lady Crawleigh enquired
-nervously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I should think so; but the fog’s so thick that you
-can’t tell.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Did David find you?,” Sonia asked me.
-“He wanted to talk to you about soup-kitchens or something.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He hadn’t come when I left the office,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we went in to luncheon, Charles Neave, who had
-come up from the country the day before, contributed
-some first-hand observations on the march from Cumberland.
-It had been peaceful and orderly from the moment
-when the marchers convinced their potential antagonists
-that they meant to have what they wanted. Private property
-was scrupulously respected; but, on the principle that
-churches and public buildings belonged to the community,
-Griffiths’ ‘armies’ took possession of them as lodgings
-for a night. I was given to understand that there had
-been one or two sharp conflicts; but Crawleigh was expressing
-more than his own opinion when he reminded
-us that this was December and that the men were starving.
-Barns and warehouses were offered voluntarily as
-soon as their owners were satisfied that they would not
-be damaged.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How did they manage for food?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The workhouse people did what they could. I think
-the rest was voted by the different town-councils. There
-wasn’t enough to go round anywhere, but a whole lot was
-given privately.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Were there any speeches or demonstrations?,” asked
-Crawleigh.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I didn’t hear any. Everybody seemed to be on the
-side of the marchers. They felt it was jolly hard lines
-and something ought to be done. Any ass who calls it
-bolshevism doesn’t know what he’s talking about.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we can only get them back as quietly as they’ve
-come .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Crawleigh began and left his sentence unfinished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wondered whether he too was reflecting that the most
-dangerous revolution is the one in which popular sympathy
-goes out to the revolutionaries. In the last years
-of the eighteenth century the history of the world would
-have been changed if Louis had not forbidden the Swiss
-Guard to fire from the windows of the Tuileries; it was
-in fact changed—and revolution died in giving birth
-to Bonapartism—when Napoleon cleared the streets of
-Paris with a whiff of grapeshot. I would more readily
-have turned a machine-gun on my own dining-room than
-have harassed the spent men whom I saw collapsing on
-the doorsteps of Brook Street; but I wondered how far
-the sympathy of the onlookers and the kindliness of the
-police would paralyse vigorous action if the spent men
-rose and had to be coerced.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is anybody in <span class='it'>fact</span> taking any steps?,” I asked Crawleigh.
-“We’ve food in the house, we can buy
-more.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re collecting food and money as it is,” added
-Sonia. “Just before I came here, that little red-eyed
-Welshman called to see David .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“D’you mean Griffiths?,” I asked in surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes. That’s another reason why I was so late. He
-wouldn’t go. I told him I’d nothing to give him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did he come alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh, no! There was a queue stretching farther than
-I could see. He told me he was sure Mr. O’Rane wouldn’t
-refuse to help when he realized what these men had been
-through to bring their grievances before the government.”
-Sonia’s expression grew suddenly hard. “I told
-him we weren’t the government; and I should be very
-glad if he’d take his army to Hampstead and let me get
-to my taxi.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before I had time to warn her against such trifling,
-I was called to the telephone and informed that O’Rane
-himself was in Fetter Lane and wished to see me at
-once.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hullo? This is a private wire, isn’t it?,” he began.
-“Good! I came to see you on quite other business. Then
-one of your people came in with the latest news, and
-I felt I should have to borrow your eyes for the
-afternoon. I’m afraid Griffiths’ people are getting out
-of hand. There’s a certain amount of damage being
-done .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Whereabouts?,” I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In Hampstead. I’ve warned the police; and, of
-course, Hampstead is a big place; but I couldn’t help wondering
-if they’d taken it into their heads to loot my office.
-I’m afraid they won’t find more than about five pounds
-in the till; but there are a lot of young clerks there, and
-I don’t want them to have a scare. If you could pick
-me up here and come to inspect the field of battle .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll be with you as soon as I can get across London,”
-I answered.</p>
-
-<h3>6</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I hung up the receiver, I saw Barbara standing in
-the doorway. One hand gripped the moulding of the
-frame; the other was pressed to her side. I jumped up
-in sudden alarm and helped her to a chair, for her lips
-were moving without giving forth any sound.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Babs! Darling heart, what’s the matter?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That’s what I came to find out,” she answered with
-an effort that almost choked her. “George, you’re not
-going!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not till you’re all right,” I promised. “Are you
-feeling faint? I shall have to go out for a bit: a man
-who’s waiting to see me at the office .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you’re not going!,” she repeated frantically.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’ll only be for an hour or so .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’ll be for all eternity! George, if you go, you won’t
-come back! Can’t you <span class='it'>feel</span> it? I know when death’s at
-hand! Have I ever been wrong? Uncle Bertrand.
-Eric .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Oh, before the war! Jack Summertown and
-the other boys in Jim’s last party! I know, I <span class='it'>know</span>! You
-think I’m mad .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, my dear, who’s going to kill me?,” I asked.
-“I’ve been in too many London fogs to fear them much;
-and, if you’re thinking of the hunger-marchers, I’m afraid
-the poor devils couldn’t do any mischief even if they
-wanted to. I made an appointment with a man .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“With David. You put him before me?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was at a loss to think of anything that would calm
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He is my best and oldest friend,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You always <span class='it'>have</span> put him before me,” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My dear, you speak as if you were jealous! It’s absurd
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I heard what you said to him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then you couldn’t have heard more than about six
-words. I said I’d be with him .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And wasn’t that enough? Wasn’t it enough when I
-knew he wanted you? I’m not jealous; I’m terrified!
-Don’t I know what he said to you? He’s in trouble
-and he wants to drag you into it. But he shan’t, he
-shan’t!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I sat down by Barbara’s side and told her, so far as I
-could remember, word for word all that O’Rane had said
-to me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You know what Fleet Street rumours are,” I ended,
-though I felt it was unfortunate that this rumour of rioting
-in Hampstead had followed so disquieting soon on
-Sonia’s jaunty account of her meeting with Griffiths.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If there weren’t danger, you wouldn’t think it necessary
-to go. It’s no good lying to me, George. I’ve lived
-with you too long not to know something about you. I
-ask you to stay.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If Raney could see for himself .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” I began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let some one <span class='it'>else</span> go!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I could not tell Barbara, I remembered vividly
-the night when I had sat alone in that room, begging
-O’Rane to come and keep me company. I remembered,
-too, his characteristic promise that he would see me
-through to the grave and beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s never asked me to do anything for him before.
-I’ve promised; and I’m afraid I can’t go back on it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara stood up as though she were going to rejoin
-her guests. Physically she was in control of herself and
-could walk without difficulty or apparent pain; mentally
-she seemed to be on the verge of a collapse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Four and a half,” she muttered at the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Four and a half what?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Four and a half years since <span class='it'>you</span> made certain promises
-to <span class='it'>me</span>. Four and a half years since we were married.
-David has only to raise his little finger .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is hardly the time to hold a <span class='it'>post mortem</span> on our
-marriage,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I’m hardly the person?,” she taunted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I didn’t say that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You wouldn’t! You made up your mind to be patient
-with me at all costs. You just <span class='it'>wouldn’t</span> lose your
-temper! Dear God, why didn’t you, George? I deserved
-it. We could have been friends if you’d dropped your
-hateful superiority for a moment, if you’d ever become
-human! You <span class='it'>can</span> be! You were marvellously sympathetic
-when all was going well; but, after the crash, you
-behaved like a stone god. I was wrong. I <span class='it'>told</span> you I
-was wrong. You didn’t blame me. You know I’m
-jealous through and through, but you wouldn’t punish
-me by falling in love with some one else. You didn’t
-even complain of this ghastly two years’ imprisonment.
-Won’t you ever meet me half way? I told you my love
-for Eric was dead; you know I never loved any one else.
-What more do you want? Must I apologize? I will!
-I’m sorry. I love you, I need you! I wouldn’t say it the
-other night, because I was trying to hold together the
-rags of my pride. Isn’t that enough? If you’ll stay, I’ll
-make up for all my wickedness and cruelty. You’re all
-I have in the world. I didn’t know it before; but now
-I can feel death hovering over you like some great black
-bird. If you go .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. If you go .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Suddenly turning, she clung to me, laughing and crying.
-I stood without speaking because her intensity of
-feeling overwhelmed me. I remember stroking her
-hands. I believe I told her that I should be back before
-she had time to miss me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you’re not going <span class='it'>now</span>?,” she cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Darling, I must. I shan’t be in any more danger
-than I am now; but, if it were a question of bombs and
-machine-guns, you wouldn’t ask me to let Raney down.
-He wouldn’t have asked me if he didn’t need me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara’s hands disengaged themselves from mine and
-rose to draw me into her embrace. As our lips met, I
-felt that she belonged to me, at last, heart and soul; but,
-when I looked into her eyes, I read her frantic certainty
-that we should never kiss again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m coming back, sweetheart,” I promised her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good-bye,” she whispered. Then, still gripping my
-shoulders, she looked wildly about the room as though to
-face and drive away this black presence of death that was
-haunting her. “It’s .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. come too late. Good-bye .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and forgive me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m coming back,” I told her again; but Barbara was
-now kneeling with eyes closed and folded hands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If she heard me, she made no sign; I fancy she heard
-nothing but her own passionate prayers. As I stumbled
-into the choking fog, the door slammed behind me; and
-for the first time in these bewildering five minutes I
-realized that I was awake.</p>
-
-<div><h1 id='chap13'>CHAPTER THREE</h1></div>
-
-<h3>TWO IN THE FIELD</h3>
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<div class='stanza-inner'>
-<p class='line0'>“The one shall be taken, and the other left.”</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='it'>S. Matthew</span>: XXIV, 40.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<h3>1</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In Seymour Street I could not distinguish the houses
-on the far side of the road; at the Marble Arch I was
-unable to see from the one side of the pavement to the
-other; and I made my cautious way to the tube station
-chiefly by sense of touch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A London fog can be the completest insulator in the
-world. Paralysing sight and muffling sound, it separates
-the individual from his fellows in the densest part of a
-crowded street. As I walked up Great Cumberland
-Place, there was no sound but my own faint footsteps;
-the whole city belonged to me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘<span class='it'>Dear God, the very houses seem asleep</span>’;” I murmured
-involuntarily:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘<span class='it'>And all that mighty heart is lying still.</span>’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Then, I am not ashamed to confess, I felt suddenly
-frightened, for I knew that the mighty heart was beating,
-the houses which seemed asleep were full of people peering
-into the darkness of the street as I peered through the
-darkness at their windows. The street was full; at any
-moment I might trample on the unseen; and the unseen
-that watched and listened for my faint footsteps might
-spring out on me. I walked on tiptoe .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. and could
-have sworn that some one or something laughed at my
-futile caution.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At an unattainable distance, a haze of dirty-lemon
-light smeared the darkness. I hurried forward six paces
-and bruised my knees against a lamp-post. Pausing to
-pick up my hat, I saw a knot of motionless bodies tangled
-on the doorstep at my feet. There was no word, no more
-laughter; perhaps I had imagined that earlier laugh. The
-fog insulated me again as though I had been thrust under
-an airless bell-glass with a pile of dead. I dared not
-move for fear of treading on one of them. The lemon
-light grew dim, as a thicker wave of fog floated silently
-from the unplumbed reservoir in the park. I felt my
-fingers tightening round my stick. Then one of the
-crumpled bodies moved in its sleep and broke the spell.
-I walked on—slowly, because I was out of breath—and
-steadied my nerves by speaking to the policeman on
-duty at the corner.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He too, I found, was insulated by the fog. Some one
-should have relieved him hours ago; but every man in the
-force was required to regulate the traffic and to shepherd
-the hunger-marchers. What had happened to them he
-could not tell me. Whenever the fog lifted, he saw groups
-of them drifting aimlessly about or camping wearily in
-the first resting-place that they could find. As armies,
-they had either ceased to exist or had transferred themselves
-to another part of London. I asked whether he
-had heard of any trouble.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Haven’t heard nothing, sir,” he answered. “Wish
-I had. No, there won’t be no trouble. These chaps
-are too tired; and they’re all of them strange to
-London.”</p>
-
-<h3>2</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I reached the light and warmth of the tube, I
-could analyse calmly my curious surrender to panic on
-my way up Great Cumberland Place. A London fog, as
-I had told Barbara, was no new phenomenon to me; apart
-from its dirt, I rather enjoyed one for its mystery and
-romance. If the order of interrogation had been reversed,
-I should have assured the policeman that I anticipated no
-trouble and that the hunger-marchers were too tired, too
-ill-acquainted with London to provoke a riot. I believed
-every word that I had said to my wife; I am not more
-nervous than most short-sighted and unadventurous men
-of forty; and yet for a moment I had entirely lost my
-head. Was this due to Barbara’s sudden collapse? Were
-my own nerves cracking?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the familiar long car, staring up at the well-known
-advertisements, I was myself again. I could dismiss all
-thoughts of imminent death, hanging over the house like
-a bird of doom, as lightly as they would have been dismissed
-by my stolid neighbours in the train. Barbara,
-for some reason, was overexcited. In my uncle’s last
-illness she had felt—or said she felt—the presence of
-death; she added then, with something of the same terror,
-that, if she ever heard my life was in danger, she would
-be dragged out of her indifference. We had been talking,
-throughout luncheon, of possible riots; I had arrived unexpectedly
-because I was anxious for her safety; a cell in
-her unconscious mind might well have retained our conversation
-as I drove to my uncle’s death-bed. Was it
-necessary to probe deeper than that?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>What mattered, what I could not yet begin to realize
-was that Barbara and I were at last one flesh and spirit.
-When I returned to her .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I wondered whether I had done wisely in leaving her.
-When I remembered the last poignant attitude in which
-I had seen her, kneeling upright with closed eyes and
-praying distractedly, I felt unforgivably callous.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For a casual promise to a friend,” I told myself indignantly;
-“when I’ve assured her he’s in no danger
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As the train ran in to Oxford Circus, I rose from my
-seat. Then I sat down again; rose again; sat down again
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. till the conductor called sharply:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now, make up your mind, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I made up my mind and went on to Chancery Lane. I
-must keep my word to O’Rane. Had I wished to break
-it, I could not; and, with this sense of impotence, something
-of my old anxiety returned. Raney would not
-have summoned me for a trifle; if he needed me, there
-was danger; yet I had told Barbara that I should be as
-safe with him as if I stayed in Seymour Street.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From Chancery Lane I stumbled to my office at a pace
-that left no time for morbid fancies. O’Rane was in my
-room, sitting by the fire and slapping a stick lazily against
-his boot. I have never seen any one less like a figure of
-destiny, urging me to an unknown doom. At the vaguest
-hint, he would have insisted on my going back to Barbara.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is there any more news?,” I asked. “I came as soon
-as I could.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s very good of you. No, I’ve heard nothing since
-that first rumour,” he answered. “If I had, I wouldn’t
-have bothered you; but I’ve been trying for two hours to
-get through to my secretary, and the girl at the exchange
-tells me every time that there’s no answer. I expect the
-hunger-march has disorganized everything; and I can
-smell a pretty thick fog even if I can’t see it.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Shall
-we start, or is there anything you want to do here first?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we set out, I realized that in the darkness of night
-or the greater darkness of a fog the blind man has an
-advantage over those who are guided by their eyes. With
-a murmured “Chancery Lane Tube; and then change at
-Tottenham Court Road”, O’Rane piloted me more surely
-and far more quickly than I could have found my way
-unaided. The contents-bills outside the station proclaimed—rather
-superfluously—“<span class='it'>Fog-Pall over London</span>”;
-but, beyond one or two collisions and an accident
-with a runaway horse on the Embankment, I could find
-no news. “<span class='it'>Griffiths’ Armies</span>” were given a headline of
-no more than medium size; and their progress had been
-followed less far than Philip Hornbeck had carried it
-that morning. The peaceful encounter with the police in
-Regent’s Park was briefly described; but of the barricades
-which Sonia had seen at Westminster there was no mention.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By the way, you know Griffiths has turned up
-again?,” I said. “Your wife was lunching with us; and
-I gathered that he’d called on you at The Sanctuary.
-That was just before lunch.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s happened to him?,” O’Rane asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sonia told him you weren’t at home.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did she send him to the office?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I believe she did.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane’s face grew grave; but he only muttered a hope
-that he would be in time to meet the deputation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is a moment for desperate remedies,” he explained.
-“That’s why I came to see you in the first place.
-Most of these fellows will starve, and a fair number will
-go berserk if we don’t do something for them. I’ve had
-leave to turn Millbank Gardens into a canteen; so we can
-look after any one who comes to The Sanctuary. Only a
-few, though, will penetrate into the heart of London; the
-main armies are still in the suburbs; and if we can set up
-relief-camps at Wimbledon, Hounslow, Hampstead, Epping
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I wanted you to help me with the plans .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-Are we nearly there yet?,” he enquired with sudden impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s the next station,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the high ground of Hampstead, the fog lay whiter,
-with a tantalizing promise that it would clear at any moment.
-As we came out of the lift, I could read without
-difficulty the shop-signs on the opposite side of the street,
-though the higher ground of the Heath alternated patches
-of afternoon light with pockets of mist as impenetrable
-as anything I had seen at the Marble Arch. Of hunger-marchers
-I could find no trace; but here, as everywhere in
-London, the police seemed to have been multiplied a hundredfold.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Take my arm,” O’Rane ordered. “I can shew you a
-short cut.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Leaving the main road, I followed him through devious
-alleys until a sense of open spaces hinted that we must be
-near the Heath. After the noise of the train, the silence
-of these empty lanes was unearthly; after the thronged
-street by the station, we seemed to be alone in the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This reminds me of a raid-night in the war,” I said,
-as we plunged into a belt of fog. “Pitch-dark. Deserted.
-And all the time you feel there are thousands of
-people within touching-distance of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Before he could answer, we had come again into a
-broad street and were within touching-distance of a crowd
-that seemed to number thousands, though I could only
-see the first three or four ranks.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is this one of the armies?,” O’Rane asked, as he
-turned, almost without checking, down a footway between
-two villas.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Spectators, I think. It was more like a football
-crowd than a demonstration.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What the devil’s a crowd doing here?,” he asked
-with the first note of anxiety that I had heard in his voice.
-“There’s nothing to see, except my office.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Hold
-on a minute while I find the key. I’m going to take you
-in the back way.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we halted, I observed that the footway had brought
-us to a high brick wall with a wooden door in the middle.
-O’Rane was fitting the key into the lock when the door
-opened from the inside and a constable flashed his bull’s-eye
-into our faces.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now then, what are you up to?,” he demanded truculently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is my office,” O’Rane answered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Sorry, sir. My orders are not to let any one in.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But you can’t keep me out of my own house.
-Where’s the inspector?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The constable levelled the beam of his lamp on us again,
-this time with marked indecision. O’Rane’s voice had a
-ring of authority; and the key which he held was superficial
-evidence of good faith.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are you Mr. O’Rane, sir?,” asked the constable.
-“The inspector’s been trying to get hold of you. Maybe
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. you haven’t heard, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Haven’t heard what?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The place has been smashed about, sir. Them hunger-marchers .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Any one hurt?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“None of your people, sir; but we had to take our
-truncheons to the others. If you’ll see the inspector,
-sir .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane bent his head and passed through the doorway,
-dragging me behind him by the wrist. Our path lay
-through an overgrown clump of evergreens; and, when
-we came into the open, on a strip of blighted lawn, it
-was my turn to catch O’Rane’s wrist while I surveyed
-the damage. So far as I could see in the uncertain light,
-there was not one whole pane of glass in the place; a
-door, torn from its hinges, lay athwart one of the trampled
-flower-beds; and under the boarding of the penthouse
-that did duty for a waiting-room there trickled a
-thin stream of black water. The lawn was carpeted with
-files and ledgers; the doorways were blocked with broken
-chairs; and the air was heavy with the smell of wet
-ashes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The place is wrecked?,” O’Rane broke in on my description.
-“That’s enough for the present. Find me
-the man in charge.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a corner of the main office we came upon a group of
-three constables, one inspector and two unexplained men
-in plain-clothes. They were talking in undertones round
-a table on which O’Rane’s secretary lay in a dead faint.
-Another clerk, white-faced and tremulous, sat in another
-corner with a telephone; a third wandered distractedly
-about the room, tidying books into place and sobbing
-gently to herself.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is Mr. O’Rane,” I told the inspector. “We
-understand no one’s been killed. That’s all we know.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s not the fault of those others that some one <span class='it'>wasn’t</span>
-killed. Excuse me, sir, she’s coming to,” he added in
-an undertone. “Don’t hurry her! Stand back there and
-give her room.”</p>
-
-<h3>3</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Five minutes later we began to build up a composite
-explanation from the inspector’s report and the evidence
-of the three eye-witnesses. Shortly after one o’clock a
-man had called to see Mr. O’Rane; he gave no name, but
-said that he had been sent to the office from Westminster.
-On hearing that Mr. O’Rane was not yet arrived, he explained
-that he was spokesman of a deputation and would
-like to wait for an interview. The one clerk who was on
-duty during the luncheon-hour then tried to make an appointment
-for the next morning on the ground that Mr.
-O’Rane had said he would not be at the office until late,
-if indeed he came at all that day. The spokesman of the
-deputation replied that he had heard that story before
-and enquired sarcastically if he should lead his men back
-to Westminster.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He said he’d come all the way from the north,” interposed
-O’Rane’s secretary. “I guessed then he was
-one of the hunger-marchers; and I .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. didn’t like the
-way he spoke. So, when he turned to call the others, I
-gave him a push and slammed the door behind him.
-Then .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. then .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. then .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane patted the girl’s hand while the inspector resumed
-his narrative. Barred from one entrance, the
-rioters attacked the other and succeeded in wrenching the
-door down. Inside, their conduct at first was orderly:
-some stretched themselves on the floor, others collected
-round the fires; when the police arrived, however, one or
-two got out of hand: tables were overturned, drawers ransacked
-and the safe bombarded, ineffectually enough, with
-sticks and stones. Then two arrests were made; and the
-crowd settled down to fight in earnest. Those who were
-outside shattered the windows with every missile that
-came to hand; those within overturned the furniture,
-flung the books from their shelves and kicked burning
-coals into the midst of the wreckage. When the truncheons
-came into place, the attack collapsed; but, with half-a-dozen
-exceptions, the invaders had made good their
-escape.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Which way did they go?,” asked O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Every way, sir, as far as we could see. They were
-lost in the fog before they were out of the garden.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I understand. Well, they’re not likely to come back,
-but I suppose you’ll leave some one to look after the
-place. I shall be here first thing to-morrow morning, but
-I’ve rather a lot to do now. Can you arrange for some
-one to take these ladies home? I don’t like them to
-wander about unprotected. George, I want you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I followed him into the ruins of his private office,
-he asked me if Sonia had mentioned where she was going
-that afternoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I imagine, to The Sanctuary,” I answered. “She
-had tickets for a private view, but I heard her say it was
-too dark to do anything except go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And the best place too. Will you get hold of the
-other telephone and tell her to bar the door and put the
-shutters up in the library? All the ground-floor rooms
-without shutters must be locked on the outside. She’s
-not to go to the door on any pretext; and there must be
-no lights in any window. If I want to get in, I’ll use
-the fire-escape; so she must leave the nursery-window
-open. Tell her—without frightening her, if possible—that
-I’m asking the police to draft some additional men
-into the neighbourhood .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You think this gang has gone back?,” I interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was the first time that I had engaged in any adventure
-with O’Rane; and I began to appreciate some of
-his qualities of leadership. Always knowing what he
-wanted, he made his followers want it with equal intensity;
-fearless himself, he subdued fear in others. I
-felt that he would stand back to back with me against
-an army corps; and it was only natural that I should wish
-to stand back to back with him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s more than likely. They’re out for blood now
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. thanks to Sonia’s damned folly in sending them
-here when I told her I shouldn’t be near the place. I
-should want somebody’s blood myself if I’d had a trick
-like that played on me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I sent O’Rane’s message in his own words, not caring
-greatly whether I frightened Sonia so long as she obeyed
-to the letter. Then I telephoned to Seymour Street to
-give a similar warning. I would not speak to Barbara
-for fear she should try to argue; but I instructed Robson
-to put the house in preparation for a siege. Griffiths had
-honoured me with one call; in his mind I was intimately
-associated with O’Rane; I did not want him to call a
-second time until I had prepared a suitable reception for
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Tell her ladyship that there’s a certain amount of
-rioting,” I said, “and it is my urgent wish that she shall
-not go out of doors. Mr. O’Rane’s office has been damaged,
-though—fortunately—no one has been injured.
-I’m going with him to his house in Westminster, just to
-see that everything’s all right there. Then I shall come
-straight home.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I finished speaking, O’Rane came into the room and
-asked if I had sent his message.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then I needn’t keep you, old man,” he added. “It
-was good of you to see me through. One’s sometimes
-extraordinarily helpless without one’s eyes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m coming back with you,” I said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Because .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. one is sometimes extraordinarily helpless
-without one’s eyes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But this isn’t your show. Sonia set the match to
-the fire; and I must put it out.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I may be able to lend a hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane stood silent for a moment. Then he shook
-his head and turned to the door:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m not going to let you in for this. You have .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-other responsibilities.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s as bad as that?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It may be. You’ve never seen a mob out of temper.”
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you’re right, I may see one to-day. I’m not going
-to let you go alone, Raney.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. good of you; but I think you’re a fool.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, that’s as may be,” I answered. “Come on.”</p>
-
-<h3>4</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we hurried to the station, I told O’Rane that the
-approaches to Westminster had been barricaded earlier in
-the day and suggested that we should make for The Sanctuary
-by way of Waterloo and Lambeth. He nodded
-without speaking; and, after that, I left him undisturbed.
-I am not, I never have been, anything that could be called
-“a man of action”; I did not know whether we were
-hastening into the vortex of a revolution; and, if I had
-known, I should have had no idea what to do.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m simply waiting for your orders,” I reminded him,
-as we struggled out of the lift.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I’m waiting for you to tell me what’s happening.
-How’s the fog?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I really believe it’s thicker than ever.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good. Take my arm and come for all you’re worth.
-There’s no difference to me between night and day or fog
-and sunshine; but there’s all the difference in the world
-to these other fellows. I figure out that Griffiths’ gang
-ought to be arriving just about now, if they’ve come on
-foot. And if they’ve come at all. The police ought to
-be there before them, with luck. We’ve no idea of numbers
-on either side; but one policeman, attacking or defending,
-is a match for quite a few people who haven’t
-made up their minds how far they want to go. And it’s
-a trained against an untrained force. On the other hand,
-the police can’t go to extremes until they’re driven.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And in pitch darkness,” I added, “numbers and training
-and the majesty of the law don’t count for much.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m banking on that. This may be a one-man show.
-Me. The fog’s still holding everywhere? Good again.
-We’re all blind for this evening, but I’ve had more than
-seven years’ start of the others. I haven’t bumped you
-once so far? I can <span class='it'>feel</span> when people are near. And I’m
-coming to know London like my own bedroom. There’s
-a crossing here, with rather a high kerb. Left incline to
-the refuge! There’s a lorry feeling his way along .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-and getting tied up with a south-bound tram. We can
-go on now. People aren’t frightened of a fog nearly as
-much as I should have expected. When I remember the
-agony of fear I went through when I was blinded .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-The helplessness .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Here’s Westminster Bridge, but
-I don’t think it’s the least use trying that.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We hurried along the south bank of the river and only
-crossed when we were safely in the rear of all possible
-pickets.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What happens if we get separated?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Look after yourself as best you can, but don’t call
-me by name. D’you know <span class='it'>Lilliburlero</span>? Well, pretend
-you’re Uncle Toby and whistle that when you get a
-chance, just to shew me where you are. If you want
-help, whistle <span class='it'>John Peel</span>. I’ll get to you if I can .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Of
-course, we <span class='it'>may</span> find everything as peaceful as the grave.
-If we do, I think I shall still take the precaution of moving
-Sonia and the boys to some other part of London.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bring them to Seymour Street,” I suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will, thankfully. If we find there’s a scrap in progress,
-we must arrange a retreat. There’ll be nobody on
-the west side of the house, because there are no windows
-for any one to break on the ground floor; and there’s a
-fairly high wall round the stable-yard. If you’ll keep
-<span class='it'>cavé</span>, I’ll slip in there and go up the fire-escape. I’ll
-give you the first line of <span class='it'>The Campbells Are Coming</span> to
-know if the coast’s clear; if you’ll reply with <span class='it'>Over the
-Hills and Far Away</span>, I shall know I can unlock the door.
-From there, the way is by Smith Square, Great College
-Street and Dean’s Yard. The gates will be shut against
-us; but the police will open them.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Are you feeling
-at all nervous?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A bit keyed-up. This damned fog .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You may live to bless it. If for any reason we don’t
-both get through, we’ll say good-bye now. Slow down a
-bit; we can’t be more than fifty yards from the corner.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I fancied we were still half a mile away, I
-discovered—by the abrupt change from stucco to brick—that
-we had indeed reached the south side of the house.
-So far as I could see or hear, the neighbourhood was deserted;
-but a single distant thud, followed by a sharp
-tinkle, told me that some one on the other side of the
-house had broken a window and that the missile had
-been stopped by a shutter. I heard hurried footsteps and
-pulled up within an inch of colliding with a young policeman.
-His truncheon was drawn; and he had lost his
-helmet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You gentlemen had best keep out of this,” he
-warned us.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What’s happening?,” I asked. “Are these the hunger-marchers?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I reckon so. And they’re out for mischief. If you
-could see them, it wouldn’t be so bad .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He broke off as a fusillade of stones rattled against the
-house. A hollow ‘plump’, like the sound of a weight
-dropped into water, indicated another broken window;
-and in the moment’s silence that followed we heard another
-tinkle of glass.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The house will stand a good deal of that,” O’Rane
-murmured. “They’ve had no luck with the door?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Two or three got in by the area window,” stated the
-constable. “Now they can’t get out again. There are
-two men waiting for them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>O’Rane broke into an unexpected laugh:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid they’ll have a long wait. That’s the cellar;
-and the door’s sure to be locked. I hope they’ll find the
-wine to their taste.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is this your house, sir?,” asked the policeman.
-“You’d best not let them see you, then. They’re after
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So it seems,” O’Rane answered, as a new volley of
-stones rattled on to the pavement and a series of short
-scuffles gave place to the sound of running feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The battle, we were told, had been raging for half-an-hour.
-At first the assailants had concentrated on the
-front door; when that refused to yield, they began to
-break every window within reach until the police scattered
-them. Then the attack was transferred to a distance.
-On the Embankment twenty yards away, where
-the road was under repair, lay miscellaneous heaps of
-stones and granite blocks. By these the hunger-marchers
-collected and bombarded both the house and the newly
-formed cordon. It was a difficult attack to meet at any
-time, but the fog made it impossible. When the police
-charged, the assailants slipped between and round them,
-to reassemble in flank and to continue their bombardment
-of the house at close-quarters; when the police charged
-back, the hunger-marchers returned to their ammunition-dump
-and reopened a long-range fire. The present lull
-in the fighting was due to a change of tactics: half the
-police were stationed in open order round the house, while
-the other half encircled the granite piles to cut off supplies.
-Their numbers, however, were insufficient to hold
-either position effectively; and, though further reinforcements
-were reported to be on their way, there were enough
-stones lying loose about the house for a long spell of irregular
-practice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is that fellow Griffiths in charge?,” asked O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve heard so,” answered the constable.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I want to get hold of him. This must be stopped,
-but it’s no good breaking heads and putting people under
-arrest. We must stop it before the reinforcements come
-up and the whole thing starts again. There’s a lot to be
-said for these fellows: they’re hungry, to begin with, and
-they’ve been fooled by everybody, Griffiths most of all.
-The first thing they need is a meal; and I’m going to
-promise them that, if they’ll stop this stone-throwing business.
-And after that we must find ’em a place for the
-night; but I must promise them there’ll be no arrests.
-Where’s the inspector?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s guarding the area window, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hope to God I can make my voice heard,” O’Rane
-muttered, as he vanished from my side to be swallowed
-up in the fog.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I waited with the constable because I had been given
-no orders. He had been on duty for little more than
-half-an-hour and could tell me nothing of the battle’s beginning.
-On the other hand, he told me much about
-the rest of London: my premonition of a duel between
-Griffiths and the O’Ranes had come true; in every other
-part, the hunger-marchers were being peacefully conducted
-to makeshift kitchens and dormitories; Hampstead
-was quiet again; and this brawl, between unknown
-numbers on either side, was the nearest approach—as
-Philip Hornbeck might have said—to barricade-fighting.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only a brawl, but an unpleasant brawl. I do not remember
-feeling unusually frightened, though I was more
-than usually helpless. From time to time a stone hurtled
-over my head or skated along the pavement at my feet;
-of all futile precautions, I pulled my hat over my eyes
-and turned up my coat-collar; also, I heard a sustained
-cursing of this Egyptian darkness and was surprised to
-recognize my own voice behind it. I could not see my
-watch; I have no idea how long it was before the next
-fusillade was followed by the now inevitable scuffling
-rush. Then came the sound of O’Rane’s voice from the
-front of the house. He called several times for Griffiths;
-and, when no answer came, he began to talk to the crowd
-and at their leader in the same breath.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Only once before had I heard O’Rane address a mass-meeting:
-that was in the early days of the war, when he
-came to gather recruits and wagered light-heartedly that
-he would stampede the meeting in five minutes. He won
-his bet; but then he had been able to see his audience, and
-his audience yielded to the double hypnotism of his voice
-and eyes. Now he was talking to a blind tent of darkness.
-I could not watch the effect; I could not tell how
-many heard him nor how many were present to hear. It
-was something that they listened in silence; but, until the
-speech was over, neither he nor I could tell for certain
-whether any one was in earshot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was little more in what he said now than in what
-he had rehearsed to me. After telling the crowd his
-name—which was received in silence—, he explained
-that, when the deputation called earlier in the day and at
-the moment when it was marching on his office in Hampstead,
-he had been taking steps to procure food for men
-whose only fault at that time was that they had listened
-to promises which could not be kept. If they did not
-know that, Griffiths did; the government had stated a
-dozen times that it would not receive their leaders; and
-the sympathy which the hunger-marchers had aroused on
-their way to London would vanish in a moment if they
-destroyed houses and helped themselves to private property.
-Though it was too late to undo the harm already
-done, it could be overlooked. If the rioting stopped instantly,
-no steps would be taken against the rioters, with
-the exception of Griffiths himself, against whom the police
-already held a warrant for inciting to crime. Further,
-immediate steps would be taken to provide shelter and
-food; but the stone-throwing must stop. Those who
-came forward empty-handed would be marshalled and
-led to Millbank Gardens, where supplies had already been
-collected.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The speech was over in three minutes; but twice that
-time passed before any answer came. I moved round to
-the front of the house, but the place from which O’Rane’s
-voice had issued was occupied by a single policeman.
-There was no more stone-throwing, but I could see nothing
-of the besieging army. Once I whistled a few bars of
-<span class='it'>Lilliburlero</span>, but they passed unacknowledged. Then I
-walked in a wider compass towards the battlefield on the
-Embankment. Everything was silent, every one was still;
-and each man suspected his neighbour. I could see
-neither policemen nor rioters until I was within a yard
-of them; then a face would leap at me out of the grey
-fog. Usually it was frightened, sometimes it was angry;
-always it seemed thin, hopeless and bewildered. The
-stench was oppressive; the sense of silent numbers suffocating.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I turned back towards the house, I felt a slight
-tremor among the men who surrounded me. Perhaps my
-own aimless movement had given them the lead they were
-awaiting. Those ahead of us were pushed forward; those
-behind hurried to catch up. Suspicion seemed to die
-down; and I heard a hoarse murmur of conversation.
-Finding myself alone, I tried <span class='it'>Lilliburlero</span> again; and
-with an answering whistle O’Rane slipped like a snake
-through the intervening ranks and stationed himself at
-my side.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You all right?,” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes, thanks. It’s over, Raney. What d’you want
-me to do now?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let’s be sure first that it <span class='it'>is</span> over.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I don’t like
-the sound of <span class='it'>that</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Taking my arm, he led me in the direction of a voice
-that seemed to be answering his own speech. I could
-not hear the words; and, if I suspected the voice to be
-Griffiths’, that was only because a curious snarl, passed
-from lip to lip, was taken up as a cry.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re saying it’s a trap,” I told O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Trap .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Trap .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. Trap .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” came the snarl;
-and those who were nearest the house turned headlong
-till we were almost swept off our feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Trap be damned,” shouted a voice; and in place of
-the mutters and snarls came the roar of two opposing
-armies.</p>
-
-<h3>5</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was very much as I had foreseen; very much as I
-had predicted to Griffiths himself. His men were turning
-against him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When hunger first became unbearable, they soothed
-their anger with a dose of wholesale destruction. If Griffiths
-had not urged them to it, I have never heard any
-one suggest that he tried to restrain them; I should be
-sceptical if any one told me that he had marched them
-from Hampstead to Westminster with another thought
-than to offer them a further dose of the same sedative.
-By this time, however, the men were realizing that broken
-windows brought satisfaction to no one but the fortunate
-two or three who had dug themselves into the wine-cellar.
-I hoped they would remain there. In a lull between
-two bursts of shouting I heard a subterranean bellowing;
-one or two bottles were flung up and promptly
-smashed by the inspector of police. I did not want our
-complications to be increased by the madness that comes
-to starving men who have inflamed their aching stomachs
-with strong liquor. O’Rane, if he aimed at dividing the
-enemy, could not have chosen a happier moment for exposing
-Griffiths to his followers. Their resentment of
-that day’s leadership became lost in a greater resentment
-of the leadership that had dragged them to London. Fear
-sharpened the antagonism of those who had heard a moment
-before that they were being incited by Griffiths to
-crime; the police were still very near; and O’Rane had
-promised an amnesty to all who threw down their missiles
-and came forward peacefully.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Amnesty and immediate food. The collective cry of
-hunger was less than human; but, as I had predicted, the
-disappointed mob had vengeance to wreak on the author
-of its misfortunes before it could eat in comfort of mind.
-As though a barrier had fallen, there was a rush towards
-the corner of the street where an excited voice could still
-be heard haranguing of ‘traps’.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That fellow will be lynched if we don’t get him
-away!,” O’Rane cried.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ll be lynched yourself,” I answered, “if you get
-mixed up with his gang.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Even as I spoke, the tide hung and turned. As I
-might have foreseen, as Griffiths himself had told me, he
-could look after himself. Again I could not hear his
-words; for part of the time I fancy he was speaking in
-Welsh; and he held his audience. The opposing clamour
-dwindled and died away. The hoarse cheers of his supporters
-spread until they were taken up all round us.
-There was a pause of perfect stillness, like the moment
-when a gigantic wave gathers before breaking; then the
-mob turned as one man upon the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Griffiths had won that round.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I imagine this must be something like the storming
-of the Bastille,” O’Rane murmured coolly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re absolutely out of hand. The police are using
-their truncheons, too,” I added, as the sickening smack
-of hard wood on human flesh and bone was followed by
-yelps of rage and whimpering moans.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I haven’t heard anything of our precious reinforcement
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. There’s a most awful reek of whisky.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’re looting the cellar. Once <span class='it'>that</span> begins .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If they’ll get drunk quietly, it will be the best thing
-in the world for everybody.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. D’you smell burning?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I sniffed; but my duller senses told me nothing till I
-saw a distant orange glow fainter than the reflection of a
-winter sunset.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They’ve started a fire. I can’t see where.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is it making any difference to the fog?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, but I believe the fog’s lifting. I can see .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-oh, ten yards. Come out of the way: I think the police
-are going to charge again.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I dragged at his arm, O’Rane stayed motionless.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If the fog’s lifting .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.,” he murmured slowly.
-Then, for the second time that evening, he gripped my
-hand. “We must go while the going’s good. The
-stable-door. And afterwards by Smith Square and Great
-College Street.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I found myself suddenly alone. The fog was certainly
-lifting, for I could see the concerted rush of the police,
-though I was not in time to get out of their way. It was
-a truncheon, I think, and not a stray stone that brought
-me down. I remember excruciating pain at the side of
-my head; I remember my knees giving slowly beneath
-me; and then, for a time, I remember nothing more.</p>
-
-<h3>6</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I came to, the fire was invisible; but the battle
-was still raging. My glasses were gone; my head ached
-savagely; and an ungentle foot had trodden my left hand
-to a bleeding pulp. I felt overpoweringly sick; and I
-wanted to crawl away from all this din till I had recovered
-my nerve. I did not know why I was there at all.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then I remembered O’Rane and the stable-door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the war, I was told by many of my friends
-that, in the first moments after being slightly wounded,
-they became wholly demoralized: they might have been
-facing intensive fire for several hours on end without
-undue discomfort, but, when once they had been hit, they
-dodged and cowered their way back to the clearing-station
-as though the heavens were raining shrapnel upon them.
-My own demoralization, as I slunk away and made for
-the stable-door by the other side of the house, was more
-complete than I care to remember: I ducked, I sidestepped,
-I ran, I hid, everywhere pursued by the reek and
-roar of struggling humanity, convinced against all reason
-that I alone was visible in the darkness and that every
-missile was deliberately aimed at me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The stable-door was locked; I could see no one near
-it; and I sank to the ground till I should faint again or
-be trampled to death. There was some challenge, some
-pass-word for me to remember; but, when I heard a whistle,
-I forgot my orders and called out: “Here I am! All
-clear.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was a precautionary pause before the door was
-opened. Then O’Rane pushed a small, muffled figure
-towards me and stepped into the road with a second
-figure, slightly larger and equally muffled, in his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shut the door quietly and follow me,” he whispered.
-“It locks itself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where’s Sonia?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I must go back for her. She’s rather rattled.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I cannot say whether my recovery was the natural result
-of time or whether I was infected by O’Rane’s unruffled
-calm. His companionship meant much; his air of
-authority more; and, if I was still frightened, I hope at
-least that I did not shew it. A very few steps, moreover,
-brought us into comparative quiet; and I could forget the
-red-hot pain in my head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The fog <span class='it'>is</span> lifting,” I told O’Rane.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The deuce it is!” He stopped suddenly and lowered
-his burden to the ground. “You must take Daniel as
-well, while I go back. Sonia wouldn’t face the fire-escape;
-and I must carry her down. There’s no time to
-lose, because these fellows have been filling up on neat
-spirit; and I came across a dud incendiary-bomb .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.
-which doesn’t look like clean fighting. You’re in Smith
-Square now. Feel your way round the church railings,
-then straight ahead, then to the left as far as you can go.
-Knock up any of the Abbey people and say these children
-must be taken in. Give them <span class='it'>your</span> address and beat it for
-home. We shall join you as soon as we can. Go carefully,”
-he added in a whisper. “There’s some one coming.
-Oh, it’s only a woman. <span class='it'>She</span> won’t hurt you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he turned back to The Sanctuary, I gave Daniel my
-undamaged hand while I hoisted little David half on to
-my shoulder. I had heard no footsteps, but somewhere
-in this bewildering darkness I heard a woman’s light
-cough. Then a voice said:</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Don’t look round! I’ll take the baby as soon as we’re
-safe, but I want to keep my hands free just in case .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then we came into a narrow circle of lamp-light and
-I saw Barbara in tweed jacket and trousers. She had
-tidied her hair away under one of my hats; and the fingers
-of her right hand gripped a service revolver.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When you didn’t come .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” she began.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’ve no right to be here,” I exclaimed in horror.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Just as much right as you, darling. I drove the car
-here in case any one was .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. hurt. It’s in that street
-by the Church House.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then will you shew me the way and take these infants
-to Seymour Street? Raney will follow as soon as he can
-bring Sonia down.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m going back to give him a hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Must you?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There may be other people in the house. Servants.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Barbara lifted the child off my shoulders into her arms
-and hurried down a side street. The fog was lifting rapidly,
-too rapidly; I could see across the street and I wondered
-how much could be seen on the battlefield outside
-The Sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you <span class='it'>must</span> .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.” Barbara murmured. “George, I
-told Robson I was coming to see if I could help you;
-but .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I brought the car to take back your dead body.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ve no intention of being killed,” I said, “but we
-can’t leave people to be burnt alive.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, .&nbsp;.&nbsp;. take the revolver,” said Barbara helplessly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When we had put the children inside the car, I went
-back at a run down Great College Street to Smith Square.
-The fog lay in pockets so that I could see thirty yards
-at one moment and less than three at another. I fancied,
-as I neared The Sanctuary, that the noise had diminished;
-I could see neither fire nor smoke; and, though my own
-road was deserted, I thought I could hear the patter of
-running feet. It was more than time for the reinforcements
-to have arrived; it was more than a likelihood
-that, with the increasing light, experience and discipline
-were favouring the police. I was halfway through Smith
-Square when I heard a sound of crying and saw a woman’s
-figure cowering against the railings. As I went forward,
-I was greeted with a scream of terror; the figure
-turned to run, and I recognized Sonia.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Calling her by name, I started in pursuit and brought
-her back from the scene of riot for which she was blindly
-heading. Her nerve was gone; and I had dragged and
-carried her halfway to the car before she could speak
-coherently. Then I learned that the battle was over, the
-fire out and Griffiths’ army in full flight; but all this
-was nothing to the unforgettable agony of the bombardment,
-and she sobbed hysterically as she tried to describe
-her own sufferings from the moment when she received
-my message from Hampstead to the moment when her
-husband climbed through the nursery-window.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where <span class='it'>is</span> Raney?,” I asked.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He’s following. He said it was dangerous for us to
-go together; and I should get along quicker without him.
-Oh, George, it was so awful! I believe I’m going to
-faint.” .&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Though I tried to comfort her, I should have had an
-easier task if she had composed herself wholly or wholly
-collapsed. Though I had not shared her ordeal, I felt
-that Sonia was making rather a pitiful exhibition of herself.
-She was frightened, but so was I; so—under his
-Gasconnade—was O’Rane; so—without disguise—had
-Barbara been. When, however, an emergency
-wrested the direction of her daily life from her own
-hands, Barbara behaved as tradition and inherited instinct
-taught her. Though her body might play her false, the
-dauntless strength of breeding came out in her spirit;
-she might break down in private; but, once on the public
-scaffold, she shewed an Elizabethan daring and feared
-death less than the ague which might make her enemies
-think she feared death. Alone of us four, Sonia was
-more concerned for her personal alarms than for the dignity
-of the order in which we had been brought up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s only a few yards to the car,” I told her. “Barbara
-will look after you. And you’ll find the children
-quite safe.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. D’you know which way David was
-coming?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;. I just ran for my life. He said he’d follow.”
-.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I handed her over to my wife’s keeping with no more
-comment than that she was badly shaken in nerve. There
-might have been a noticeable contraction of sympathy if
-Barbara, who had superfluously ventured into this maelstrom
-through loyalty to me, heard that Sonia had run
-for her life and left her blind husband to extricate herself
-from the danger in which she had involved him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m just going to meet Raney,” I said. “He’s expecting
-us either in Dean’s Yard or Seymour Street.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If we’ve gone before you come back, it’ll mean that
-he’s found us first,” said Barbara. “Then you’ll come
-home independently. Take care of yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s all over now. Even the fog’s almost gone.”</p>
-
-<h3>7</h3>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As I returned to The Sanctuary for the last time, I
-could see—even without my glasses—from one lamp-post
-to the next. The narrow streets north of Smith
-Square were almost empty; and I could hardly blame a
-routed enemy for shying from such sinister avenues of
-escape. There were more and more people as I drew
-nearer to the Embankment, all of them rather dazed and
-many wounded. I saw no dead, though stretchers were
-being hurried up as I came in sight of The Sanctuary;
-and of the battle there was no other sound than a rapid
-scurry of feet towards Westminster Bridge and Vauxhall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At the corner of Sanctuary Road I was challenged
-and stopped by a policeman.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m looking for the gentleman whose house has been
-attacked,” I explained. “I’ve got his family in a car
-near by; but he’s unfortunately blind, and I don’t want
-him to miss them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I was allowed through; and, a moment later, I stood
-in the midst of one of the strangest scenes that I have
-witnessed. To see, to smell and to touch, it was a blend
-of shambles and distillery under the combined influence
-of earthquake and fire. The ground was in places waist-deep
-with stones; for twenty feet round the house I heard
-the glass crackling as I walked. More than once I
-slipped in an ominous pool of blood; and the air was
-sickly with the smell of whisky and singed clothing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I whistled and called O’Rane’s name, but there was no
-answer. Every approach was now guarded by police;
-and on either side of the cordon I heard scuffling as the
-last unyielding attackers were put under arrest. In the
-middle of the open square, the wounded were laid out to
-await the ambulances. I borrowed a lantern and flashed
-it down the lines, but there was no one remotely resembling
-Raney.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’m going to try the house now,” I told the policeman
-nearest the stables. “If you’ll give me a leg up, I
-can get over the wall and up the fire escape.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>There was no one in the yard, no one in the house.
-As a last hope, I interrogated two or three of the constables;
-but, if any of them had found time to notice
-anything my description did not help to identify one
-half-seen figure in a surging crowd of many thousands.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, if he turns up,” I said to the inspector, “will
-you tell him that all’s well and that his family has gone
-to Mr. Oakleigh’s house?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Then, handing him a card, I bent my steps in the direction
-of the Church House.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The fog had lifted; and only a faint haze remained.
-For the first time in many hours I looked at my watch to
-explain what seemed to be stars. It was nine o’clock; and
-I became suddenly conscious of great hunger, great fatigue
-and almost unbearable pain in my head and hand.
-At the same moment I began to see the events of the
-afternoon in their perspective.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nothing quite of this kind had happened for a hundred
-years. Barbara had confirmed what the policeman told
-me: this outbreak was isolated and unique. Within the
-next day or two I was to meet men who had driven
-unsuspectingly across the battlefield from luncheon-parties
-an hour before the battle; I was to meet others who
-drove across the same ground an hour after the surrender
-and only imagined that the road was under repair. It was
-local, it was brief; but it was new. Had I seen the beginning
-or the end? Sardou, I remember, makes one of
-his characters say: “<span class='it'>An</span> émeute <span class='it'>is when the mob is conquered;
-then they are all</span> canaille; <span class='it'>a revolution is when
-they are victorious; then they are all heroes</span>.” The <span class='it'>émeute</span>
-of to-day, however, becomes not infrequently the revolution
-of to-morrow. I felt that, in history, this outbreak
-might mark a turning-point: it would be the first active
-step towards a social revolution, or it would be the last
-demonstration of turbulence before a great and orderly
-people, with a genius for self-government, adjusted itself
-slowly, pragmatically and irrationally to the new conditions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I know now, I knew next day, that the collision which
-loomed so large to me would escape the notice of the most
-vigilant historian. The average headline in the average
-paper said no more than: <span class='sc'>Disorderly scenes in westminster.
-Feared loss of life.</span> Then and now I
-felt and feel that what I witnessed was more than a
-“disorderly scene”. Little more than eight years
-had passed since the threat of a European war shook
-us to the foundations of our being. The ardent
-among us had vowed that, if we won, we would have
-an order of civilization for which any man would be
-proud to die. After eight years, the danger of a new war
-lowered more menacingly than in the summer months of
-1914. And the civilization which we had set up to commemorate
-the war was to be judged on that afternoon’s
-encounter. Had the association of one human being with
-another, in his national and international grouping, grown
-so complex that no one could control it? Had the world
-become like the Roman Empire in its last days, when—for
-no reason that a statesman of the day or an historian
-of later days could enunciate—the mighty machine
-ceased to revolve? If the aim of government was to
-secure the life and liberty of the governed and to lead
-them towards prosperity and happiness, government had
-palpably failed in victorious England and France, in defeated
-Germany, in revolutionary Russia. My uncle
-warned me on his death-bed that we were back in 1914;
-had he been with me now, I must have told him that we
-were sunk to something incredibly lower than 1914.
-After the events of this afternoon I did not believe that
-even O’Rane would dispute that.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Of all the ironies that had chequered his life, I knew
-of none greater than that his should be the house to be
-attacked by the most downtrodden and hopeless section
-of the community. If their salvation could have been
-helped by his death, he would have given his life for them
-as lightly as another man might toss a coin to a beggar.
-Now, if any one had indeed been killed, he would be held
-indirectly responsible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I had come to a halt till the pain which every step sent
-shooting through my head should abate. Looking again
-at my watch, I saw that I must hasten. By Great College
-Street, O’Rane had told me, and then into Dean’s Yard.
-As I turned the corner, I had to step aside to avoid an
-obstacle. Glancing back, I saw that it was a man. He
-lay stretched on his back, with his arms flung out, midway
-between two lamp-posts; and I could not be sure
-whether he was wounded or drunk. I called out to find
-if he wanted help; but there was no answer. Then I
-struck a match.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As it flared, I saw what—in some way that I shall
-never understand—I had been expecting to see. It was
-this that had sent me back to his side again and again;
-this, maybe, that had brought Barbara with her car; this,
-for all I know, that appeared to her in the semblance of
-black wings beating a prophetic message over the house.
-O’Rane’s hands were cold as ice; the back of his head
-was brutally smashed. His black eyes stared up to heaven
-in mild perplexity at the insoluble enigma of death and
-the eternal paradox of life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He looked a boy of twenty.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I covered his face and mounted guard over my last
-and best friend.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.&nbsp;.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>Waltham St. Lawrence</span>,</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'>Berkshire, 1923.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:3em;'>THE END</p>
-
-<div><h1>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mis-spelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where multiple spellings occur, majority use has been employed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer errors occur.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Page numbers have been removed due to a non-page layout.</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TO-MORROW AND TO-MORROW ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG&#8482;
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for an eBook, except by following
-the terms of the trademark license, including paying royalties for use
-of the Project Gutenberg trademark. If you do not charge anything for
-copies of this eBook, complying with the trademark license is very
-easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose such as creation
-of derivative works, reports, performances and research. Project
-Gutenberg eBooks may be modified and printed and given away&#8212;you may
-do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks not protected
-by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the trademark
-license, especially commercial redistribution.
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:1em; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center'>START: FULL LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em'>PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-To protect the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221;), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person
-or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.B. &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation (&#8220;the
-Foundation&#8221; or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg&#8482; mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg&#8482; work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country other than the United States.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work (any work
-on which the phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; appears, or with which the
-phrase &#8220;Project Gutenberg&#8221; is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
- <div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
- 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
- are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws
- of the country where you are located before using this eBook.
- </div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase &#8220;Project
-Gutenberg&#8221; associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg&#8482; License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg&#8482;.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; License.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg&#8482; work in a format
-other than &#8220;Plain Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg&#8482; website
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original &#8220;Plain
-Vanilla ASCII&#8221; or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg&#8482; License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg&#8482; works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-provided that:
-</div>
-
-<div style='margin-left:0.7em;'>
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, &#8220;Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation.&#8221;
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
- works.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
- </div>
-
- <div style='text-indent:-0.7em'>
- &#8226; You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482; works.
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the manager of
-the Project Gutenberg&#8482; trademark. Contact the Foundation as set
-forth in Section 3 below.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain &#8220;Defects,&#8221; such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the &#8220;Right
-of Replacement or Refund&#8221; described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you &#8216;AS-IS&#8217;, WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg&#8482; work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg&#8482;
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg&#8482;&#8217;s
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg&#8482; collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg&#8482; and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non-profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation&#8217;s EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state&#8217;s laws.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation&#8217;s business office is located at 809 North 1500 West,
-Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up
-to date contact information can be found at the Foundation&#8217;s website
-and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; depends upon and cannot survive without widespread
-public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine-readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular state
-visit <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/donate/">www.gutenberg.org/donate</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Please check the Project Gutenberg web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; font-size:1.1em; margin:1em 0; font-weight:bold'>
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg&#8482; electronic works
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg&#8482; concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Project Gutenberg&#8482; eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Most people start at our website which has the main PG search
-facility: <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This website includes information about Project Gutenberg&#8482;,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-</div>
-
-</div>
- </body>
- <!-- created with fpgen.py 4.63 on 2020-12-13 18:50:08 GMT -->
-</html>
diff --git a/old/69589-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/69589-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index c2eed43..0000000
--- a/old/69589-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ