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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Story of Mankind, by Hendrik Van Loon, Ph.D.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
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+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
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+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Story of Mankind, by Hendrik van Loon
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Story of Mankind
+
+Author: Hendrik van Loon
+
+Release Date: November 27, 2009 [EBook #754]
+Last Updated: January 25, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF MANKIND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Keller, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE STORY OF MANKIND
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Hendrik Van Loon, Ph.D.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ Professor of the Social Sciences in Antioch College. Author of The Fall
+ of the Dutch Republic, The Rise of the Dutch Kingdom, The Golden Book of
+ the Dutch Navigators, A Short Story of Discovery, Ancient Man.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p>
+ To JIMMIE "What is the use of a book without pictures?" said Alice.
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_FORE" id="link2H_FORE">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ FOREWORD
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ For Hansje and Willem:
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ WHEN I was twelve or thirteen years old, an uncle of mine who gave me my
+ love for books and pictures promised to take me upon a memorable
+ expedition. I was to go with him to the top of the tower of Old Saint
+ Lawrence in Rotterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, one fine day, a sexton with a key as large as that of Saint Peter
+ opened a mysterious door. "Ring the bell," he said, "when you come back
+ and want to get out," and with a great grinding of rusty old hinges he
+ separated us from the noise of the busy street and locked us into a world
+ of new and strange experiences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time in my life I was confronted by the phenomenon of
+ audible silence. When we had climbed the first flight of stairs, I added
+ another discovery to my limited knowledge of natural phenomena&mdash;that
+ of tangible darkness. A match showed us where the upward road continued.
+ We went to the next floor and then to the next and the next until I had
+ lost count and then there came still another floor, and suddenly we had
+ plenty of light. This floor was on an even height with the roof of the
+ church, and it was used as a storeroom. Covered with many inches of dust,
+ there lay the abandoned symbols of a venerable faith which had been
+ discarded by the good people of the city many years ago. That which had
+ meant life and death to our ancestors was here reduced to junk and
+ rubbish. The industrious rat had built his nest among the carved images
+ and the ever watchful spider had opened up shop between the outspread arms
+ of a kindly saint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next floor showed us from where we had derived our light. Enormous
+ open windows with heavy iron bars made the high and barren room the
+ roosting place of hundreds of pigeons. The wind blew through the iron bars
+ and the air was filled with a weird and pleasing music. It was the noise
+ of the town below us, but a noise which had been purified and cleansed by
+ the distance. The rumbling of heavy carts and the clinking of horses'
+ hoofs, the winding of cranes and pulleys, the hissing sound of the patient
+ steam which had been set to do the work of man in a thousand different
+ ways&mdash;they had all been blended into a softly rustling whisper which
+ provided a beautiful background for the trembling cooing of the pigeons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the stairs came to an end and the ladders began. And after the first
+ ladder (a slippery old thing which made one feel his way with a cautious
+ foot) there was a new and even greater wonder, the town-clock. I saw the
+ heart of time. I could hear the heavy pulsebeats of the rapid seconds&mdash;one&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;up
+ to sixty. Then a sudden quivering noise when all the wheels seemed to stop
+ and another minute had been chopped off eternity. Without pause it began
+ again&mdash;one&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;until at last after a warning
+ rumble and the scraping of many wheels a thunderous voice, high above us,
+ told the world that it was the hour of noon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the next floor were the bells. The nice little bells and their terrible
+ sisters. In the centre the big bell, which made me turn stiff with fright
+ when I heard it in the middle of the night telling a story of fire or
+ flood. In solitary grandeur it seemed to reflect upon those six hundred
+ years during which it had shared the joys and the sorrows of the good
+ people of Rotterdam. Around it, neatly arranged like the blue jars in an
+ old-fashioned apothecary shop, hung the little fellows, who twice each
+ week played a merry tune for the benefit of the country-folk who had come
+ to market to buy and sell and hear what the big world had been doing. But
+ in a corner&mdash;all alone and shunned by the others&mdash;a big black
+ bell, silent and stern, the bell of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then darkness once more and other ladders, steeper and even more dangerous
+ than those we had climbed before, and suddenly the fresh air of the wide
+ heavens. We had reached the highest gallery. Above us the sky. Below us
+ the city&mdash;a little toy-town, where busy ants were hastily crawling
+ hither and thither, each one intent upon his or her particular business,
+ and beyond the jumble of stones, the wide greenness of the open country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was my first glimpse of the big world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since then, whenever I have had the opportunity, I have gone to the top of
+ the tower and enjoyed myself. It was hard work, but it repaid in full the
+ mere physical exertion of climbing a few stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, I knew what my reward would be. I would see the land and the sky,
+ and I would listen to the stories of my kind friend the watchman, who
+ lived in a small shack, built in a sheltered corner of the gallery. He
+ looked after the clock and was a father to the bells, and he warned of
+ fires, but he enjoyed many free hours and then he smoked a pipe and
+ thought his own peaceful thoughts. He had gone to school almost fifty
+ years before and he had rarely read a book, but he had lived on the top of
+ his tower for so many years that he had absorbed the wisdom of that wide
+ world which surrounded him on all sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ History he knew well, for it was a living thing with him. "There," he
+ would say, pointing to a bend of the river, "there, my boy, do you see
+ those trees? That is where the Prince of Orange cut the dikes to drown the
+ land and save Leyden." Or he would tell me the tale of the old Meuse,
+ until the broad river ceased to be a convenient harbour and became a
+ wonderful highroad, carrying the ships of De Ruyter and Tromp upon that
+ famous last voyage, when they gave their lives that the sea might be free
+ to all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there were the little villages, clustering around the protecting
+ church which once, many years ago, had been the home of their Patron
+ Saints. In the distance we could see the leaning tower of Delft. Within
+ sight of its high arches, William the Silent had been murdered and there
+ Grotius had learned to construe his first Latin sentences. And still
+ further away, the long low body of the church of Gouda, the early home of
+ the man whose wit had proved mightier than the armies of many an emperor,
+ the charity-boy whom the world came to know as Erasmus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally the silver line of the endless sea and as a contrast, immediately
+ below us, the patchwork of roofs and chimneys and houses and gardens and
+ hospitals and schools and railways, which we called our home. But the
+ tower showed us the old home in a new light. The confused commotion of the
+ streets and the market-place, of the factories and the workshop, became
+ the well-ordered expression of human energy and purpose. Best of all, the
+ wide view of the glorious past, which surrounded us on all sides, gave us
+ new courage to face the problems of the future when we had gone back to
+ our daily tasks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ History is the mighty Tower of Experience, which Time has built amidst the
+ endless fields of bygone ages. It is no easy task to reach the top of this
+ ancient structure and get the benefit of the full view. There is no
+ elevator, but young feet are strong and it can be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here I give you the key that will open the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you return, you too will understand the reason for my enthusiasm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HENDRIK WILLEM VAN LOON. <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_FORE"> FOREWORD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> <b>THE STORY OF MANKIND</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE SETTING OF THE STAGE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> OUR EARLIEST ANCESTORS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> PREHISTORIC MAN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> HIEROGLYPHICS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE NILE VALLEY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> THE STORY OF EGYPT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> MESOPOTAMIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE SUMERIANS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> MOSES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> THE PHOENICIANS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> THE INDO-EUROPEANS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> THE AEGEAN SEA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE GREEKS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> THE GREEK CITIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> GREEK SELF-GOVERNMENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> GREEK LIFE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> THE GREEK THEATRE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> THE PERSIAN WARS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> ATHENS vs. SPARTA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> ALEXANDER THE GREAT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> ROME AND CARTHAGE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> THE RISE OF ROME </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> THE ROMAN EMPIRE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> JOSHUA OF NAZARETH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> THE FALL OF ROME </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> RISE OF THE CHURCH </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> MOHAMMED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> CHARLEMAGNE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> THE NORSEMEN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> FEUDALISM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> CHIVALRY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> POPE vs. EMPEROR </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> THE CRUSADES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> THE MEDIAEVAL CITY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> MEDIAEVAL SELF-GOVERNMENT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> THE MEDIAEVAL WORLD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> MEDIAEVAL TRADE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> THE RENAISSANCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> THE AGE OF EXPRESSION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0043"> THE GREAT DISCOVERIES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0044"> BUDDHA AND CONFUCIUS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0045"> THE REFORMATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0046"> RELIGIOUS WARFARE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0047"> THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0048"> THE BALANCE OF POWER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0049"> THE RISE OF RUSSIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0050"> RUSSIA vs. SWEDEN </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0051"> THE RISE OF PRUSSIA </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0052"> THE MERCANTILE SYSTEM </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0053"> THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0054"> THE FRENCH REVOLUTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0055"> NAPOLEON </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0056"> THE HOLY ALLIANCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0057"> THE GREAT REACTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0058"> NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0059"> THE AGE OF THE ENGINE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0060"> THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0061"> EMANCIPATION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0062"> THE AGE OF SCIENCE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0063"> ART </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0064"> COLONIAL EXPANSION AND WAR </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0065"> A NEW WORLD </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0066"> AS IT EVER SHALL BE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0067"> CONCERNING THE PICTURES </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0068"> AN HISTORICAL READING LIST FOR CHILDREN </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE STORY OF MANKIND
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ HIGH Up in the North in the land called Svithjod, there stands a rock. It
+ is a hundred miles high and a hundred miles wide. Once every thousand
+ years a little bird comes to this rock to sharpen its beak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the rock has thus been worn away, then a single day of eternity will
+ have gone by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SETTING OF THE STAGE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE live under the shadow of a gigantic question mark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who are we?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where do we come from?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whither are we bound?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly, but with persistent courage, we have been pushing this question
+ mark further and further towards that distant line, beyond the horizon,
+ where we hope to find our answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have not gone very far.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We still know very little but we have reached the point where (with a fair
+ degree of accuracy) we can guess at many things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this chapter I shall tell you how (according to our best belief) the
+ stage was set for the first appearance of man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we represent the time during which it has been possible for animal life
+ to exist upon our planet by a line of this length, then the tiny line just
+ below indicates the age during which man (or a creature more or less
+ resembling man) has lived upon this earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Man was the last to come but the first to use his brain for the purpose of
+ conquering the forces of nature. That is the reason why we are going to
+ study him, rather than cats or dogs or horses or any of the other animals,
+ who, all in their own way, have a very interesting historical development
+ behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the beginning, the planet upon which we live was (as far as we now
+ know) a large ball of flaming matter, a tiny cloud of smoke in the endless
+ ocean of space. Gradually, in the course of millions of years, the surface
+ burned itself out, and was covered with a thin layer of rocks. Upon these
+ lifeless rocks the rain descended in endless torrents, wearing out the
+ hard granite and carrying the dust to the valleys that lay hidden between
+ the high cliffs of the steaming earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally the hour came when the sun broke through the clouds and saw how
+ this little planet was covered with a few small puddles which were to
+ develop into the mighty oceans of the eastern and western hemispheres.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then one day the great wonder happened. What had been dead, gave birth to
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first living cell floated upon the waters of the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For millions of years it drifted aimlessly with the currents. But during
+ all that time it was developing certain habits that it might survive more
+ easily upon the inhospitable earth. Some of these cells were happiest in
+ the dark depths of the lakes and the pools. They took root in the slimy
+ sediments which had been carried down from the tops of the hills and they
+ became plants. Others preferred to move about and they grew strange
+ jointed legs, like scorpions and began to crawl along the bottom of the
+ sea amidst the plants and the pale green things that looked like
+ jelly-fishes. Still others (covered with scales) depended upon a swimming
+ motion to go from place to place in their search for food, and gradually
+ they populated the ocean with myriads of fishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the plants had increased in number and they had to search for
+ new dwelling places. There was no more room for them at the bottom of the
+ sea. Reluctantly they left the water and made a new home in the marshes
+ and on the mud-banks that lay at the foot of the mountains. Twice a day
+ the tides of the ocean covered them with their brine. For the rest of the
+ time, the plants made the best of their uncomfortable situation and tried
+ to survive in the thin air which surrounded the surface of the planet.
+ After centuries of training, they learned how to live as comfortably in
+ the air as they had done in the water. They increased in size and became
+ shrubs and trees and at last they learned how to grow lovely flowers which
+ attracted the attention of the busy big bumble-bees and the birds who
+ carried the seeds far and wide until the whole earth had become covered
+ with green pastures, or lay dark under the shadow of the big trees. But
+ some of the fishes too had begun to leave the sea, and they had learned
+ how to breathe with lungs as well as with gills. We call such creatures
+ amphibious, which means that they are able to live with equal ease on the
+ land and in the water. The first frog who crosses your path can tell you
+ all about the pleasures of the double existence of the amphibian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once outside of the water, these animals gradually adapted themselves more
+ and more to life on land. Some became reptiles (creatures who crawl like
+ lizards) and they shared the silence of the forests with the insects. That
+ they might move faster through the soft soil, they improved upon their
+ legs and their size increased until the world was populated with gigantic
+ forms (which the hand-books of biology list under the names of
+ Ichthyosaurus and Megalosaurus and Brontosaurus) who grew to be thirty to
+ forty feet long and who could have played with elephants as a full grown
+ cat plays with her kittens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the members of this reptilian family began to live in the tops of
+ the trees, which were then often more than a hundred feet high. They no
+ longer needed their legs for the purpose of walking, but it was necessary
+ for them to move quickly from branch to branch. And so they changed a part
+ of their skin into a sort of parachute, which stretched between the sides
+ of their bodies and the small toes of their fore-feet, and gradually they
+ covered this skinny parachute with feathers and made their tails into a
+ steering gear and flew from tree to tree and developed into true birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a strange thing happened. All the gigantic reptiles died within a
+ short time. We do not know the reason. Perhaps it was due to a sudden
+ change in climate. Perhaps they had grown so large that they could neither
+ swim nor walk nor crawl, and they starved to death within sight but not
+ within reach of the big ferns and trees. Whatever the cause, the million
+ year old world-empire of the big reptiles was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world now began to be occupied by very different creatures. They were
+ the descendants of the reptiles but they were quite unlike these because
+ they fed their young from the "mammae" or the breasts of the mother.
+ Wherefore modern science calls these animals "mammals." They had shed the
+ scales of the fish. They did not adopt the feathers of the bird, but they
+ covered their bodies with hair. The mammals however developed other habits
+ which gave their race a great advantage over the other animals. The female
+ of the species carried the eggs of the young inside her body until they
+ were hatched and while all other living beings, up to that time, had left
+ their children exposed to the dangers of cold and heat, and the attacks of
+ wild beasts, the mammals kept their young with them for a long time and
+ sheltered them while they were still too weak to fight their enemies. In
+ this way the young mammals were given a much better chance to survive,
+ because they learned many things from their mothers, as you will know if
+ you have ever watched a cat teaching her kittens to take care of
+ themselves and how to wash their faces and how to catch mice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of these mammals I need not tell you much for you know them well. They
+ surround you on all sides. They are your daily companions in the streets
+ and in your home, and you can see your less familiar cousins behind the
+ bars of the zoological garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now we come to the parting of the ways when man suddenly leaves the
+ endless procession of dumbly living and dying creatures and begins to use
+ his reason to shape the destiny of his race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One mammal in particular seemed to surpass all others in its ability to
+ find food and shelter. It had learned to use its fore-feet for the purpose
+ of holding its prey, and by dint of practice it had developed a hand-like
+ claw. After innumerable attempts it had learned how to balance the whole
+ of the body upon the hind legs. (This is a difficult act, which every
+ child has to learn anew although the human race has been doing it for over
+ a million years.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This creature, half ape and half monkey but superior to both, became the
+ most successful hunter and could make a living in every clime. For greater
+ safety, it usually moved about in groups. It learned how to make strange
+ grunts to warn its young of approaching danger and after many hundreds of
+ thousands of years it began to use these throaty noises for the purpose of
+ talking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This creature, though you may hardly believe it, was your first "man-like"
+ ancestor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ OUR EARLIEST ANCESTORS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WE know very little about the first "true" men. We have never seen their
+ pictures. In the deepest layer of clay of an ancient soil we have
+ sometimes found pieces of their bones. These lay buried amidst the broken
+ skeletons of other animals that have long since disappeared from the face
+ of the earth. Anthropologists (learned scientists who devote their lives
+ to the study of man as a member of the animal kingdom) have taken these
+ bones and they have been able to reconstruct our earliest ancestors with a
+ fair degree of accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great-great-grandfather of the human race was a very ugly and
+ unattractive mammal. He was quite small, much smaller than the people of
+ today. The heat of the sun and the biting wind of the cold winter had
+ coloured his skin a dark brown. His head and most of his body, his arms
+ and legs too, were covered with long, coarse hair. He had very thin but
+ strong fingers which made his hands look like those of a monkey. His
+ forehead was low and his jaw was like the jaw of a wild animal which uses
+ its teeth both as fork and knife. He wore no clothes. He had seen no fire
+ except the flames of the rumbling volcanoes which filled the earth with
+ their smoke and their lava.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lived in the damp blackness of vast forests, as the pygmies of Africa
+ do to this very day. When he felt the pangs of hunger he ate raw leaves
+ and the roots of plants or he took the eggs away from an angry bird and
+ fed them to his own young. Once in a while, after a long and patient
+ chase, he would catch a sparrow or a small wild dog or perhaps a rabbit.
+ These he would eat raw for he had never discovered that food tasted better
+ when it was cooked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the hours of day, this primitive human being prowled about looking
+ for things to eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When night descended upon the earth, he hid his wife and his children in a
+ hollow tree or behind some heavy boulders, for he was surrounded on all
+ sides by ferocious animals and when it was dark these animals began to
+ prowl about, looking for something to eat for their mates and their own
+ young, and they liked the taste of human beings. It was a world where you
+ must either eat or be eaten, and life was very unhappy because it was full
+ of fear and misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In summer, man was exposed to the scorching rays of the sun, and during
+ the winter his children would freeze to death in his arms. When such a
+ creature hurt itself, (and hunting animals are forever breaking their
+ bones or spraining their ankles) he had no one to take care of him and he
+ must die a horrible death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like many of the animals who fill the Zoo with their strange noises, early
+ man liked to jabber. That is to say, he endlessly repeated the same
+ unintelligible gibberish because it pleased him to hear the sound of his
+ voice. In due time he learned that he could use this guttural noise to
+ warn his fellow beings whenever danger threatened and he gave certain
+ little shrieks which came to mean "there is a tiger!" or "here come five
+ elephants." Then the others grunted something back at him and their growl
+ meant, "I see them," or "let us run away and hide." And this was probably
+ the origin of all language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, as I have said before, of these beginnings we know so very little.
+ Early man had no tools and he built himself no houses. He lived and died
+ and left no trace of his existence except a few collar-bones and a few
+ pieces of his skull. These tell us that many thousands of years ago the
+ world was inhabited by certain mammals who were quite different from all
+ the other animals&mdash;who had probably developed from another unknown
+ ape-like animal which had learned to walk on its hind-legs and use its
+ fore-paws as hands&mdash;and who were most probably connected with the
+ creatures who happen to be our own immediate ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is little enough we know and the rest is darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PREHISTORIC MAN
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ PREHISTORIC MAN BEGINS TO MAKE THINGS FOR HIMSELF.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ EARLY man did not know what time meant. He kept no records of birthdays or
+ wedding anniversaries or the hour of death. He had no idea of days or
+ weeks or even years. But in a general way he kept track of the seasons for
+ he had noticed that the cold winter was invariably followed by the mild
+ spring&mdash;that spring grew into the hot summer when fruits ripened and
+ the wild ears of corn were ready to be eaten and that summer ended when
+ sudden gusts of wind swept the leaves from the trees and a number of
+ animals were getting ready for the long hibernal sleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now, something unusual and rather frightening had happened. Something
+ was the matter with the weather. The warm days of summer had come very
+ late. The fruits had not ripened. The tops of the mountains which used to
+ be covered with grass now lay deeply hidden underneath a heavy burden of
+ snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, one morning, a number of wild people, different from the other
+ creatures who lived in that neighbourhood, came wandering down from the
+ region of the high peaks. They looked lean and appeared to be starving.
+ They uttered sounds which no one could understand. They seemed to say that
+ they were hungry. There was not food enough for both the old inhabitants
+ and the newcomers. When they tried to stay more than a few days there was
+ a terrible battle with claw-like hands and feet and whole families were
+ killed. The others fled back to their mountain slopes and died in the next
+ blizzard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the people in the forest were greatly frightened. All the time the
+ days grew shorter and the nights grew colder than they ought to have been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in a gap between two high hills, there appeared a tiny speck of
+ greenish ice. Rapidly it increased in size. A gigantic glacier came
+ sliding downhill. Huge stones were being pushed into the valley. With the
+ noise of a dozen thunderstorms torrents of ice and mud and blocks of
+ granite suddenly tumbled among the people of the forest and killed them
+ while they slept. Century old trees were crushed into kindling wood. And
+ then it began to snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It snowed for months and months. All the plants died and the animals fled
+ in search of the southern sun. Man hoisted his young upon his back and
+ followed them. But he could not travel as fast as the wilder creatures and
+ he was forced to choose between quick thinking or quick dying. He seems to
+ have preferred the former for he has managed to survive the terrible
+ glacial periods which upon four different occasions threatened to kill
+ every human being on the face of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place it was necessary that man clothe himself lest he freeze
+ to death. He learned how to dig holes and cover them with branches and
+ leaves and in these traps he caught bears and hyenas, which he then killed
+ with heavy stones and whose skins he used as coats for himself and his
+ family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next came the housing problem. This was simple. Many animals were in the
+ habit of sleeping in dark caves. Man now followed their example, drove the
+ animals out of their warm homes and claimed them for his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even so, the climate was too severe for most people and the old and the
+ young died at a terrible rate. Then a genius bethought himself of the use
+ of fire. Once, while out hunting, he had been caught in a forest-fire. He
+ remembered that he had been almost roasted to death by the flames. Thus
+ far fire had been an enemy. Now it became a friend. A dead tree was
+ dragged into the cave and lighted by means of smouldering branches from a
+ burning wood. This turned the cave into a cozy little room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then one evening a dead chicken fell into the fire. It was not rescued
+ until it had been well roasted. Man discovered that meat tasted better
+ when cooked and he then and there discarded one of the old habits which he
+ had shared with the other animals and began to prepare his food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way thousands of years passed. Only the people with the cleverest
+ brains survived. They had to struggle day and night against cold and
+ hunger. They were forced to invent tools. They learned how to sharpen
+ stones into axes and how to make hammers. They were obliged to put up
+ large stores of food for the endless days of the winter and they found
+ that clay could be made into bowls and jars and hardened in the rays of
+ the sun. And so the glacial period, which had threatened to destroy the
+ human race, became its greatest teacher because it forced man to use his
+ brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ HIEROGLYPHICS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE EGYPTIANS INVENT THE ART OF WRITING AND THE RECORD OF HISTORY BEGINS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THESE earliest ancestors of ours who lived in the great European
+ wilderness were rapidly learning many new things. It is safe to say that
+ in due course of time they would have given up the ways of savages and
+ would have developed a civilisation of their own. But suddenly there came
+ an end to their isolation. They were discovered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A traveller from an unknown southland who had dared to cross the sea and
+ the high mountain passes had found his way to the wild people of the
+ European continent. He came from Africa. His home was in Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valley of the Nile had developed a high stage of civilisation
+ thousands of years before the people of the west had dreamed of the
+ possibilities of a fork or a wheel or a house. And we shall therefore
+ leave our great-great-grandfathers in their caves, while we visit the
+ southern and eastern shores of the Mediterranean, where stood the earliest
+ school of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Egyptians have taught us many things. They were excellent farmers.
+ They knew all about irrigation. They built temples which were afterwards
+ copied by the Greeks and which served as the earliest models for the
+ churches in which we worship nowadays. They had invented a calendar which
+ proved such a useful instrument for the purpose of measuring time that it
+ has survived with a few changes until today. But most important of all,
+ the Egyptians had learned how to preserve speech for the benefit of future
+ generations. They had invented the art of writing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are so accustomed to newspapers and books and magazines that we take it
+ for granted that the world has always been able to read and write. As a
+ matter of fact, writing, the most important of all inventions, is quite
+ new. Without written documents we would be like cats and dogs, who can
+ only teach their kittens and their puppies a few simple things and who,
+ because they cannot write, possess no way in which they can make use of
+ the experience of those generations of cats and dogs that have gone
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first century before our era, when the Romans came to Egypt, they
+ found the valley full of strange little pictures which seemed to have
+ something to do with the history of the country. But the Romans were not
+ interested in "anything foreign" and did not inquire into the origin of
+ these queer figures which covered the walls of the temples and the walls
+ of the palaces and endless reams of flat sheets made out of the papyrus
+ reed. The last of the Egyptian priests who had understood the holy art of
+ making such pictures had died several years before. Egypt deprived of its
+ independence had become a store-house filled with important historical
+ documents which no one could decipher and which were of no earthly use to
+ either man or beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seventeen centuries went by and Egypt remained a land of mystery. But in
+ the year 1798 a French general by the name of Bonaparte happened to visit
+ eastern Africa to prepare for an attack upon the British Indian Colonies.
+ He did not get beyond the Nile, and his campaign was a failure. But, quite
+ accidentally, the famous French expedition solved the problem of the
+ ancient Egyptian picture-language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day a young French officer, much bored by the dreary life of his
+ little fortress on the Rosetta river (a mouth of the Nile) decided to
+ spend a few idle hours rummaging among the ruins of the Nile Delta. And
+ behold! he found a stone which greatly puzzled him. Like everything else
+ in Egypt it was covered with little figures. But this particular slab of
+ black basalt was different from anything that had ever been discovered. It
+ carried three inscriptions. One of these was in Greek. The Greek language
+ was known. "All that is necessary," so he reasoned, "is to compare the
+ Greek text with the Egyptian figures, and they will at once tell their
+ secrets."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plan sounded simple enough but it took more than twenty years to solve
+ the riddle. In the year 1802 a French professor by the name of Champollion
+ began to compare the Greek and the Egyptian texts of the famous Rosetta
+ stone. In the year 1823 he announced that he had discovered the meaning of
+ fourteen little figures. A short time later he died from overwork, but the
+ main principles of Egyptian writing had become known. Today the story of
+ the valley of the Nile is better known to us than the story of the
+ Mississippi River. We possess a written record which covers four thousand
+ years of chronicled history.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics (the word means "sacred writing")
+ have played such a very great role in history, (a few of them in modified
+ form have even found their way into our own alphabet,) you ought to know
+ something about the ingenious system which was used fifty centuries ago to
+ preserve the spoken word for the benefit of the coming generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, you know what a sign language is. Every Indian story of our
+ western plains has a chapter devoted to strange messages writter{sic} in
+ the form of little pictures which tell how many buffaloes were killed and
+ how many hunters there were in a certain party. As a rule it is not
+ difficult to understand the meaning of such messages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ancient Egyptian, however, was not a sign language. The clever people of
+ the Nile had passed beyond that stage long before. Their pictures meant a
+ great deal more than the object which they represented, as I shall try to
+ explain to you now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suppose that you were Champollion, and that you were examining a stack of
+ papyrus sheets, all covered with hieroglyphics. Suddenly you came across a
+ picture of a man with a saw. "Very well," you would say, "that means of
+ course that a farmer went out to cut down a tree." Then you take another
+ papyrus. It tells the story of a queen who had died at the age of
+ eighty-two. In the midst of a sentence appears the picture of the man with
+ the saw. Queens of eighty-two do not handle saws. The picture therefore
+ must mean something else. But what?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is the riddle which the Frenchman finally solved. He discovered that
+ the Egyptians were the first to use what we now call "phonetic writing"&mdash;a
+ system of characters which reproduce the "sound" (or phone) of the spoken
+ word and which make it possible for us to translate all our spoken words
+ into a written form, with the help of only a few dots and dashes and
+ pothooks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us return for a moment to the little fellow with the saw. The word
+ "saw" either means a certain tool which you will find in a carpenter's
+ shop, or it means the past tense of the verb "to see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is what had happened to the word during the course of centuries.
+ First of all it had meant only the particular tool which it represented.
+ Then that meaning had been lost and it had become the past participle of a
+ verb. After several hundred years, the Egyptians lost sight of both these
+ meanings and the picture {illust.} came to stand for a single letter, the
+ letter S. A short sentence will show you what I mean. Here is a modern
+ English sentence as it would have been written in hieroglyphics. {illust.}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The {illust.} either means one of these two round objects in your head,
+ which allow you to see or it means "I," the person who is talking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A {illust.} is either an insect which gathers honey, or it represents the
+ verb "to be" which means to exist. Again, it may be the first part of a
+ verb like "be-come" or "be-have." In this particular instance it is
+ followed by {illust.} which means a "leaf" or "leave" or "lieve" (the
+ sound of all three words is the same).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "eye" you know all about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally you get the picture of a {illust.}. It is a giraffe It is part of
+ the old sign-language out of which the hieroglyphics developed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You can now read that sentence without much difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe I saw a giraffe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having invented this system the Egyptians developed it during thousands of
+ years until they could write anything they wanted, and they used these
+ "canned words" to send messages to friends, to keep business accounts and
+ to keep a record of the history of their country, that future generations
+ might benefit by the mistakes of the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE NILE VALLEY
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE BEGINNING OF CIVILISATION IN THE VALLEY OF THE NILE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE history of man is the record of a hungry creature in search of food.
+ Wherever food was plentiful, thither man has travelled to make his home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fame of the Valley of the Nile must have spread at an early date. From
+ the interior of Africa and from the desert of Arabia and from the western
+ part of Asia people had flocked to Egypt to claim their share of the rich
+ farms. Together these invaders had formed a new race which called itself
+ "Remi" or "the Men" just as we sometimes call America "God's own country."
+ They had good reason to be grateful to a Fate which had carried them to
+ this narrow strip of land. In the summer of each year the Nile turned the
+ valley into a shallow lake and when the waters receded all the grainfields
+ and the pastures were covered with several inches of the most fertile
+ clay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Egypt a kindly river did the work of a million men and made it possible
+ to feed the teeming population of the first large cities of which we have
+ any record. It is true that all the arable land was not in the valley. But
+ a complicated system of small canals and well-sweeps carried water from
+ the river-level to the top of the highest banks and an even more intricate
+ system of irrigation trenches spread it throughout the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While man of the prehistoric age had been obliged to spend sixteen hours
+ out of every twenty-four gathering food for himself and the members of his
+ tribe, the Egyptian peasant or the inhabitant of the Egyptian city found
+ himself possessed of a certain leisure. He used this spare time to make
+ himself many things that were merely ornamental and not in the least bit
+ useful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More than that. One day he discovered that his brain was capable of
+ thinking all kinds of thoughts which had nothing to do with the problems
+ of eating and sleeping and finding a home for the children. The Egyptian
+ began to speculate upon many strange problems that confronted him. Where
+ did the stars come from? Who made the noise of the thunder which
+ frightened him so terribly? Who made the River Nile rise with such
+ regularity that it was possible to base the calendar upon the appearance
+ and the disappearance of the annual floods? Who was he, himself, a strange
+ little creature surrounded on all sides by death and sickness and yet
+ happy and full of laughter?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He asked these many questions and certain people obligingly stepped
+ forward to answer these inquiries to the best of their ability. The
+ Egyptians called them "priests" and they became the guardians of his
+ thoughts and gained great respect in the community. They were highly
+ learned men who were entrusted with the sacred task of keeping the written
+ records. They understood that it is not good for man to think only of his
+ immediate advantage in this world and they drew his attention to the days
+ of the future when his soul would dwell beyond the mountains of the west
+ and must give an account of his deeds to Osiris, the mighty God who was
+ the Ruler of the Living and the Dead and who judged the acts of men
+ according to their merits. Indeed, the priests made so much of that future
+ day in the realm of Isis and Osiris that the Egyptians began to regard
+ life merely as a short preparation for the Hereafter and turned the
+ teeming valley of the Nile into a land devoted to the Dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a strange way, the Egyptians had come to believe that no soul could
+ enter the realm of Osiris without the possession of the body which had
+ been its place of residence in this world. Therefore as soon as a man was
+ dead his relatives took his corpse and had it embalmed. For weeks it was
+ soaked in a solution of natron and then it was filled with pitch. The
+ Persian word for pitch was "Mumiai" and the embalmed body was called a
+ "Mummy." It was wrapped in yards and yards of specially prepared linen and
+ it was placed in a specially prepared coffin ready to be removed to its
+ final home. But an Egyptian grave was a real home where the body was
+ surrounded by pieces of furniture and musical instruments (to while away
+ the dreary hours of waiting) and by little statues of cooks and bakers and
+ barbers (that the occupant of this dark home might be decently provided
+ with food and need not go about unshaven).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Originally these graves had been dug into the rocks of the western
+ mountains but as the Egyptians moved northward they were obliged to build
+ their cemeteries in the desert. The desert however is full of wild animals
+ and equally wild robbers and they broke into the graves and disturbed the
+ mummy or stole the jewelry that had been buried with the body. To prevent
+ such unholy desecration the Egyptians used to build small mounds of stones
+ on top of the graves. These little mounds gradually grew in size, because
+ the rich people built higher mounds than the poor and there was a good
+ deal of competition to see who could make the highest hill of stones. The
+ record was made by King Khufu, whom the Greeks called Cheops and who lived
+ thirty centuries before our era. His mound, which the Greeks called a
+ pyramid (because the Egyptian word for high was pir-em-us) was over five
+ hundred feet high.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It covered more than thirteen acres of desert which is three times as much
+ space as that occupied by the church of St. Peter, the largest edifice of
+ the Christian world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During twenty years, over a hundred thousand men were busy carrying the
+ necessary stones from the other side of the river&mdash;ferrying them
+ across the Nile (how they ever managed to do this, we do not understand),
+ dragging them in many instances a long distance across the desert and
+ finally hoisting them into their correct position. But so well did the
+ King's architects and engineers perform their task that the narrow
+ passage-way which leads to the royal tomb in the heart of the stone monster
+ has never yet been pushed out of shape by the weight of those thousands of
+ tons of stone which press upon it from all sides.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE STORY OF EGYPT
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE RISE AND FALL OF EGYPT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE river Nile was a kind friend but occasionally it was a hard
+ taskmaster. It taught the people who lived along its banks the noble art
+ of "team-work." They depended upon each other to build their irrigation
+ trenches and keep their dikes in repair. In this way they learned how to
+ get along with their neighbours and their mutual-benefit-association quite
+ easily developed into an organised state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then one man grew more powerful than most of his neighbours and he became
+ the leader of the community and their commander-in-chief when the envious
+ neighbours of western Asia invaded the prosperous valley. In due course of
+ time he became their King and ruled all the land from the Mediterranean to
+ the mountains of the west.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these political adventures of the old Pharaohs (the word meant "the
+ Man who lived in the Big House") rarely interested the patient and toiling
+ peasant of the grain fields. Provided he was not obliged to pay more taxes
+ to his King than he thought just, he accepted the rule of Pharaoh as he
+ accepted the rule of Mighty Osiris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was different however when a foreign invader came and robbed him of his
+ possessions. After twenty centuries of independent life, a savage Arab
+ tribe of shepherds, called the Hyksos, attacked Egypt and for five hundred
+ years they were the masters of the valley of the Nile. They were highly
+ un-popular and great hate was also felt for the Hebrews who came to the
+ land of Goshen to find a shelter after their long wandering through the
+ desert and who helped the foreign usurper by acting as his tax-gatherers
+ and his civil servants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But shortly after the year 1700 B.C. the people of Thebes began a
+ revolution and after a long struggle the Hyksos were driven out of the
+ country and Egypt was free once more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A thousand years later, when Assyria conquered all of western Asia, Egypt
+ became part of the empire of Sardanapalus. In the seventh century B.C. it
+ became once more an independent state which obeyed the rule of a king who
+ lived in the city of Sais in the Delta of the Nile. But in the year 525
+ B.C., Cambyses, the king of the Persians, took possession of Egypt and in
+ the fourth century B.C., when Persia was conquered by Alexander the Great,
+ Egypt too became a Macedonian province. It regained a semblance of
+ independence when one of Alexander's generals set himself up as king of a
+ new Egyptian state and founded the dynasty of the Ptolemies, who resided
+ in the newly built city of Alexandria.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in the year 89 B.C., the Romans came. The last Egyptian queen,
+ Cleopatra, tried her best to save the country. Her beauty and charm were
+ more dangerous to the Roman generals than half a dozen Egyptian army
+ corps. Twice she was successful in her attacks upon the hearts of her
+ Roman conquerors. But in the year 30 B.C., Augustus, the nephew and heir
+ of Caesar, landed in Alexandria. He did not share his late uncle's
+ admiration for the lovely princess. He destroyed her armies, but spared
+ her life that he might make her march in his triumph as part of the spoils
+ of war. When Cleopatra heard of this plan, she killed herself by taking
+ poison. And Egypt became a Roman province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MESOPOTAMIA
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ MESOPOTAMIA&mdash;THE SECOND CENTRE OF EASTERN CIVILISATION
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ I AM going to take you to the top of the highest pyramid and I am going to
+ ask that you imagine yourself possessed of the eyes of a hawk. Way, way
+ off, in the distance, far beyond the yellow sands of the desert, you will
+ see something green and shimmering. It is a valley situated between two
+ rivers. It is the Paradise of the Old Testament. It is the land of mystery
+ and wonder which the Greeks called Mesopotamia&mdash;the "country between
+ the rivers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The names of the two rivers are the Euphrates (which the Babylonians
+ called the Purattu) and the Tigris (which was known as the Diklat). They
+ begin their course amidst the snows of the mountains of Armenia where
+ Noah's Ark found a resting place and slowly they flow through the southern
+ plain until they reach the muddy banks of the Persian gulf. They perform a
+ very useful service. They turn the arid regions of western Asia into a
+ fertile garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The valley of the Nile had attracted people because it had offered them
+ food upon fairly easy terms. The "land between the rivers" was popular for
+ the same reason. It was a country full of promise and both the inhabitants
+ of the northern mountains and the tribes which roamed through the southern
+ deserts tried to claim this territory as their own and most exclusive
+ possession. The constant rivalry between the mountaineers and the
+ desert-nomads led to endless warfare. Only the strongest and the bravest
+ could hope to survive and that will explain why Mesopotamia became the
+ home of a very strong race of men who were capable of creating a
+ civilisation which was in every respect as important as that of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SUMERIANS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE SUMERIAN NAIL WRITERS, WHOSE CLAY TABLETS TELL US THE STORY OF ASSYRIA
+ AND BABYLONIA, THE GREAT SEMITIC MELTING-POT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE fifteenth century was an age of great discoveries. Columbus tried to
+ find a way to the island of Kathay and stumbled upon a new and unsuspected
+ continent. An Austrian bishop equipped an expedition which was to travel
+ eastward and find the home of the Grand Duke of Muscovy, a voyage which
+ led to complete failure, for Moscow was not visited by western men until a
+ generation later. Meanwhile a certain Venetian by the name of Barbero had
+ explored the ruins of western Asia and had brought back reports of a most
+ curious language which he had found carved in the rocks of the temples of
+ Shiraz and engraved upon endless pieces of baked clay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Europe was busy with many other things and it was not until the end of
+ the eighteenth century that the first "cuneiform inscriptions" (so-called
+ because the letters were wedge-shaped and wedge is called "Cuneus" in
+ Latin) were brought to Europe by a Danish surveyor, named Niebuhr. Then it
+ took thirty years before a patient German school-master by the name of
+ Grotefend had deciphered the first four letters, the D, the A, the R and
+ the SH, the name of the Persian King Darius. And another twenty years had
+ to go by until a British officer, Henry Rawlinson, who found the famous
+ inscription of Behistun, gave us a workable key to the nail-writing of
+ western Asia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Compared to the problem of deciphering these nail-writings, the job of
+ Champollion had been an easy one. The Egyptians used pictures. But the
+ Sumerians, the earliest inhabitants of Mesopotamia, who had hit upon the
+ idea of scratching their words in tablets of clay, had discarded pictures
+ entirely and had evolved a system of V-shaped figures which showed little
+ connection with the pictures out of which they had been developed. A few
+ examples will show you what I mean. In the beginning a star, when drawn
+ with a nail into a brick looked as follows: {illust.} This sign however
+ was too cumbersome and after a short while when the meaning of "heaven"
+ was added to that of star the picture was simplified in this way {illust.}
+ which made it even more of a puzzle. In the same way an ox changed from
+ {illust} into {illust.} and a fish changed from {illust.} into {illust.}
+ The sun was originally a plain circle {illust.} and became {illust.} If we
+ were using the Sumerian script today we would make an {illust.} look like
+ {illust.}. This system of writing down our ideas looks rather complicated
+ but for more than thirty centuries it was used by the Sumerians and the
+ Babylonians and the Assyrians and the Persians and all the different races
+ which forced their way into the fertile valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Mesopotamia is one of endless warfare and conquest. First the
+ Sumerians came from the North. They were a white People who had lived in
+ the mountains. They had been accustomed to worship their Gods on the tops
+ of hills. After they had entered the plain they constructed artificial
+ little hills on top of which they built their altars. They did not know
+ how to build stairs and they therefore surrounded their towers with
+ sloping galleries. Our engineers have borrowed this idea, as you may see
+ in our big railroad stations where ascending galleries lead from one floor
+ to another. We may have borrowed other ideas from the Sumerians but we do
+ not know it. The Sumerians were entirely ab-sorbed by those races that
+ entered the fertile valley at a later date. Their towers however still
+ stand amidst the ruins of Mesopotamia. The Jews saw them when they went
+ into exile in the land of Babylon and they called them towers of Babillli,
+ or towers of Babel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the fortieth century before our era, the Sumerians had entered
+ Mesopotamia. They were soon afterwards over-powered by the Akkadians, one
+ of the many tribes from the desert of Arabia who speak a common dialect
+ and who are known as the "Semites," because in the olden days people
+ believed them to be the direct descendants of Shem, one of the three sons
+ of Noah. A thousand years later, the Akkadians were forced to submit to
+ the rule of the Amorites, another Semitic desert tribe whose great King
+ Hammurabi built himself a magnificent palace in the holy city of Babylon
+ and who gave his people a set of laws which made the Babylonian state the
+ best administered empire of the ancient world. Next the Hittites, whom you
+ will also meet in the Old Testament, over-ran the Fertile Valley and
+ destroyed whatever they could not carry away. They in turn were vanquished
+ by the followers of the great desert God, Ashur, who called themselves
+ Assyrians and who made the city of Nineveh the center of a vast and
+ terrible empire which conquered all of western Asia and Egypt and gathered
+ taxes from countless subject races until the end of the seventh century
+ before the birth of Christ when the Chaldeans, also a Semitic tribe,
+ re-established Babylon and made that city the most important capital of
+ that day. Nebuchadnezzar, the best known of their Kings, encouraged the
+ study of science, and our modern knowledge of astronomy and mathematics is
+ all based upon certain first principles which were discovered by the
+ Chaldeans. In the year 538 B.C. a crude tribe of Persian shepherds invaded
+ this old land and overthrew the empire of the Chaldeans. Two hundred years
+ later, they in turn were overthrown by Alexander the Great, who turned the
+ Fertile Valley, the old melting-pot of so many Semitic races, into a Greek
+ province. Next came the Romans and after the Romans, the Turks, and
+ Mesopotamia, the second centre of the world's civilisation, became a vast
+ wilderness where huge mounds of earth told a story of ancient glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MOSES
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE STORY OF MOSES, THE LEADER OF THE JEWISH PEOPLE
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ SOME time during the twentieth century before our era, a small and
+ unimportant tribe of Semitic shepherds had left its old home, which was
+ situated in the land of Ur on the mouth of the Euphrates, and had tried to
+ find new pastures within the domain of the Kings of Babylonia. They had
+ been driven away by the royal soldiers and they had moved westward looking
+ for a little piece of unoccupied territory where they might set up their
+ tents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This tribe of shepherds was known as the Hebrews or, as we call them, the
+ Jews. They had wandered far and wide, and after many years of dreary
+ peregrinations they had been given shelter in Egypt. For more than five
+ centuries they had dwelt among the Egyptians and when their adopted
+ country had been overrun by the Hyksos marauders (as I told you in the
+ story of Egypt) they had managed to make themselves useful to the foreign
+ invader and had been left in the undisturbed possession of their grazing
+ fields. But after a long war of independence the Egyptians had driven the
+ Hyksos out of the valley of the Nile and then the Jews had come upon evil
+ times for they had been degraded to the rank of common slaves and they had
+ been forced to work on the royal roads and on the Pyramids. And as the
+ frontiers were guarded by the Egyptian soldiers it had been impossible for
+ the Jews to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After many years of suffering they were saved from their miserable fate by
+ a young Jew, called Moses, who for a long time had dwelt in the desert and
+ there had learned to appreciate the simple virtues of his earliest
+ ancestors, who had kept away from cities and city-life and had refused to
+ let themselves be corrupted by the ease and the luxury of a foreign
+ civilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moses decided to bring his people back to a love of the ways of the
+ patriarchs. He succeeded in evading the Egyptian troops that were sent
+ after him and led his fellow tribesmen into the heart of the plain at the
+ foot of Mount Sinai. During his long and lonely life in the desert, he had
+ learned to revere the strength of the great God of the Thunder and the
+ Storm, who ruled the high heavens and upon whom the shepherds depended for
+ life and light and breath. This God, one of the many divinities who were
+ widely worshipped in western Asia, was called Jehovah, and through the
+ teaching of Moses, he became the sole Master of the Hebrew race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day, Moses disappeared from the camp of the Jews. It was whispered
+ that he had gone away carrying two tablets of rough-hewn stone. That
+ afternoon, the top of the mountain was lost to sight. The darkness of a
+ terrible storm hid it from the eye of man. But when Moses returned,
+ behold! there stood engraved upon the tablets the words which Jehovah had
+ spoken unto the people of Israel amidst the crash of his thunder and the
+ blinding flashes of his lightning. And from that moment, Jehovah was
+ recognised by all the Jews as the Highest Master of their Fate, the only
+ True God, who had taught them how to live holy lives when he bade them to
+ follow the wise lessons of his Ten Commandments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They followed Moses when he bade them continue their journey through the
+ desert. They obeyed him when he told them what to eat and drink and what
+ to avoid that they might keep well in the hot climate. And finally after
+ many years of wandering they came to a land which seemed pleasant and
+ prosperous. It was called Palestine, which means the country of the
+ "Pilistu" the Philistines, a small tribe of Cretans who had settled along
+ the coast after they had been driven away from their own island.
+ Unfortunately, the mainland, Palestine, was already inhabited by another
+ Semitic race, called the Canaanites. But the Jews forced their way into
+ the valleys and built themselves cities and constructed a mighty temple in
+ a town which they named Jerusalem, the Home of Peace. As for Moses, he was
+ no longer the leader of his people. He had been allowed to see the
+ mountain ridges of Palestine from afar. Then he had closed his tired eyes
+ for all time. He had worked faithfully and hard to please Jehovah. Not
+ only had he guided his brethren out of foreign slavery into the free and
+ independent life of a new home but he had also made the Jews the first of
+ all nations to worship a single God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PHOENICIANS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE PHOENICIANS WHO GAVE US OUR ALPHABET
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE Phoenicians, who were the neighbours of the Jews, were a Semitic tribe
+ which at a very early age had settled along the shores of the
+ Mediterranean. They had built themselves two well-fortified towns, Tyre
+ and Sidon, and within a short time they had gained a monopoly of the trade
+ of the western seas. Their ships went regularly to Greece and Italy and
+ Spain and they even ventured beyond the straits of Gibraltar to visit the
+ Scilly islands where they could buy tin. Wherever they went, they built
+ themselves small trading stations, which they called colonies. Many of
+ these were the origin of modern cities, such as Cadiz and Marseilles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They bought and sold whatever promised to bring them a good profit. They
+ were not troubled by a conscience. If we are to believe all their
+ neighbours they did not know what the words honesty or integrity meant.
+ They regarded a well-filled treasure chest the highest ideal of all good
+ citizens. Indeed they were very unpleasant people and did not have a
+ single friend. Nevertheless they have rendered all coming generations one
+ service of the greatest possible value. They gave us our alphabet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Phoenicians had been familiar with the art of writing, invented by the
+ Sumerians. But they regarded these pothooks as a clumsy waste of time.
+ They were practical business men and could not spend hours engraving two
+ or three letters. They set to work and invented a new system of writing
+ which was greatly superior to the old one. They borrowed a few pictures
+ from the Egyptians and they simplified a number of the wedge-shaped
+ figures of the Sumerians. They sacrificed the pretty looks of the older
+ system for the advantage of speed and they reduced the thousands of
+ different images to a short and handy alphabet of twenty-two letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In due course of time, this alphabet travelled across the AEgean Sea and
+ entered Greece. The Greeks added a few letters of their own and carried
+ the improved system to Italy. The Romans modified the figures somewhat and
+ in turn taught them to the wild barbarians of western Europe. Those wild
+ barbarians were our own ancestors, and that is the reason why this book is
+ written in characters that are of Phoenician origin and not in the
+ hieroglyphics of the Egyptians or in the nail-script of the Sumerians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE INDO-EUROPEANS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE INDO-EUROPEAN PERSIANS CONQUER THE SEMITIC AND THE EGYPTIAN WORLD
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE world of Egypt and Babylon and Assyria and Phoenicia had existed
+ almost thirty centuries and the venerable races of the Fertile Valley were
+ getting old and tired. Their doom was sealed when a new and more energetic
+ race appeared upon the horizon. We call this race the Indo-European race,
+ because it conquered not only Europe but also made itself the ruling class
+ in the country which is now known as British India.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These Indo-Europeans were white men like the Semites but they spoke a
+ different language which is regarded as the common ancestor of all
+ European tongues with the exception of Hungarian and Finnish and the
+ Basque dialects of Northern Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we first hear of them, they had been living along the shores of the
+ Caspian Sea for many centuries. But one day they had packed their tents
+ and they had wandered forth in search of a new home. Some of them had
+ moved into the mountains of Central Asia and for many centuries they had
+ lived among the peaks which surround the plateau of Iran and that is why
+ we call them Aryans. Others had followed the setting sun and they had
+ taken possession of the plains of Europe as I shall tell you when I give
+ you the story of Greece and Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the moment we must follow the Aryans. Under the leadership of
+ Zarathustra (or Zoroaster) who was their great teacher many of them had
+ left their mountain homes to follow the swiftly flowing Indus river on its
+ way to the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others had preferred to stay among the hills of western Asia and there
+ they had founded the half-independent communities of the Medes and the
+ Persians, two peoples whose names we have copied from the old Greek
+ history-books. In the seventh century before the birth of Christ, the
+ Medes had established a kingdom of their own called Media, but this
+ perished when Cyrus, the chief of a clan known as the Anshan, made himself
+ king of all the Persian tribes and started upon a career of conquest which
+ soon made him and his children the undisputed masters of the whole of
+ western Asia and of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, with such energy did these Indo-European Persians push their
+ triumphant campaigns in the west that they soon found themselves in
+ serious difficulties with certain other Indo-European tribes which
+ centuries before had moved into Europe and had taken possession of the
+ Greek peninsula and the islands of the AEgean Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These difficulties led to the three famous wars between Greece and Persia
+ during which King Darius and King Xerxes of Persia invaded the northern
+ part of the peninsula. They ravaged the lands of the Greeks and tried very
+ hard to get a foothold upon the European continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in this they did not succeed. The navy of Athens proved unconquerable.
+ By cutting off the lines of supplies of the Persian armies, the Greek
+ sailors invariably forced the Asiatic rulers to return to their base.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the first encounter between Asia, the ancient teacher, and Europe,
+ the young and eager pupil. A great many of the other chapters of this book
+ will tell you how the struggle between east and west has continued until
+ this very day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE AEGEAN SEA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE PEOPLE OF THE AEGEAN SEA CARRIED THE CIVILISATION OF OLD ASIA INTO THE
+ WILDERNESS OF EUROPE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHEN Heinrich Schliemann was a little boy his father told him the story of
+ Troy. He liked that story better than anything else he had ever heard and
+ he made up his mind, that as soon as he was big enough to leave home, he
+ would travel to Greece and "find Troy." That he was the son of a poor
+ country parson in a Mecklenburg village did not bother him. He knew that
+ he would need money but he decided to gather a fortune first and do the
+ digging afterwards. As a matter of fact, he managed to get a large fortune
+ within a very short time, and as soon as he had enough money to equip an
+ expedition, he went to the northwest corner of Asia Minor, where he
+ supposed that Troy had been situated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that particular nook of old Asia Minor, stood a high mound covered with
+ grainfields. According to tradition it had been the home of Priamus the
+ king of Troy. Schliemann, whose enthusiasm was somewhat greater than his
+ knowledge, wasted no time in preliminary explorations. At once he began to
+ dig. And he dug with such zeal and such speed that his trench went
+ straight through the heart of the city for which he was looking and
+ carried him to the ruins of another buried town which was at least a
+ thousand years older than the Troy of which Homer had written. Then
+ something very interesting occurred. If Schliemann had found a few
+ polished stone hammers and perhaps a few pieces of crude pottery, no one
+ would have been surprised. Instead of discovering such objects, which
+ people had generally associated with the prehistoric men who had lived in
+ these regions before the coming of the Greeks, Schliemann found beautiful
+ statuettes and very costly jewelry and ornamented vases of a pattern that
+ was unknown to the Greeks. He ventured the suggestion that fully ten
+ centuries before the great Trojan war, the coast of the AEgean had been
+ inhabited by a mysterious race of men who in many ways had been the
+ superiors of the wild Greek tribes who had invaded their country and had
+ destroyed their civilisation or absorbed it until it had lost all trace of
+ originality. And this proved to be the case. In the late seventies of the
+ last century, Schliemann visited the ruins of Mycenae, ruins which were so
+ old that Roman guide-books marvelled at their antiquity. There again,
+ beneath the flat slabs of stone of a small round enclosure, Schliemann
+ stumbled upon a wonderful treasure-trove, which had been left behind by
+ those mysterious people who had covered the Greek coast with their cities
+ and who had built walls, so big and so heavy and so strong, that the
+ Greeks called them the work of the Titans, those god-like giants who in
+ very olden days had used to play ball with mountain peaks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very careful study of these many relics has done away with some of the
+ romantic features of the story. The makers of these early works of art and
+ the builders of these strong fortresses were no sorcerers, but simple
+ sailors and traders. They had lived in Crete, and on the many small
+ islands of the AEgean Sea. They had been hardy mariners and they had
+ turned the AEgean into a center of commerce for the exchange of goods
+ between the highly civilised east and the slowly developing wilderness of
+ the European mainland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For more than a thousand years they had maintained an island empire which
+ had developed a very high form of art. Indeed their most important city,
+ Cnossus, on the northern coast of Crete, had been entirely modern in its
+ insistence upon hygiene and comfort. The palace had been properly drained
+ and the houses had been provided with stoves and the Cnossians had been
+ the first people to make a daily use of the hitherto unknown bathtub. The
+ palace of their King had been famous for its winding staircases and its
+ large banqueting hall. The cellars underneath this palace, where the wine
+ and the grain and the olive-oil were stored, had been so vast and had so
+ greatly impressed the first Greek visitors, that they had given rise to
+ the story of the "labyrinth," the name which we give to a structure with
+ so many complicated passages that it is almost impossible to find our way
+ out, once the front door has closed upon our frightened selves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what finally became of this great AEgean Empire and what caused its
+ sudden downfall, that I can not tell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Cretans were familiar with the art of writing, but no one has yet been
+ able to decipher their inscriptions. Their history therefore is unknown to
+ us. We have to reconstruct the record of their adventures from the ruins
+ which the AEgeans have left behind. These ruins make it clear that the
+ AEgean world was suddenly conquered by a less civilised race which had
+ recently come from the plains of northern Europe. Unless we are very much
+ mistaken, the savages who were responsible for the destruction of the
+ Cretan and the AEgean civilisation were none other than certain tribes of
+ wandering shepherds who had just taken possession of the rocky peninsula
+ between the Adriatic and the AEgean seas and who are known to us as
+ Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GREEKS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ MEANWHILE THE INDO-EUROPEAN TRIBE OF THE HELLENES WAS TAKING POSSESSION OF
+ GREECE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Pyramids were a thousand years old and were beginning to show the
+ first signs of decay, and Hammurabi, the wise king of Babylon, had been
+ dead and buried several centuries, when a small tribe of shepherds left
+ their homes along the banks of the River Danube and wandered southward in
+ search of fresh pastures. They called themselves Hellenes, after Hellen,
+ the son of Deucalion and Pyrrha. According to the old myths these were the
+ only two human beings who had escaped the great flood, which countless
+ years before had destroyed all the people of the world, when they had
+ grown so wicked that they disgusted Zeus, the mighty God, who lived on
+ Mount Olympus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these early Hellenes we know nothing. Thucydides, the historian of the
+ fall of Athens, describing his earliest ancestors, said that they "did not
+ amount to very much," and this was probably true. They were very
+ ill-mannered. They lived like pigs and threw the bodies of their enemies
+ to the wild dogs who guarded their sheep. They had very little respect for
+ other people's rights, and they killed the natives of the Greek peninsula
+ (who were called the Pelasgians) and stole their farms and took their
+ cattle and made their wives and daughters slaves and wrote endless songs
+ praising the courage of the clan of the Achaeans, who had led the Hellenic
+ advance-guard into the mountains of Thessaly and the Peloponnesus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here and there, on the tops of high rocks, they saw the castles of the
+ AEgeans and those they did not attack for they feared the metal swords and
+ the spears of the AEgean soldiers and knew that they could not hope to
+ defeat them with their clumsy stone axes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many centuries they continued to wander from valley to valley and from
+ mountain side to mountain side Then the whole of the land had been
+ occupied and the migration had come to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That moment was the beginning of Greek civilisation. The Greek farmer,
+ living within sight of the AEgean colonies, was finally driven by
+ curiosity to visit his haughty neighbours. He discovered that he could
+ learn many useful things from the men who dwelt behind the high stone
+ walls of Mycenae, and Tiryns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a clever pupil. Within a short time he mastered the art of handling
+ those strange iron weapons which the AEgeans had brought from Babylon and
+ from Thebes. He came to understand the mysteries of navigation. He began
+ to build little boats for his own use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when he had learned everything the AEgeans could teach him he turned
+ upon his teachers and drove them back to their islands. Soon afterwards he
+ ventured forth upon the sea and conquered all the cities of the AEgean.
+ Finally in the fifteenth century before our era he plundered and ravaged
+ Cnossus and ten centuries after their first appearance upon the scene the
+ Hellenes were the undisputed rulers of Greece, of the AEgean and of the
+ coastal regions of Asia Minor. Troy, the last great commercial stronghold
+ of the older civilisation, was destroyed in the eleventh century B.C.
+ European history was to begin in all seriousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GREEK CITIES
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE GREEK CITIES THAT WERE REALLY STATES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ WE modern people love the sound of the word "big." We pride ourselves upon
+ the fact that we belong to the "biggest" country in the world and possess
+ the "biggest" navy and grow the "biggest" oranges and potatoes, and we
+ love to live in cities of "millions" of inhabitants and when we are dead
+ we are buried in the "biggest cemetery of the whole state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A citizen of ancient Greece, could he have heard us talk, would not have
+ known what we meant. "Moderation in all things" was the ideal of his life
+ and mere bulk did not impress him at all. And this love of moderation was
+ not merely a hollow phrase used upon special occasions: it influenced the
+ life of the Greeks from the day of their birth to the hour of their death.
+ It was part of their literature and it made them build small but perfect
+ temples. It found expression in the clothes which the men wore and in the
+ rings and the bracelets of their wives. It followed the crowds that went
+ to the theatre and made them hoot down any playwright who dared to sin
+ against the iron law of good taste or good sense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks even insisted upon this quality in their politicians and in
+ their most popular athletes. When a powerful runner came to Sparta and
+ boasted that he could stand longer on one foot than any other man in
+ Hellas the people drove him from the city because he prided himself upon
+ an accomplishment at which he could be beaten by any common goose. "That
+ is all very well," you will say, "and no doubt it is a great virtue to
+ care so much for moderation and perfection, but why should the Greeks have
+ been the only people to develop this quality in olden times?" For an
+ answer I shall point to the way in which the Greeks lived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of Egypt or Mesopotamia had been the "subjects" of a mysterious
+ Supreme Ruler who lived miles and miles away in a dark palace and who was
+ rarely seen by the masses of the population. The Greeks on the other hand,
+ were "free citizens" of a hundred independent little "cities" the largest
+ of which counted fewer inhabitants than a large modern village. When a
+ peasant who lived in Ur said that he was a Babylonian he meant that he was
+ one of millions of other people who paid tribute to the king who at that
+ particular moment happened to be master of western Asia. But when a Greek
+ said proudly that he was an Athenian or a Theban he spoke of a small town,
+ which was both his home and his country and which recognised no master but
+ the will of the people in the market-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Greek, his fatherland was the place where he was born; where he had
+ spent his earliest years playing hide and seek amidst the forbidden rocks
+ of the Acropolis; where he had grown into manhood with a thousand other
+ boys and girls, whose nicknames were as familiar to him as those of your
+ own schoolmates. His Fatherland was the holy soil where his father and
+ mother lay buried. It was the small house within the high city-walls where
+ his wife and children lived in safety. It was a complete world which
+ covered no more than four or five acres of rocky land. Don't you see how
+ these surroundings must have influenced a man in everything he did and
+ said and thought? The people of Babylon and Assyria and Egypt had been
+ part of a vast mob. They had been lost in the multitude. The Greek on the
+ other hand had never lost touch with his immediate surroundings. He never
+ ceased to be part of a little town where everybody knew every one else. He
+ felt that his intelligent neighbours were watching him. Whatever he did,
+ whether he wrote plays or made statues out of marble or composed songs, he
+ remembered that his efforts were going to be judged by all the free-born
+ citizens of his home-town who knew about such things. This knowledge
+ forced him to strive after perfection, and perfection, as he had been
+ taught from childhood, was not possible without moderation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this hard school, the Greeks learned to excel in many things. They
+ created new forms of government and new forms of literature and new ideals
+ in art which we have never been able to surpass. They performed these
+ miracles in little villages that covered less ground than four or five
+ modern city blocks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And look, what finally happened!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the fourth century before our era, Alexander of Macedonia conquered the
+ world. As soon as he had done with fighting, Alexander decided that he
+ must bestow the benefits of the true Greek genius upon all mankind. He
+ took it away from the little cities and the little villages and tried to
+ make it blossom and bear fruit amidst the vast royal residences of his
+ newly acquired Empire. But the Greeks, removed from the familiar sight of
+ their own temples, removed from the well-known sounds and smells of their
+ own crooked streets, at once lost the cheerful joy and the marvellous
+ sense of moderation which had inspired the work of their hands and brains
+ while they laboured for the glory of their old city-states. They became
+ cheap artisans, content with second-rate work. The day the little
+ city-states of old Hellas lost their independence and were forced to
+ become part of a big nation, the old Greek spirit died. And it has been
+ dead ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ GREEK SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE GREEKS WERE THE FIRST PEOPLE TO TRY THE DIFFICULT EXPERIMENT OF
+ SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the beginning, all the Greeks had been equally rich and equally poor.
+ Every man had owned a certain number of cows and sheep. His mud-hut had
+ been his castle. He had been free to come and go as he wished. Whenever it
+ was necessary to discuss matters of public importance, all the citizens
+ had gathered in the market-place. One of the older men of the village was
+ elected chairman and it was his duty to see that everybody had a chance to
+ express his views. In case of war, a particularly energetic and
+ self-confident villager was chosen commander-in-chief, but the same people
+ who had voluntarily given this man the right to be their leader, claimed
+ an equal right to deprive him of his job, once the danger had been
+ averted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But gradually the village had grown into a city. Some people had worked
+ hard and others had been lazy. A few had been unlucky and still others had
+ been just plain dishonest in dealing with their neighbours and had
+ gathered wealth. As a result, the city no longer consisted of a number of
+ men who were equally well-off. On the contrary it was inhabited by a small
+ class of very rich people and a large class of very poor ones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There had been another change. The old commander-in-chief who had been
+ willingly recognised as "headman" or "King" because he knew how to lead
+ his men to victory, had disappeared from the scene. His place had been
+ taken by the nobles&mdash;a class of rich people who during the course of
+ time had got hold of an undue share of the farms and estates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These nobles enjoyed many advantages over the common crowd of freemen.
+ They were able to buy the best weapons which were to be found on the
+ market of the eastern Mediterranean. They had much spare time in which
+ they could practise the art of fighting. They lived in strongly built
+ houses and they could hire soldiers to fight for them. They were
+ constantly quarrelling among each other to decide who should rule the
+ city. The victorious nobleman then assumed a sort of Kingship over all his
+ neighbours and governed the town until he in turn was killed or driven
+ away by still another ambitious nobleman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a King, by the grace of his soldiers, was called a "Tyrant" and
+ during the seventh and sixth centuries before our era every Greek city was
+ for a time ruled by such Tyrants, many of whom, by the way, happened to be
+ exceedingly capa-ble men. But in the long run, this state of affairs
+ became unbearable. Then attempts were made to bring about reforms and out
+ of these reforms grew the first democratic government of which the world
+ has a record.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was early in the seventh century that the people of Athens decided to
+ do some housecleaning and give the large number of freemen once more a
+ voice in the government as they were supposed to have had in the days of
+ their Achaean ancestors. They asked a man by the name of Draco to provide
+ them with a set of laws that would protect the poor against the
+ aggressions of the rich. Draco set to work. Unfortunately he was a
+ professional lawyer and very much out of touch with ordinary life. In his
+ eyes a crime was a crime and when he had finished his code, the people of
+ Athens discovered that these Draconian laws were so severe that they could
+ not possibly be put into effect. There would not have been rope enough to
+ hang all the criminals under their new system of jurisprudence which made
+ the stealing of an apple a capital offence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Athenians looked about for a more humane reformer. At last they found
+ some one who could do that sort of thing better than anybody else. His
+ name was Solon. He belonged to a noble family and he had travelled all
+ over the world and had studied the forms of government of many other
+ countries. After a careful study of the subject, Solon gave Athens a set
+ of laws which bore testimony to that wonderful principle of moderation
+ which was part of the Greek character. He tried to improve the condition
+ of the peasant without however destroying the prosperity of the nobles who
+ were (or rather who could be) of such great service to the state as
+ soldiers. To protect the poorer classes against abuse on the part of the
+ judges (who were always elected from the class of the nobles because they
+ received no salary) Solon made a provision whereby a citizen with a
+ grievance had the right to state his case before a jury of thirty of his
+ fellow Athenians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Most important of all, Solon forced the average freeman to take a direct
+ and personal interest in the affairs of the city. No longer could he stay
+ at home and say "oh, I am too busy today" or "it is raining and I had
+ better stay indoors." He was expected to do his share; to be at the
+ meeting of the town council; and carry part of the responsibility for the
+ safety and the prosperity of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This government by the "demos," the people, was often far from successful.
+ There was too much idle talk. There were too many hateful and spiteful
+ scenes between rivals for official honor. But it taught the Greek people
+ to be independent and to rely upon themselves for their salvation and that
+ was a very good thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ GREEK LIFE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE GREEKS LIVED
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ BUT how, you will ask, did the ancient Greeks have time to look after
+ their families and their business if they were forever running to the
+ market-place to discuss affairs of state? In this chapter I shall tell
+ you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In all matters of government, the Greek democracy recognised only one
+ class of citizens&mdash;the freemen. Every Greek city was composed of a
+ small number of free born citizens, a large number of slaves and a
+ sprinkling of foreigners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At rare intervals (usually during a war, when men were needed for the
+ army) the Greeks showed themselves willing to confer the rights of
+ citizenship upon the "barbarians" as they called the foreigners. But this
+ was an exception. Citizenship was a matter of birth. You were an Athenian
+ because your father and your grandfather had been Athenians before you.
+ But however great your merits as a trader or a soldier, if you were born
+ of non-Athenian parents, you remained a "foreigner" until the end of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greek city, therefore, whenever it was not ruled by a king or a
+ tyrant, was run by and for the freemen, and this would not have been
+ possible without a large army of slaves who outnumbered the free citizens
+ at the rate of six or five to one and who performed those tasks to which
+ we modern people must devote most of our time and energy if we wish to
+ provide for our families and pay the rent of our apartments. The slaves
+ did all the cooking and baking and candlestick making of the entire city.
+ They were the tailors and the carpenters and the jewelers and the
+ school-teachers and the bookkeepers and they tended the store and looked
+ after the factory while the master went to the public meeting to discuss
+ questions of war and peace or visited the theatre to see the latest play
+ of AEschylus or hear a discussion of the revolutionary ideas of Euripides,
+ who had dared to express certain doubts upon the omnipotence of the great
+ god Zeus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, ancient Athens resembled a modern club. All the freeborn citizens
+ were hereditary members and all the slaves were hereditary servants, and
+ waited upon the needs of their masters, and it was very pleasant to be a
+ member of the organisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when we talk about slaves, we do not mean the sort of people about
+ whom you have read in the pages of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." It is true that
+ the position of those slaves who tilled the fields was a very unpleasant
+ one, but the average freeman who had come down in the world and who had
+ been obliged to hire himself out as a farm hand led just as miserable a
+ life. In the cities, furthermore, many of the slaves were more prosperous
+ than the poorer classes of the freemen. For the Greeks, who loved
+ moderation in all things, did not like to treat their slaves after the
+ fashion which afterward was so common in Rome, where a slave had as few
+ rights as an engine in a modern factory and could be thrown to the wild
+ animals upon the smallest pretext.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks accepted slavery as a necessary institution, without which no
+ city could possibly become the home of a truly civilised people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The slaves also took care of those tasks which nowadays are performed by
+ the business men and the professional men. As for those household duties
+ which take up so much of the time of your mother and which worry your
+ father when he comes home from his office, the Greeks, who understood the
+ value of leisure, had reduced such duties to the smallest possible minimum
+ by living amidst surroundings of extreme simplicity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To begin with, their homes were very plain. Even the rich nobles spent
+ their lives in a sort of adobe barn, which lacked all the comforts which a
+ modern workman expects as his natural right. A Greek home consisted of
+ four walls and a roof. There was a door which led into the street but
+ there were no windows. The kitchen, the living rooms and the sleeping
+ quarters were built around an open courtyard in which there was a small
+ fountain, or a statue and a few plants to make it look bright. Within this
+ courtyard the family lived when it did not rain or when it was not too
+ cold. In one corner of the yard the cook (who was a slave) prepared the
+ meal and in another corner, the teacher (who was also a slave) taught the
+ children the alpha beta gamma and the tables of multiplication and in
+ still another corner the lady of the house, who rarely left her domain
+ (since it was not considered good form for a married woman to be seen on
+ the street too often) was repairing her husband's coat with her
+ seamstresses (who were slaves,) and in the little office, right off the
+ door, the master was inspecting the accounts which the overseer of his
+ farm (who was a slave) had just brought to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When dinner was ready the family came together but the meal was a very
+ simple one and did not take much time. The Greeks seem to have regarded
+ eating as an unavoidable evil and not a pastime, which kills many dreary
+ hours and eventually kills many dreary people. They lived on bread and on
+ wine, with a little meat and some green vegetables. They drank water only
+ when nothing else was available because they did not think it very
+ healthy. They loved to call on each other for dinner, but our idea of a
+ festive meal, where everybody is supposed to eat much more than is good
+ for him, would have disgusted them. They came together at the table for
+ the purpose of a good talk and a good glass of wine and water, but as they
+ were moderate people they despised those who drank too much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The same simplicity which prevailed in the dining room also dominated
+ their choice of clothes. They liked to be clean and well groomed, to have
+ their hair and beards neatly cut, to feel their bodies strong with the
+ exercise and the swimming of the gymnasium, but they never followed the
+ Asiatic fashion which prescribed loud colours and strange patterns. They
+ wore a long white coat and they managed to look as smart as a modern
+ Italian officer in his long blue cape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They loved to see their wives wear ornaments but they thought it very
+ vulgar to display their wealth (or their wives) in public and whenever the
+ women left their home they were as inconspicuous as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, the story of Greek life is a story not only of moderation but
+ also of simplicity. "Things," chairs and tables and books and houses and
+ carriages, are apt to take up a great deal of their owner's time. In the
+ end they invariably make him their slave and his hours are spent looking
+ after their wants, keeping them polished and brushed and painted. The
+ Greeks, before everything else, wanted to be "free," both in mind and in
+ body. That they might maintain their liberty, and be truly free in spirit,
+ they reduced their daily needs to the lowest possible point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GREEK THEATRE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE ORIGINS OF THE THEATRE, THE FIRST FORM OF PUBLIC AMUSEMENT
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ AT a very early stage of their history the Greeks had begun to collect the
+ poems, which had been written in honor of their brave ancestors who had
+ driven the Pelasgians out of Hellas and had destroyed the power of Troy.
+ These poems were recited in public and everybody came to listen to them.
+ But the theatre, the form of entertainment which has become almost a
+ necessary part of our own lives, did not grow out of these recited heroic
+ tales. It had such a curious origin that I must tell you something about
+ it in a separate chapter
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks had always been fond of parades. Every year they held solemn
+ processions in honor of Dionysos the God of the wine. As everybody in
+ Greece drank wine (the Greeks thought water only useful for the purpose of
+ swimming and sailing) this particular Divinity was as popular as a God of
+ the Soda-Fountain would be in our own land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And because the Wine-God was supposed to live in the vineyards, amidst a
+ merry mob of Satyrs (strange creatures who were half man and half goat),
+ the crowd that joined the procession used to wear goat-skins and to
+ hee-haw like real billy-goats. The Greek word for goat is "tragos" and the
+ Greek word for singer is "oidos." The singer who meh-mehed like a goat
+ therefore was called a "tragos-oidos" or goat singer, and it is this
+ strange name which developed into the modern word "Tragedy," which means
+ in the theatrical sense a piece with an unhappy ending, just as Comedy
+ (which really means the singing of something "comos" or gay) is the name
+ given to a play which ends happily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how, you will ask, did this noisy chorus of masqueraders, stamping
+ around like wild goats, ever develop into the noble tragedies which have
+ filled the theatres of the world for almost two thousand years?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The connecting link between the goat-singer and Hamlet is really very
+ simple as I shall show you in a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singing chorus was very amusing in the beginning and attracted large
+ crowds of spectators who stood along the side of the road and laughed. But
+ soon this business of tree-hawing grew tiresome and the Greeks thought
+ dullness an evil only comparable to ugliness or sickness. They asked for
+ something more entertaining. Then an inventive young poet from the village
+ of Icaria in Attica hit upon a new idea which proved a tremendous success.
+ He made one of the members of the goat-chorus step forward and engage in
+ conversation with the leader of the musicians who marched at the head of
+ the parade playing upon their pipes of Pan. This individual was allowed to
+ step out of line. He waved his arms and gesticulated while he spoke (that
+ is to say he "acted" while the others merely stood by and sang) and he
+ asked a lot of questions, which the bandmaster answered according to the
+ roll of papyrus upon which the poet had written down these answers before
+ the show began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This rough and ready conversation&mdash;the dialogue&mdash;which told the
+ story of Dionysos or one of the other Gods, became at once popular with
+ the crowd. Henceforth every Dionysian procession had an "acted scene" and
+ very soon the "acting" was considered more important than the procession
+ and the meh-mehing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AEschylus, the most successful of all "tragedians" who wrote no less than
+ eighty plays during his long life (from 526 to 455) made a bold step
+ forward when he introduced two "actors" instead of one. A generation later
+ Sophocles increased the number of actors to three. When Euripides began to
+ write his terrible tragedies in the middle of the fifth century, B.C., he
+ was allowed as many actors as he liked and when Aristophanes wrote those
+ famous comedies in which he poked fun at everybody and everything,
+ including the Gods of Mount Olympus, the chorus had been reduced to the
+ role of mere bystanders who were lined up behind the principal performers
+ and who sang "this is a terrible world" while the hero in the foreground
+ committed a crime against the will of the Gods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This new form of dramatic entertainment demanded a proper setting, and
+ soon every Greek city owned a theatre, cut out of the rock of a nearby
+ hill. The spectators sat upon wooden benches and faced a wide circle (our
+ present orchestra where you pay three dollars and thirty cents for a
+ seat). Upon this half-circle, which was the stage, the actors and the
+ chorus took their stand. Behind them there was a tent where they made up
+ with large clay masks which hid their faces and which showed the
+ spectators whether the actors were supposed to be happy and smiling or
+ unhappy and weeping. The Greek word for tent is "skene" and that is the
+ reason why we talk of the "scenery" of the stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When once the tragedy had become part of Greek life, the people took it
+ very seriously and never went to the theatre to give their minds a
+ vacation. A new play became as important an event as an election and a
+ successful playwright was received with greater honors than those bestowed
+ upon a general who had just returned from a famous victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE PERSIAN WARS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE GREEKS DEFENDED EUROPE AGAINST ASIATIC INVASION AND DROVE THE
+ PERSIANS BACK ACROSS THE AEGEAN SEA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Greeks had learned the art of trading from the AEgeans who had been
+ the pupils of the Phoenicians. They had founded colonies after the
+ Phoenician pattern. They had even improved upon the Phoenician methods by
+ a more general use of money in dealing with foreign customers. In the
+ sixth century before our era they had established themselves firmly along
+ the coast of Asia Minor and they were taking away trade from the
+ Phoenicians at a fast rate. This the Phoenicians of course did not like
+ but they were not strong enough to risk a war with their Greek
+ competitors. They sat and waited nor did they wait in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a former chapter, I have told you how a humble tribe of Persian
+ shepherds had suddenly gone upon the warpath and had conquered the greater
+ part of western Asia. The Persians were too civilised to plunder their new
+ subjects. They contented themselves with a yearly tribute. When they
+ reached the coast of Asia Minor they insisted that the Greek colonies of
+ Lydia recognize the Persian Kings as their over-Lords and pay them a
+ stipulated tax. The Greek colonies objected. The Persians insisted. Then
+ the Greek colonies appealed to the home-country and the stage was set for
+ a quarrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For if the truth be told, the Persian Kings regarded the Greek city-states
+ as very dangerous political institutions and bad examples for all other
+ people who were supposed to be the patient slaves of the mighty Persian
+ Kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, the Greeks enjoyed a certain degree of safety because their
+ country lay hidden beyond the deep waters of the AEgean. But here their
+ old enemies, the Phoenicians, stepped forward with offers of help and
+ advice to the Persians. If the Persian King would provide the soldiers,
+ the Phoenicians would guarantee to deliver the necessary ships to carry
+ them to Europe. It was the year 492 before the birth of Christ, and Asia
+ made ready to destroy the rising power of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a final warning the King of Persia sent messengers to the Greeks asking
+ for "earth and water" as a token of their submission. The Greeks promptly
+ threw the messengers into the nearest well where they would find both
+ "earth and water" in large abundance and thereafter of course peace was
+ impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Gods of High Olympus watched over their children and when the
+ Phoenician fleet carrying the Persian troops was near Mount Athos, the
+ Storm-God blew his cheeks until he almost burst the veins of his brow, and
+ the fleet was destroyed by a terrible hurricane and the Persians were all
+ drowned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years later they returned. This time they sailed straight across the
+ AEgean Sea and landed near the village of Marathon. As soon as the
+ Athenians heard this they sent their army of ten thousand men to guard the
+ hills that surrounded the Marathonian plain. At the same time they
+ despatched a fast runner to Sparta to ask for help. But Sparta was envious
+ of the fame of Athens and refused to come to her assistance. The other
+ Greek cities followed her example with the exception of tiny Plataea which
+ sent a thousand men. On the twelfth of September of the year 490,
+ Miltiades, the Athenian commander, threw this little army against the
+ hordes of the Persians. The Greeks broke through the Persian barrage of
+ arrows and their spears caused terrible havoc among the disorganised
+ Asiatic troops who had never been called upon to resist such an enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night the people of Athens watched the sky grow red with the flames
+ of burning ships. Anxiously they waited for news. At last a little cloud
+ of dust appeared upon the road that led to the North. It was Pheidippides,
+ the runner. He stumbled and gasped for his end was near. Only a few days
+ before had he returned from his errand to Sparta. He had hastened to join
+ Miltiades. That morning he had taken part in the attack and later he had
+ volunteered to carry the news of victory to his beloved city. The people
+ saw him fall and they rushed forward to support him. "We have won," he
+ whispered and then he died, a glorious death which made him envied of all
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the Persians, they tried, after this defeat, to land near Athens
+ but they found the coast guarded and disappeared, and once more the land
+ of Hellas was at peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eight years they waited and during this time the Greeks were not idle.
+ They knew that a final attack was to be expected but they did not agree
+ upon the best way to avert the danger. Some people wanted to increase the
+ army. Others said that a strong fleet was necessary for success. The two
+ parties led by Aristides (for the army) and Themistocles (the leader of
+ the bigger-navy men) fought each other bitterly and nothing was done until
+ Aristides was exiled. Then Themistocles had his chance and he built all
+ the ships he could and turned the Piraeus into a strong naval base.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 481 B.C. a tremendous Persian army appeared in Thessaly, a
+ province of northern Greece. In this hour of danger, Sparta, the great
+ military city of Greece, was elected commander-in-chief. But the Spartans
+ cared little what happened to northern Greece provided their own country
+ was not invaded, They neglected to fortify the passes that led into
+ Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A small detachment of Spartans under Leonidas had been told to guard the
+ narrow road between the high mountains and the sea which connected
+ Thessaly with the southern provinces. Leonidas obeyed his orders. He
+ fought and held the pass with unequalled bravery. But a traitor by the
+ name of Ephialtes who knew the little byways of Malis guided a regiment of
+ Persians through the hills and made it possible for them to attack
+ Leonidas in the rear. Near the Warm Wells&mdash;the Thermopylae&mdash;a
+ terrible battle was fought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When night came Leonidas and his faithful soldiers lay dead under the
+ corpses of their enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the pass had been lost and the greater part of Greece fell into the
+ hands of the Persians. They marched upon Athens, threw the garrison from
+ the rocks of the Acropolis and burned the city. The people fled to the
+ Island of Salamis. All seemed lost. But on the 20th of September of the
+ year 480 Themistocles forced the Persian fleet to give battle within the
+ narrow straits which separated the Island of Salamis from the mainland and
+ within a few hours he destroyed three quarters of the Persian ships.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way the victory of Thermopylae came to naught. Xerxes was forced
+ to retire. The next year, so he decreed, would bring a final decision. He
+ took his troops to Thessaly and there he waited for spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this time the Spartans understood the seriousness of the hour. They
+ left the safe shelter of the wall which they had built across the isthmus
+ of Corinth and under the leadership of Pausanias they marched against
+ Mardonius the Persian general. The united Greeks (some one hundred
+ thousand men from a dozen different cities) attacked the three hundred
+ thou-sand men of the enemy near Plataea. Once more the heavy Greek
+ infantry broke through the Persian barrage of arrows. The Persians were
+ defeated, as they had been at Marathon, and this time they left for good.
+ By a strange coincidence, the same day that the Greek armies won their
+ victory near Plataea, the Athenian ships destroyed the enemy's fleet near
+ Cape Mycale in Asia Minor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus did the first encounter between Asia and Europe end. Athens had
+ covered herself with glory and Sparta had fought bravely and well. If
+ these two cities had been able to come to an agreement, if they had been
+ willing to forget their little jealousies, they might have become the
+ leaders of a strong and united Hellas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But alas, they allowed the hour of victory and enthusiasm to slip by, and
+ the same opportunity never returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ATHENS vs. SPARTA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW ATHENS AND SPARTA FOUGHT A LONG AND DISASTROUS WAR FOR THE LEADERSHIP
+ OF GREECE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ATHENS and Sparta were both Greek cities and their people spoke a common
+ language. In every other respect they were different. Athens rose high
+ from the plain. It was a city exposed to the fresh breezes from the sea,
+ willing to look at the world with the eyes of a happy child. Sparta, on
+ the other hand, was built at the bottom of a deep valley, and used the
+ surrounding mountains as a barrier against foreign thought. Athens was a
+ city of busy trade. Sparta was an armed camp where people were soldiers
+ for the sake of being soldiers. The people of Athens loved to sit in the
+ sun and discuss poetry or listen to the wise words of a philosopher. The
+ Spartans, on the other hand, never wrote a single line that was considered
+ literature, but they knew how to fight, they liked to fight, and they
+ sacrificed all human emotions to their ideal of military preparedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No wonder that these sombre Spartans viewed the success of Athens with
+ malicious hate. The energy which the defence of the common home had
+ developed in Athens was now used for purposes of a more peaceful nature.
+ The Acropolis was rebuilt and was made into a marble shrine to the Goddess
+ Athena. Pericles, the leader of the Athenian democracy, sent far and wide
+ to find famous sculptors and painters and scientists to make the city more
+ beautiful and the young Athenians more worthy of their home. At the same
+ time he kept a watchful eye on Sparta and built high walls which connected
+ Athens with the sea and made her the strongest fortress of that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An insignificant quarrel between two little Greek cities led to the final
+ conflict. For thirty years the war between Athens and Sparta continued. It
+ ended in a terrible disaster for Athens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the third year of the war the plague had entered the city. More
+ than half of the people and Pericles, the great leader, had been killed.
+ The plague was followed by a period of bad and untrustworthy leadership. A
+ brilliant young fellow by the name of Alcibiades had gained the favor of
+ the popular assembly. He suggested a raid upon the Spartan colony of
+ Syracuse in Sicily. An expedition was equipped and everything was ready.
+ But Alcibiades got mixed up in a street brawl and was forced to flee. The
+ general who succeeded him was a bungler. First he lost his ships and then
+ he lost his army, and the few surviving Athenians were thrown into the
+ stone-quarries of Syracuse, where they died from hunger and thirst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The expedition had killed all the young men of Athens. The city was
+ doomed. After a long siege the town surrendered in April of the year 404.
+ The high walls were demolished. The navy was taken away by the Spartans.
+ Athens ceased to exist as the center of the great colonial empire which it
+ had conquered during the days of its prosperity. But that wonderful desire
+ to learn and to know and to investigate which had distinguished her free
+ citizens during the days of greatness and prosperity did not perish with
+ the walls and the ships. It continued to live. It became even more
+ brilliant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Athens no longer shaped the destinies of the land of Greece. But now, as
+ the home of the first great university the city began to influence the
+ minds of intelligent people far beyond the narrow frontiers of Hellas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ALEXANDER THE GREAT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ ALEXANDER THE MACEDONIAN ESTABLISHES A GREEK WORLD-EMPIRE, AND WHAT BECAME
+ OF THIS HIGH AMBITION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHEN the Achaeans had left their homes along the banks of the Danube to
+ look for pastures new, they had spent some time among the mountains of
+ Macedonia. Ever since, the Greeks had maintained certain more or less
+ formal relations with the people of this northern country. The Macedonians
+ from their side had kept themselves well informed about conditions in
+ Greece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it happened, just when Sparta and Athens had finished their disastrous
+ war for the leadership of Hellas, that Macedonia was ruled by an
+ extraordinarily clever man by the name of Philip. He admired the Greek
+ spirit in letters and art but he despised the Greek lack of self-control
+ in political affairs. It irritated him to see a perfectly good people
+ waste its men and money upon fruitless quarrels. So he settled the
+ difficulty by making himself the master of all Greece and then he asked
+ his new subjects to join him on a voyage which he meant to pay to Persia
+ in return for the visit which Xerxes had paid the Greeks one hundred and
+ fifty years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately Philip was murdered before he could start upon this
+ well-prepared expedition. The task of avenging the destruction of Athens
+ was left to Philip's son Alexander, the beloved pupil of Aristotle, wisest
+ of all Greek teachers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander bade farewell to Europe in the spring of the year 334 B.C. Seven
+ years later he reached India. In the meantime he had destroyed Phoenicia,
+ the old rival of the Greek merchants. He had conquered Egypt and had been
+ worshipped by the people of the Nile valley as the son and heir of the
+ Pharaohs. He had defeated the last Persian king&mdash;he had overthrown
+ the Persian empire he had given orders to rebuild Babylon&mdash;he had led
+ his troops into the heart of the Himalayan mountains and had made the
+ entire world a Macedonian province and dependency. Then he stopped and
+ announced even more ambitious plans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The newly formed Empire must be brought under the influence of the Greek
+ mind. The people must be taught the Greek language&mdash;they must live in
+ cities built after a Greek model. The Alexandrian soldier now turned
+ school-master. The military camps of yesterday became the peaceful centres
+ of the newly imported Greek civilisation. Higher and higher did the flood
+ of Greek manners and Greek customs rise, when suddenly Alexander was
+ stricken with a fever and died in the old palace of King Hammurabi of
+ Babylon in the year 323.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the waters receded. But they left behind the fertile clay of a higher
+ civilisation and Alexander, with all his childish ambitions and his silly
+ vanities, had performed a most valuable service. His Empire did not long
+ survive him. A number of ambitious generals divided the territory among
+ themselves. But they too remained faithful to the dream of a great world
+ brotherhood of Greek and Asiatic ideas and knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They maintained their independence until the Romans added western Asia and
+ Egypt to their other domains. The strange inheritance of this Hellenistic
+ civilisation (part Greek, part Persian, part Egyptian and Babylonian) fell
+ to the Roman conquerors. During the following centuries, it got such a
+ firm hold upon the Roman world, that we feel its influence in our own
+ lives this very day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A SUMMARY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A SHORT SUMMARY OF CHAPTERS 1 to 20
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THUS far, from the top of our high tower we have been looking eastward.
+ But from this time on, the history of Egypt and Mesopotamia is going to
+ grow less interesting and I must take you to study the western landscape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before we do this, let us stop a moment and make clear to ourselves what
+ we have seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First of all I showed you prehistoric man&mdash;a creature very simple in
+ his habits and very unattractive in his manners. I told you how he was the
+ most defenceless of the many animals that roamed through the early
+ wilderness of the five continents, but being possessed of a larger and
+ better brain, he managed to hold his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the glaciers and the many centuries of cold weather, and life on
+ this planet became so difficult that man was obliged to think three times
+ as hard as ever before if he wished to survive. Since, however, that "wish
+ to survive" was (and is) the mainspring which keeps every living being
+ going full tilt to the last gasp of its breath, the brain of glacial man
+ was set to work in all earnestness. Not only did these hardy people manage
+ to exist through the long cold spells which killed many ferocious animals,
+ but when the earth became warm and comfortable once more, prehistoric man
+ had learned a number of things which gave him such great advantages over
+ his less intelligent neighbors that the danger of extinction (a very
+ serious one during the first half million years of man's residence upon
+ this planet) became a very remote one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I told you how these earliest ancestors of ours were slowly plodding along
+ when suddenly (and for reasons that are not well understood) the people
+ who lived in the valley of the Nile rushed ahead and almost over night,
+ created the first centre of civilisation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I showed you Mesopotamia, "the land between the rivers," which was
+ the second great school of the human race. And I made you a map of the
+ little island bridges of the AEgean Sea, which carried the knowledge and
+ the science of the old east to the young west, where lived the Greeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next I told you of an Indo-European tribe, called the Hellenes, who
+ thousands of years before had left the heart of Asia and who had in the
+ eleventh century before our era pushed their way into the rocky peninsula
+ of Greece and who, since then, have been known to us as the Greeks. And I
+ told you the story of the little Greek cities that were really states,
+ where the civilisation of old Egypt and Asia was transfigured (that is a
+ big word, but you can "figure out" what it means) into something quite
+ new, something that was much nobler and finer than anything that had gone
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you look at the map you will see how by this time civilisation has
+ described a semi-circle. It begins in Egypt, and by way of Mesopotamia and
+ the AEgean Islands it moves westward until it reaches the European
+ continent. The first four thousand years, Egyptians and Babylonians and
+ Phoenicians and a large number of Semitic tribes (please remember that the
+ Jews were but one of a large number of Semitic peoples) have carried the
+ torch that was to illuminate the world. They now hand it over to the
+ Indo-European Greeks, who become the teachers of another Indo-European
+ tribe, called the Romans. But meanwhile the Semites have pushed westward
+ along the northern coast of Africa and have made themselves the rulers of
+ the western half of the Mediterranean just when the eastern half has
+ become a Greek (or Indo-European) possession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, as you shall see in a moment, leads to a terrible conflict between
+ the two rival races, and out of their struggle arises the victorious Roman
+ Empire, which is to take this Egyptian-Mesopotamian-Greek civilisation to
+ the furthermost corners of the European continent, where it serves as the
+ foundation upon which our modern society is based.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I know all this sounds very complicated, but if you get hold of these few
+ principles, the rest of our history will become a great deal simpler. The
+ maps will make clear what the words fail to tell. And after this short
+ intermission, we go back to our story and give you an account of the
+ famous war between Carthage and Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ROME AND CARTHAGE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE SEMITIC COLONY OF CARTHAGE ON THE NORTHERN COAST OF AFRICA AND THE
+ INDO-EUROPEAN CITY OF ROME ON THE WEST COAST OF ITALY FOUGHT EACH OTHER
+ FOR THE POSSESSION OF THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN AND CARTHAGE WAS DESTROYED
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE little Phoenician trading post of Kart-hadshat stood on a low hill
+ which overlooked the African Sea, a stretch of water ninety miles wide
+ which separates Africa from Europe. It was an ideal spot for a commercial
+ centre. Almost too ideal. It grew too fast and became too rich. When in
+ the sixth century before our era, Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon destroyed
+ Tyre, Carthage broke off all further relations with the Mother Country and
+ became an independent state&mdash;the great western advance-post of the
+ Semitic races.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately the city had inherited many of the traits which for a
+ thousand years had been characteristic of the Phoenicians. It was a vast
+ business-house, protected by a strong navy, indifferent to most of the
+ finer aspects of life. The city and the surrounding country and the
+ distant colonies were all ruled by a small but exceedingly powerful group
+ of rich men, The Greek word for rich is "ploutos" and the Greeks called
+ such a government by "rich men" a "Plutocracy." Carthage was a plutocracy
+ and the real power of the state lay in the hands of a dozen big
+ ship-owners and mine-owners and merchants who met in the back room of an
+ office and regarded their common Fatherland as a business enterprise which
+ ought to yield them a decent profit. They were however wide awake and full
+ of energy and worked very hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the years went by the influence of Carthage upon her neighbours
+ increased until the greater part of the African coast, Spain and certain
+ regions of France were Carthaginian possessions, and paid tribute, taxes
+ and dividends to the mighty city on the African Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, such a "plutocracy" was forever at the mercy of the crowd. As
+ long as there was plenty of work and wages were high, the majority of the
+ citizens were quite contented, allowed their "betters" to rule them and
+ asked no embarrassing questions. But when no ships left the harbor, when
+ no ore was brought to the smelting-ovens, when dockworkers and stevedores
+ were thrown out of employment, then there were grumblings and there was a
+ demand that the popular assembly be called together as in the olden days
+ when Carthage had been a self-governing republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To prevent such an occurrence the plutocracy was obliged to keep the
+ business of the town going at full speed. They had managed to do this very
+ successfully for almost five hun-dred years when they were greatly
+ disturbed by certain rumors which reached them from the western coast of
+ Italy. It was said that a little village on the banks of the Tiber had
+ suddenly risen to great power and was making itself the acknowledged
+ leader of all the Latin tribes who inhabited central Italy. It was also
+ said that this village, which by the way was called Rome, intended to
+ build ships and go after the commerce of Sicily and the southern coast of
+ France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Carthage could not possibly tolerate such competition. The young rival
+ must be destroyed lest the Carthaginian rulers lose their prestige as the
+ absolute rulers of the western Mediterranean. The rumors were duly
+ investigated and in a general way these were the facts that came to light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The west coast of Italy had long been neglected by civilisation. Whereas
+ in Greece all the good harbours faced eastward and enjoyed a full view of
+ the busy islands of the AEgean, the west coast of Italy contemplated
+ nothing more exciting than the desolate waves of the Mediterranean. The
+ country was poor. It was therefore rarely visited by foreign merchants and
+ the natives were allowed to live in undisturbed possession of their hills
+ and their marshy plains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first serious invasion of this land came from the north. At an unknown
+ date certain Indo-European tribes had managed to find their way through
+ the passes of the Alps and had pushed southward until they had filled the
+ heel and the toe of the famous Italian boot with their villages and their
+ flocks. Of these early conquerors we know nothing. No Homer sang their
+ glory. Their own accounts of the foundation of Rome (written eight hundred
+ years later when the little city had become the centre of an Empire) are
+ fairy stories and do not belong in a history. Romulus and Remus jumping
+ across each other's walls (I always forget who jumped across whose wall)
+ make entertaining reading, but the foundation of the City of Rome was a
+ much more prosaic affair. Rome began as a thousand American cities have
+ done, by being a convenient place for barter and horse-trading. It lay in
+ the heart of the plains of central Italy The Tiber provided direct access
+ to the sea. The land-road from north to south found here a convenient ford
+ which could be used all the year around. And seven little hills along the
+ banks of the river offered the inhabitants a safe shelter against their
+ enemies who lived in the mountains and those who lived beyond the horizon
+ of the nearby sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mountaineers were called the Sabines. They were a rough crowd with an
+ unholy desire for easy plunder. But they were very backward. They used
+ stone axes and wooden shields and were no match for the Romans with their
+ steel swords. The sea-people on the other hand were dangerous foes. They
+ were called the Etruscans and they were (and still are) one of the great
+ mysteries of history. Nobody knew (or knows) whence they came; who they
+ were; what had driven them away from their original homes. We have found
+ the remains of their cities and their cemeteries and their waterworks all
+ along the Italian coast. We are familiar with their inscriptions. But as
+ no one has ever been able to decipher the Etruscan alphabet, these written
+ messages are, so far, merely annoying and not at all useful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our best guess is that the Etruscans came originally from Asia Minor and
+ that a great war or a pestilence in that country had forced them to go
+ away and seek a new home elsewhere. Whatever the reason for their coming,
+ the Etruscans played a great role in history. They carried the pollen of
+ the ancient civilisation from the east to the west and they taught the
+ Romans who, as we know, came from the north, the first principles of
+ architecture and street-building and fighting and art and cookery and
+ medicine and astronomy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just as the Greeks had not loved their AEgean teachers, in this same
+ way did the Romans hate their Etruscan masters. They got rid of them as
+ soon as they could and the opportunity offered itself when Greek merchants
+ discovered the commercial possibilities of Italy and when the first Greek
+ vessels reached Rome. The Greeks came to trade, but they stayed to
+ instruct. They found the tribes who inhabited the Roman country-side (and
+ who were called the Latins) quite willing to learn such things as might be
+ of practical use. At once they understood the great benefit that could be
+ derived from a written alphabet and they copied that of the Greeks. They
+ also understood the commercial advantages of a well-regulated system of
+ coins and measures and weights. Eventually the Romans swallowed Greek
+ civilisation hook, line and sinker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They even welcomed the Gods of the Greeks to their country. Zeus was taken
+ to Rome where he became known as Jupiter and the other divinities followed
+ him. The Roman Gods however never were quite like their cheerful cousins
+ who had accompanied the Greeks on their road through life and through
+ history. The Roman Gods were State Functionaries. Each one managed his own
+ department with great prudence and a deep sense of justice, but in turn he
+ was exact in demanding the obedience of his worshippers. This obedience
+ the Romans rendered with scrupulous care. But they never established the
+ cordial personal relations and that charming friendship which had existed
+ between the old Hellenes and the mighty residents of the high Olympian
+ peak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romans did not imitate the Greek form of government, but being of the
+ same Indo-European stock as the people of Hellas, the early history of
+ Rome resembles that of Athens and the other Greek cities. They did not
+ find it difficult to get rid of their kings, the descendants of the
+ ancient tribal chieftains. But once the kings had been driven from the
+ city, the Romans were forced to bridle the power of the nobles, and it
+ took many centuries before they managed to establish a system which gave
+ every free citizen of Rome a chance to take a personal interest in the
+ affairs of his town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereafter the Romans enjoyed one great advantage over the Greeks. They
+ managed the affairs of their country without making too many speeches.
+ They were less imaginative than the Greeks and they preferred an ounce of
+ action to a pound of words. They understood the tendency of the multitude
+ (the "plebe," as the assemblage of free citizens was called) only too well
+ to waste valuable time upon mere talk. They therefore placed the actual
+ business of running the city into the hands of two "consuls" who were
+ assisted by a council of Elders, called the Senate (because the word
+ "senex" means an old man). As a matter of custom and practical advantage
+ the senators were elected from the nobility. But their power had been
+ strictly defined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rome at one time had passed through the same sort of struggle between the
+ poor and the rich which had forced Athens to adopt the laws of Draco and
+ Solon. In Rome this conflict had occurred in the fifth century B. C. As a
+ result the freemen had obtained a written code of laws which protected
+ them against the despotism of the aristocratic judges by the institution
+ of the "Tribune." These Tribunes were city-magistrates, elected by the
+ freemen. They had the right to protect any citizen against those actions
+ of the government officials which were thought to be unjust. A consul had
+ the right to condemn a man to death, but if the case had not been
+ absolutely proved the Tribune could interfere and save the poor fellow's
+ life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when I use the word Rome, I seem to refer to a little city of a few
+ thousand inhabitants. And the real strength of Rome lay in the country
+ districts outside her walls. And it was in the government of these
+ outlying provinces that Rome at an early age showed her wonderful gift as
+ a colonising power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In very early times Rome had been the only strongly fortified city in
+ central Italy, but it had always offered a hospitable refuge to other
+ Latin tribes who happened to be in danger of attack. The Latin neighbours
+ had recognised the advantages of a close union with such a powerful friend
+ and they had tried to find a basis for some sort of defensive and
+ offensive alliance. Other nations, Egyptians, Babylonians, Phoenicians,
+ even Greeks, would have insisted upon a treaty of submission on the part
+ of the "barbarians," The Romans did nothing of the sort. They gave the
+ "outsider" a chance to become partners in a common "res publica"&mdash;or
+ common-wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You want to join us," they said. "Very well, go ahead and join. We shall
+ treat you as if you were full-fledged citizens of Rome. In return for this
+ privilege we expect you to fight for our city, the mother of us all,
+ whenever it shall be necessary."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The "outsider" appreciated this generosity and he showed his gratitude by
+ his unswerving loyalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whenever a Greek city had been attacked, the foreign residents had moved
+ out as quickly as they could. Why defend something which meant nothing to
+ them but a temporary boarding house in which they were tolerated as long
+ as they paid their bills? But when the enemy was before the gates of Rome,
+ all the Latins rushed to her defence. It was their Mother who was in
+ danger. It was their true "home" even if they lived a hundred miles away
+ and had never seen the walls of the sacred Hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No defeat and no disaster could change this sentiment. In the beginning of
+ the fourth century B.C. the wild Gauls forced their way into Italy. They
+ had defeated the Roman army near the River Allia and had marched upon the
+ city. They had taken Rome and then they expected that the people would
+ come and sue for peace. They waited, but nothing happened. After a short
+ time the Gauls found themselves surrounded by a hostile population which
+ made it impossible for them to obtain supplies. After seven months, hunger
+ forced them to withdraw. The policy of Rome to treat the "foreigner" on
+ equal terms had proved a great success and Rome stood stronger than ever
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This short account of the early history of Rome shows you the enormous
+ difference between the Roman ideal of a healthy state, and that of the
+ ancient world which was embodied in the town of Carthage. The Romans
+ counted upon the cheerful and hearty co-operation between a number of
+ "equal citizens." The Carthaginians, following the example of Egypt and
+ western Asia, insisted upon the unreasoning (and therefore unwilling)
+ obedience of "Subjects" and when these failed they hired professional
+ soldiers to do their fighting for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will now understand why Carthage was bound to fear such a clever and
+ powerful enemy and why the plutocracy of Carthage was only too willing to
+ pick a quarrel that they might destroy the dangerous rival before it was
+ too late.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Carthaginians, being good business men, knew that it never pays to
+ rush matters. They proposed to the Romans that their respective cities
+ draw two circles on the map and that each town claim one of these circles
+ as her own "sphere of influence" and promise to keep out of the other
+ fellow's circle. The agreement was promptly made and was broken just as
+ promptly when both sides thought it wise to send their armies to Sicily
+ where a rich soil and a bad government invited foreign interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war which followed (the so-called first Punic War) lasted twenty-four
+ years. It was fought out on the high seas and in the beginning it seemed
+ that the experienced Carthaginian navy would defeat the newly created
+ Roman fleet. Following their ancient tactics, the Carthaginian ships would
+ either ram the enemy vessels or by a bold attack from the side they would
+ break their oars and would then kill the sailors of the helpless vessel
+ with their arrows and with fire balls. But Roman engineers invented a new
+ craft which carried a boarding bridge across which the Roman infantrymen
+ stormed the hostile ship. Then there was a sudden end to Carthaginian
+ victories. At the battle of Mylae their fleet was badly defeated. Carthage
+ was obliged to sue for peace, and Sicily became part of the Roman domains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-three years later new trouble arose. Rome (in quest of copper) had
+ taken the island of Sardinia. Carthage (in quest of silver) thereupon
+ occupied all of southern Spain. This made Carthage a direct neighbour of
+ the Romans. The latter did not like this at all and they ordered their
+ troops to cross the Pyrenees and watch the Carthaginian army of
+ occupation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stage was set for the second outbreak between the two rivals. Once
+ more a Greek colony was the pretext for a war. The Carthaginians were
+ besieging Saguntum on the east coast of Spain. The Saguntians appealed to
+ Rome and Rome, as usual, was willing to help. The Senate promised the help
+ of the Latin armies, but the preparation for this expedition took some
+ time, and meanwhile Saguntum had been taken and had been destroyed. This
+ had been done in direct opposition to the will of Rome. The Senate decided
+ upon war. One Roman army was to cross the African sea and make a landing
+ on Carthaginian soil. A second division was to keep the Carthaginian
+ armies occupied in Spain to prevent them from rushing to the aid of the
+ home town. It was an excellent plan and everybody expected a great
+ victory. But the Gods had decided otherwise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the fall of the year 218 before the birth of Christ and the Roman
+ army which was to attack the Carthaginians in Spain had left Italy. People
+ were eagerly waiting for news of an easy and complete victory when a
+ terrible rumour began to spread through the plain of the Po. Wild
+ mountaineers, their lips trembling with fear, told of hundreds of
+ thousands of brown men accompanied by strange beasts "each one as big as a
+ house," who had suddenly emerged from the clouds of snow which surrounded
+ the old Graian pass through which Hercules, thousands of years before, had
+ driven the oxen of Geryon on his way from Spain to Greece. Soon an endless
+ stream of bedraggled refugees appeared before the gates of Rome, with more
+ complete details. Hannibal, the son of Hamilcar, with fifty thousand
+ soldiers, nine thousand horsemen and thirty-seven fighting elephants, had
+ crossed the Pyrenees. He had defeated the Roman army of Scipio on the
+ banks of the Rhone and he had guided his army safely across the mountain
+ passes of the Alps although it was October and the roads were thickly
+ covered with snow and ice. Then he had joined forces with the Gauls and
+ together they had defeated a second Roman army just before they crossed
+ the Trebia and laid siege to Placentia, the northern terminus of the road
+ which connected Rome with the province of the Alpine districts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Senate, surprised but calm and energetic as usual, hushed up the news
+ of these many defeats and sent two fresh armies to stop the invader.
+ Hannibal managed to surprise these troops on a narrow road along the
+ shores of the Trasimene Lake and there he killed all the Roman officers
+ and most of their men. This time there was a panic among the people of
+ Rome, but the Senate kept its nerve. A third army was organised and the
+ command was given to Quintus Fabius Maximus with full power to act "as was
+ necessary to save the state."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fabius knew that he must be very careful lest all be lost. His raw and
+ untrained men, the last available soldiers, were no match for Hannibal's
+ veterans. He refused to accept battle but forever he followed Hannibal,
+ destroyed everything eatable, destroyed the roads, attacked small
+ detachments and generally weakened the morale of the Carthaginian troops
+ by a most distressing and annoying form of guerilla warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such methods however did not satisfy the fearsome crowds who had found
+ safety behind the walls of Rome. They wanted "action." Something must be
+ done and must be done quickly. A popular hero by the name of Varro, the
+ sort of man who went about the city telling everybody how much better he
+ could do things than slow old Fabius, the "Delayer," was made
+ commander-in-chief by popular acclamation. At the battle of Cannae (216)
+ he suffered the most terrible defeat of Roman history. More than seventy
+ thousand men were killed. Hannibal was master of all Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He marched from one end of the peninsula to the other, proclaiming himself
+ the "deliverer from the yoke of Rome" and asking the different provinces
+ to join him in warfare upon the mother city. Then once more the wisdom of
+ Rome bore noble fruit. With the exceptions of Capua and Syracuse, all
+ Roman cities remained loyal. Hannibal, the deliverer, found himself
+ opposed by the people whose friend he pretended to be. He was far away
+ from home and did not like the situation. He sent messengers to Carthage
+ to ask for fresh supplies and new men. Alas, Carthage could not send him
+ either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romans with their boarding-bridges, were the masters of the sea.
+ Hannibal must help himself as best he could. He continued to defeat the
+ Roman armies that were sent out against him, but his own numbers were
+ decreasing rapidly and the Italian peasants held aloof from this
+ self-appointed "deliverer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After many years of uninterrupted victories, Hannibal found himself
+ besieged in the country which he had just conquered. For a moment, the
+ luck seemed to turn. Hasdrubal, his brother, had defeated the Roman armies
+ in Spain. He had crossed the Alps to come to Hannibal's assistance. He
+ sent messengers to the south to tell of his arrival and ask the other army
+ to meet him in the plain of the Tiber. Unfortunately the messengers fell
+ into the hands of the Romans and Hannibal waited in vain for further news
+ until his brother's head, neatly packed in a basket, came rolling into his
+ camp and told him of the fate of the last of the Carthaginian troops.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Hasdrubal out of the way, young Publius Scipio easily reconquered
+ Spain and four years later the Romans were ready for a final attack upon
+ Carthage. Hannibal was called back. He crossed the African Sea and tried
+ to organise the defences of his home-city. In the year 202 at the battle
+ of Zama, the Carthaginians were defeated. Hannibal fled to Tyre. From
+ there he went to Asia Minor to stir up the Syrians and the Macedonians
+ against Rome. He accomplished very little but his activities among these
+ Asiatic powers gave the Romans an excuse to carry their warfare into the
+ territory of the east and annex the greater part of the AEgean world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Driven from one city to another, a fugitive without a home, Hannibal at
+ last knew that the end of his ambitious dream had come. His beloved city
+ of Carthage had been ruined by the war. She had been forced to sign a
+ terrible peace. Her navy had been sunk. She had been forbidden to make war
+ without Roman permission. She had been condemned to pay the Romans
+ millions of dollars for endless years to come. Life offered no hope of a
+ better future. In the year 190 B.C. Hannibal took poison and killed
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forty years later, the Romans forced their last war upon Carthage. Three
+ long years the inhabitants of the old Phoenician colony held out against
+ the power of the new republic. Hunger forced them to surrender. The few
+ men and women who had survived the siege were sold as slaves. The city was
+ set on fire. For two whole weeks the store-houses and the pal-aces and the
+ great arsenal burned. Then a terrible curse was pronounced upon the
+ blackened ruins and the Roman legions returned to Italy to enjoy their
+ victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the next thousand years, the Mediterranean remained a European sea.
+ But as soon as the Roman Empire had been destroyed, Asia made another
+ attempt to dominate this great inland sea, as you will learn when I tell
+ you about Mohammed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RISE OF ROME
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROME HAPPENED
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE Roman Empire was an accident. No one planned it. It "happened." No
+ famous general or statesman or cut-throat ever got up and said "Friends,
+ Romans, Citizens, we must found an Empire. Follow me and together we shall
+ conquer all the land from the Gates of Hercules to Mount Taurus."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rome produced famous generals and equally distinguished statesmen and
+ cut-throats, and Roman armies fought all over the world. But the Roman
+ empire-making was done without a preconceived plan. The average Roman was
+ a very matter-of-fact citizen. He disliked theories about government. When
+ someone began to recite "eastward the course of Roman Empire, etc., etc.,"
+ he hastily left the forum. He just continued to take more and more land
+ because circumstances forced him to do so. He was not driven by ambition
+ or by greed. Both by nature and inclination he was a farmer and wanted to
+ stay at home. But when he was attacked he was obliged to defend himself
+ and when the enemy happened to cross the sea to ask for aid in a distant
+ country then the patient Roman marched many dreary miles to defeat this
+ dangerous foe and when this had been accomplished, he stayed behind to
+ adminster{sic} his newly conquered provinces lest they fall into the hands
+ of wandering Barbarians and become themselves a menace to Roman safety. It
+ sounds rather complicated and yet to the contemporaries it was so very
+ simple, as you shall see in a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 203 B.C. Scipio had crossed the African Sea and had carried
+ the war into Africa. Carthage had called Hannibal back. Badly supported by
+ his mercenaries, Hannibal had been defeated near Zama. The Romans had
+ asked for his surrender and Hannibal had fled to get aid from the kings of
+ Macedonia and Syria, as I told you in my last chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rulers of these two countries (remnants of the Empire of Alexander the
+ Great) just then were contemplating an expedition against Egypt. They
+ hoped to divide the rich Nile valley between themselves. The king of Egypt
+ had heard of this and he had asked Rome to come to his support. The stage
+ was set for a number of highly interesting plots and counter-plots. But
+ the Romans, with their lack of imagination, rang the curtain down before
+ the play had been fairly started. Their legions completely defeated the
+ heavy Greek phalanx which was still used by the Macedonians as their
+ battle formation. That happened in the year 197 B.C. at the battle in the
+ plains of Cynoscephalae, or "Dogs' Heads," in central Thessaly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romans then marched southward to Attica and informed the Greeks that
+ they had come to "deliver the Hellenes from the Macedonian yoke." The
+ Greeks, having learned nothing in their years of semi-slavery, used their
+ new freedom in a most unfortunate way. All the little city-states once
+ more began to quarrel with each other as they had done in the good old
+ days. The Romans, who had little understanding and less love for these
+ silly bickerings of a race which they rather despised, showed great
+ forebearance. But tiring of these endless dissensions they lost patience,
+ invaded Greece, burned down Corinth (to "encourage the other Greeks") and
+ sent a Roman governor to Athens to rule this turbulent province. In this
+ way, Macedonia and Greece became buffer states which protected Rome's
+ eastern frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile right across the Hellespont lay the Kingdom of Syria, and
+ Antiochus III, who ruled that vast land, had shown great eagerness when
+ his distinguished guest, General Hannibal, explained to him how easy it
+ would be to invade Italy and sack the city of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lucius Scipio, a brother of Scipio the African fighter who had defeated
+ Hannibal and his Carthaginians at Zama, was sent to Asia Minor. He
+ destroyed the armies of the Syrian king near Magnesia (in the year 190
+ B.C.) Shortly afterwards, Antiochus was lynched by his own people. Asia
+ Minor became a Roman protectorate and the small City-Republic of Rome was
+ mistress of most of the lands which bordered upon the Mediterranean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ROMAN EMPIRE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE REPUBLIC OF ROME AFTER CENTURIES OF UNREST AND REVOLUTION BECAME
+ AN EMPIRE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WHEN the Roman armies returned from these many victorious campaigns, they
+ were received with great jubilation. Alas and alack! this sudden glory did
+ not make the country any happier. On the contrary. The endless campaigns
+ had ruined the farmers who had been obliged to do the hard work of Empire
+ making. It had placed too much power in the hands of the successful
+ generals (and their private friends) who had used the war as an excuse for
+ wholesale robbery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old Roman Republic had been proud of the simplicity which had
+ characterised the lives of her famous men. The new Republic felt ashamed
+ of the shabby coats and the high principles which had been fashionable in
+ the days of its grandfathers. It became a land of rich people ruled by
+ rich people for the benefit of rich people. As such it was doomed to
+ disastrous failure, as I shall now tell you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within less than a century and a half. Rome had become the mistress of
+ practically all the land around the Mediterranean. In those early days of
+ history a prisoner of war lost his freedom and became a slave. The Roman
+ regarded war as a very serious business and he showed no mercy to a
+ conquered foe. After the fall of Carthage, the Carthaginian women and
+ children were sold into bondage together with their own slaves. And a like
+ fate awaited the obstinate inhabitants of Greece and Macedonia and Spain
+ and Syria when they dared to revolt against the Roman power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two thousand years ago a slave was merely a piece of machinery. Nowadays a
+ rich man invests his money in factories. The rich people of Rome
+ (senators, generals and war-profiteers) invested theirs in land and in
+ slaves. The land they bought or took in the newly-acquired provinces. The
+ slaves they bought in open market wherever they happened to be cheapest.
+ During most of the third and second centuries before Christ there was a
+ plentiful supply, and as a result the landowners worked their slaves until
+ they dropped dead in their tracks, when they bought new ones at the
+ nearest bargain-counter of Corinthian or Carthaginian captives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now behold the fate of the freeborn farmer!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had done his duty toward Rome and he had fought her battles without
+ complaint. But when he came home after ten, fifteen or twenty years, his
+ lands were covered with weeds and his family had been ruined. But he was a
+ strong man and willing to begin life anew. He sowed and planted and waited
+ for the harvest. He carried his grain to the market together with his
+ cattle and his poultry, to find that the large landowners who worked their
+ estates with slaves could underbid him all along the line. For a couple of
+ years he tried to hold his own. Then he gave up in despair. He left the
+ country and he went to the nearest city. In the city he was as hungry as
+ he had been before on the land. But he shared his misery with thousands of
+ other disinherited beings. They crouched together in filthy hovels in the
+ suburbs of the large cities. They were apt to get sick and die from
+ terrible epidemics. They were all profoundly discontented. They had fought
+ for their country and this was their reward. They were always willing to
+ listen to those plausible spell-binders who gather around a public
+ grievance like so many hungry vultures, and soon they became a grave
+ menace to the safety of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the class of the newly-rich shrugged its shoulders. "We have our army
+ and our policemen," they argued, "they will keep the mob in order." And
+ they hid themselves behind the high walls of their pleasant villas and
+ cultivated their gardens and read the poems of a certain Homer which a
+ Greek slave had just translated into very pleasing Latin hexameters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a few families however the old tradition of unselfish service to the
+ Commonwealth continued. Cornelia, the daughter of Scipio Africanus, had
+ been married to a Roman by the name of Gracchus. She had two sons,
+ Tiberius and Gaius. When the boys grew up they entered politics and tried
+ to bring about certain much-needed reforms. A census had shown that most
+ of the land of the Italian peninsula was owned by two thousand noble
+ families. Tiberius Gracchus, having been elected a Tribune, tried to help
+ the freemen. He revived two ancient laws which restricted the number of
+ acres which a single owner might possess. In this way he hoped to revive
+ the valuable old class of small and independent freeholders. The
+ newly-rich called him a robber and an enemy of the state. There were
+ street riots. A party of thugs was hired to kill the popular Tribune.
+ Tiberius Gracchus was attacked when he entered the assembly and was beaten
+ to death. Ten years later his brother Gaius tried the experiment of
+ reforming a nation against the expressed wishes of a strong privileged
+ class. He passed a "poor law" which was meant to help the destitute
+ farmers. Eventually it made the greater part of the Roman citizens into
+ professional beggars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He established colonies of destitute people in distant parts of the
+ empire, but these settlements failed to attract the right sort of people.
+ Before Gaius Gracchus could do more harm he too was murdered and his
+ followers were either killed or exiled. The first two reformers had been
+ gentlemen. The two who came after were of a very different stamp. They
+ were professional soldiers. One was called Marius. The name of the other
+ was Sulla. Both enjoyed a large personal following.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sulla was the leader of the landowners. Marius, the victor in a great
+ battle at the foot of the Alps when the Teutons and the Cimbri had been
+ annihilated, was the popular hero of the disinherited freemen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it happened in the year 88 B.C. that the Senate of Rome was greatly
+ disturbed by rumours that came from Asia. Mithridates, king of a country
+ along the shores of the Black Sea, and a Greek on his mother's side, had
+ seen the possibility of establishing a second Alexandrian Empire. He began
+ his campaign for world-domination with the murder of all Roman citizens
+ who happened to be in Asia Minor, men, women and children. Such an act, of
+ course, meant war. The Senate equipped an army to march against the King
+ of Pontus and punish him for his crime. But who was to be
+ commander-in-chief? "Sulla," said the Senate, "because he is Consul."
+ "Marius," said the mob, "because he has been Consul five times and because
+ he is the champion of our rights."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Possession is nine points of the law. Sulla happened to be in actual
+ command of the army. He went west to defeat Mithridates and Marius fled to
+ Africa. There he waited until he heard that Sulla had crossed into Asia.
+ He then returned to Italy, gathered a motley crew of malcontents, marched
+ on Rome and entered the city with his professional highwaymen, spent five
+ days and five nights, slaughtering the enemies of the Senatorial party,
+ got himself elected Consul and promptly died from the excitement of the
+ last fortnight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There followed four years of disorder. Then Sulla, having defeated
+ Mithridates, announced that he was ready to return to Rome and settle a
+ few old scores of his own. He was as good as his word. For weeks his
+ soldiers were busy executing those of their fellow citizens who were
+ suspected of democratic sympathies. One day they got hold of a young
+ fellow who had been often seen in the company of Marius. They were going
+ to hang him when some one interfered. "The boy is too young," he said, and
+ they let him go. His name was Julius Caesar. You shall meet him again on
+ the next page.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Sulla, he became "Dictator," which meant sole and supreme ruler of
+ all the Roman possessions. He ruled Rome for four years, and he died
+ quietly in his bed, having spent the last year of his life tenderly
+ raising his cabbages, as was the custom of so many Romans who had spent a
+ lifetime killing their fellow-men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But conditions did not grow better. On the contrary, they grew worse.
+ Another general, Gnaeus Pompeius, or Pompey, a close friend of Sulla, went
+ east to renew the war against the ever troublesome Mithridates. He drove
+ that energetic potentate into the mountains where Mithridates took poison
+ and killed himself, well knowing what fate awaited him as a Roman captive.
+ Next he re-established the authority of Rome over Syria, destroyed
+ Jerusalem, roamed through western Asia, trying to revive the myth of
+ Alexander the Great, and at last (in the year 62) returned to Rome with a
+ dozen ship-loads of defeated Kings and Princes and Generals, all of whom
+ were forced to march in the triumphal procession of this enormously
+ popular Roman who presented his city with the sum of forty million dollars
+ in plunder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was necessary that the government of Rome be placed in the hands of a
+ strong man. Only a few months before, the town had almost fallen into the
+ hands of a good-for-nothing young aristocrat by the name of Catiline, who
+ had gambled away his money and hoped to reimburse himself for his losses
+ by a little plundering. Cicero, a public-spirited lawyer, had discovered
+ the plot, had warned the Senate, and had forced Catiline to flee. But
+ there were other young men with similar ambitions and it was no time for
+ idle talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pompey organised a triumvirate which was to take charge of affairs. He
+ became the leader of this Vigilante Committee. Gaius Julius Caesar, who
+ had made a reputation for himself as governor of Spain, was the second in
+ command. The third was an indifferent sort of person by the name of
+ Crassus. He had been elected because he was incredibly rich, having been a
+ successful contractor of war supplies. He soon went upon an expedition
+ against the Parthians and was killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Caesar, who was by far the ablest of the three, he decided that he
+ needed a little more military glory to become a popular hero. He crossed
+ the Alps and conquered that part of the world which is now called France.
+ Then he hammered a solid wooden bridge across the Rhine and invaded the
+ land of the wild Teutons. Finally he took ship and visited England. Heaven
+ knows where he might have ended if he had not been forced to return to
+ Italy. Pompey, so he was informed, had been appointed dictator for life.
+ This of course meant that Caesar was to be placed on the list of the
+ "retired officers," and the idea did not appeal to him. He remembered that
+ he had begun life as a follower of Marius. He decided to teach the
+ Senators and their "dictator" another lesson. He crossed the Rubicon River
+ which separated the province of Cis-alpine Gaul from Italy. Everywhere he
+ was received as the "friend of the people." Without difficulty Caesar
+ entered Rome and Pompey fled to Greece Caesar followed him and defeated
+ his followers near Pharsalus. Pompey sailed across the Mediterranean and
+ escaped to Egypt. When he landed he was murdered by order of young king
+ Ptolemy. A few days later Caesar arrived. He found himself caught in a
+ trap. Both the Egyptians and the Roman garrison which had remained
+ faithful to Pompey, attacked his camp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortune was with Caesar. He succeeded in setting fire to the Egyptian
+ fleet. Incidentally the sparks of the burning vessels fell on the roof of
+ the famous library of Alexandria (which was just off the water front,) and
+ destroyed it. Next he attacked the Egyptian army, drove the soldiers into
+ the Nile, drowned Ptolemy, and established a new government under
+ Cleopatra, the sister of the late king. Just then word reached him that
+ Pharnaces, the son and heir of Mithridates, had gone on the war-path.
+ Caesar marched northward, defeated Pharnaces in a war which lasted five
+ days, sent word of his victory to Rome in the famous sentence "veni, vidi,
+ vici," which is Latin for "I came, I saw, I conquered," and returned to
+ Egypt where he fell desperately in love with Cleopatra, who followed him
+ to Rome when he returned to take charge of the government, in the year 46.
+ He marched at the head of not less than four different victory-parades,
+ having won four different campaigns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Caesar appeared in the Senate to report upon his adventures, and the
+ grateful Senate made him "dictator" for ten years. It was a fatal step.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new dictator made serious attempts to reform the Roman state. He made
+ it possible for freemen to become members of the Senate. He conferred the
+ rights of citizenship upon distant communities as had been done in the
+ early days of Roman history. He permitted "foreigners" to exercise
+ influence upon the government. He reformed the administration of the
+ distant provinces which certain aristocratic families had come to regard
+ as their private possessions. In short he did many things for the good of
+ the majority of the people but which made him thoroughly unpopular with
+ the most powerful men in the state. Half a hundred young aristocrats
+ formed a plot "to save the Republic." On the Ides of March (the fifteenth
+ of March according to that new calendar which Caesar had brought with him
+ from Egypt) Caesar was murdered when he entered the Senate. Once more Rome
+ was without a master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two men who tried to continue the tradition of Caesar's glory.
+ One was Antony, his former secretary. The other was Octavian, Caesar's
+ grand-nephew and heir to his estate. Octavian remained in Rome, but Antony
+ went to Egypt to be near Cleopatra with whom he too had fallen in love, as
+ seems to have been the habit of Roman generals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A war broke out between the two. In the battle of Actium, Octavian
+ defeated Antony. Antony killed himself and Cleopatra was left alone to
+ face the enemy. She tried very hard to make Octavian her third Roman
+ conquest. When she saw that she could make no impression upon this very
+ proud aristocrat, she killed herself, and Egypt became a Roman province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Octavian, he was a very wise young man and he did not repeat the
+ mistake of his famous uncle. He knew how people will shy at words. He was
+ very modest in his demands when he returned to Rome. He did not want to be
+ a "dictator." He would be entirely satisfied with the title of "the
+ Honourable." But when the Senate, a few years later, addressed him as
+ Augustus&mdash;the Illustrious&mdash;he did not object and a few years
+ later the man in the street called him Caesar, or Kaiser, while the
+ soldiers, accustomed to regard Octavian as their Commander-in-chief
+ referred to him as the Chief, the Imperator or Emperor. The Republic had
+ become an Empire, but the average Roman was hardly aware of the fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 14 A.D. his position as the Absolute Ruler of the Roman people had
+ become so well established that he was made an object of that divine
+ worship which hitherto had been reserved for the Gods. And his successors
+ were true "Emperors"&mdash;the absolute rulers of the greatest empire the
+ world had ever seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the truth be told, the average citizen was sick and tired of anarchy
+ and disorder. He did not care who ruled him provided the new master gave
+ him a chance to live quietly and without the noise of eternal street
+ riots. Octavian assured his subjects forty years of peace. He had no
+ desire to extend the frontiers of his domains, In the year 9 A.D. he had
+ contem-plated an invasion of the northwestern wilderness which was
+ inhabited by the Teutons. But Varrus, his general, had been killed with
+ all his men in the Teutoburg Woods, and after that the Romans made no
+ further attempts to civilise these wild people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They concentrated their efforts upon the gigantic problem of internal
+ reform. But it was too late to do much good. Two centuries of revolution
+ and foreign war had repeatedly killed the best men among the younger
+ generations. It had ruined the class of the free farmers. It had
+ introduced slave labor, against which no freeman could hope to compete. It
+ had turned the cities into beehives inhabited by pauperized and unhealthy
+ mobs of runaway peasants. It had created a large bureaucracy&mdash;petty
+ officials who were underpaid and who were forced to take graft in order to
+ buy bread and clothing for their families. Worst of all, it had accustomed
+ people to violence, to blood-shed, to a barbarous pleasure in the pain and
+ suffering of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outwardly, the Roman state during the first century of our era was a
+ magnificent political structure, so large that Alexander's empire became
+ one of its minor provinces. Underneath this glory there lived millions
+ upon millions of poor and tired human beings, toiling like ants who have
+ built a nest underneath a heavy stone. They worked for the benefit of some
+ one else. They shared their food with the animals of the fields. They
+ lived in stables. They died without hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the seven hundred and fifty-third year since the founding of Rome.
+ Gaius Julius Caesar Octavianus Augustus was living in the palace of the
+ Palatine Hill, busily engaged upon the task of ruling his empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a little village of distant Syria, Mary, the wife of Joseph the
+ Carpenter, was tending her little boy, born in a stable of Bethlehem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a strange world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before long, the palace and the stable were to meet in open combat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the stable was to emerge victorious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ JOSHUA OF NAZARETH
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE STORY OF JOSHUA OF NAZARETH, WHOM THE GREEKS CALLED JESUS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ IN the autumn of the year of the city 783 (which would be 62 A.D., in our
+ way of counting time) AEsculapius Cultellus, a Roman physician, wrote to
+ his nephew who was with the army in Syria as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My dear Nephew,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few days ago I was called in to prescribe for a sick man named Paul. He
+ appeared to be a Roman citizen of Jewish parentage, well educated and of
+ agreeable manners. I had been told that he was here in connection with a
+ law-suit, an appeal from one of our provincial courts, Caesarea or some
+ such place in the eastern Mediterranean. He had been described to me as a
+ "wild and violent" fellow who had been making speeches against the People
+ and against the Law. I found him very intelligent and of great honesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A friend of mine who used to be with the army in Asia Minor tells me that
+ he heard something about him in Ephesus where he was preaching sermons
+ about a strange new God. I asked my patient if this were true and whether
+ he had told the people to rebel against the will of our beloved Emperor.
+ Paul answered me that the Kingdom of which he had spoken was not of this
+ world and he added many strange utterances which I did not understand, but
+ which were probably due to his fever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His personality made a great impression upon me and I was sorry to hear
+ that he was killed on the Ostian Road a few days ago. Therefore I am
+ writing this letter to you. When next you visit Jerusalem, I want you to
+ find out something about my friend Paul and the strange Jewish prophet,
+ who seems to have been his teacher. Our slaves are getting much excited
+ about this so-called Messiah, and a few of them, who openly talked of the
+ new kingdom (whatever that means) have been crucified. I would like to
+ know the truth about all these rumours and I am
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Your devoted Uncle,
+ AESCULAPIUS CULTELLUS.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Six weeks later, Gladius Ensa, the nephew, a captain of the VII Gallic
+ Infantry, answered as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My dear Uncle,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I received your letter and I have obeyed your instructions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two weeks ago our brigade was sent to Jerusalem. There have been several
+ revolutions during the last century and there is not much left of the old
+ city. We have been here now for a month and to-morrow we shall continue
+ our march to Petra, where there has been trouble with some of the Arab
+ tribes. I shall use this evening to answer your questions, but pray do not
+ expect a detailed report.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have talked with most of the older men in this city but few have been
+ able to give me any definite information. A few days ago a pedler came to
+ the camp. I bought some of his olives and I asked him whether he had ever
+ heard of the famous Messiah who was killed when he was young. He said that
+ he remembered it very clearly, because his father had taken him to
+ Golgotha (a hill just outside the city) to see the execution, and to show
+ him what became of the enemies of the laws of the people of Judaea. He
+ gave me the address of one Joseph, who had been a personal friend of the
+ Messiah and told me that I had better go and see him if I wanted to know
+ more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This morning I went to call on Joseph. He was quite an old man. He had
+ been a fisherman on one of the fresh-water lakes. His memory was clear,
+ and from him at last I got a fairly definite account of what had happened
+ during the troublesome days before I was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tiberius, our great and glorious emperor, was on the throne, and an
+ officer of the name of Pontius Pilatus was governor of Judaea and Samaria.
+ Joseph knew little about this Pilatus. He seemed to have been an honest
+ enough official who left a decent reputation as procurator of the
+ province. In the year 755 or 756 (Joseph had forgotten when) Pilatus was
+ called to Jerusalem on account of a riot. A certain young man (the son of
+ a carpenter of Nazareth) was said to be planning a revolution against the
+ Roman government. Strangely enough our own intelligence officers, who are
+ usually well informed, appear to have heard nothing about it, and when
+ they investigated the matter they reported that the carpenter was an
+ excellent citizen and that there was no reason to proceed against him. But
+ the old-fashioned leaders of the Jewish faith, according to Joseph, were
+ much upset. They greatly disliked his popularity with the masses of the
+ poorer Hebrews. The "Nazarene" (so they told Pilatus) had publicly claimed
+ that a Greek or a Roman or even a Philistine, who tried to live a decent
+ and honourable life, was quite as good as a Jew who spent his days
+ studying the ancient laws of Moses. Pilatus does not seem to have been
+ impressed by this argument, but when the crowds around the temple
+ threatened to lynch Jesus, and kill all his followers, he decided to take
+ the carpenter into custody to save his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He does not appear to have understood the real nature of the quarrel.
+ Whenever he asked the Jewish priests to explain their grievances, they
+ shouted "heresy" and "treason" and got terribly excited. Finally, so
+ Joseph told me, Pilatus sent for Joshua (that was the name of the
+ Nazarene, but the Greeks who live in this part of the world always refer
+ to him as Jesus) to examine him personally. He talked to him for several
+ hours. He asked him about the "dangerous doctrines" which he was said to
+ have preached on the shores of the sea of Galilee. But Jesus answered that
+ he never referred to politics. He was not so much interested in the bodies
+ of men as in Man's soul. He wanted all people to regard their neighbours
+ as their brothers and to love one single God, who was the father of all
+ living beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pilatus, who seems to have been well versed in the doctrines of the Stoics
+ and the other Greek philosophers, does not appear to have discovered
+ anything seditious in the talk of Jesus. According to my informant he made
+ another attempt to save the life of the kindly prophet. He kept putting
+ the execution off. Meanwhile the Jewish people, lashed into fury by their
+ priests, got frantic with rage. There had been many riots in Jerusalem
+ before this and there were only a few Roman soldiers within calling
+ distance. Reports were being sent to the Roman authorities in Caesarea
+ that Pilatus had "fallen a victim to the teachings of the Nazarene."
+ Petitions were being circulated all through the city to have Pilatus
+ recalled, because he was an enemy of the Emperor. You know that our
+ governors have strict instructions to avoid an open break with their
+ foreign subjects. To save the country from civil war, Pilatus finally
+ sacrificed his prisoner, Joshua, who behaved with great dignity and who
+ forgave all those who hated him. He was crucified amidst the howls and the
+ laughter of the Jerusalem mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That is what Joseph told me, with tears running down his old cheeks. I
+ gave him a gold piece when I left him, but he refused it and asked me to
+ hand it to one poorer than himself. I also asked him a few questions about
+ your friend Paul. He had known him slightly. He seems to have been a tent
+ maker who gave up his profession that he might preach the words of a
+ loving and forgiving God, who was so very different from that Jehovah of
+ whom the Jewish priests are telling us all the time. Afterwards, Paul
+ appears to have travelled much in Asia Minor and in Greece, telling the
+ slaves that they were all children of one loving Father and that happiness
+ awaits all, both rich and poor, who have tried to live honest lives and
+ have done good to those who were suffering and miserable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I hope that I have answered your questions to your satisfaction. The whole
+ story seems very harmless to me as far as the safety of the state is
+ concerned. But then, we Romans never have been able to understand the
+ people of this province. I am sorry that they have killed your friend
+ Paul. I wish that I were at home again, and I am, as ever,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Your dutiful nephew,
+ GLADIUS ENSA.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FALL OF ROME
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE TWILIGHT OF ROME
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE text-books of ancient History give the date 476 as the year in which
+ Rome fell, because in that year the last emperor was driven off his
+ throne. But Rome, which was not built in a day, took a long time falling.
+ The process was so slow and so gradual that most Romans did not realise
+ how their old world was coming to an end. They complained about the unrest
+ of the times&mdash;they grumbled about the high prices of food and about
+ the low wages of the workmen&mdash;they cursed the profiteers who had a
+ monopoly of the grain and the wool and the gold coin. Occasionally they
+ rebelled against an unusually rapacious governor. But the majority of the
+ people during the first four centuries of our era ate and drank (whatever
+ their purse allowed them to buy) and hated or loved (according to their
+ nature) and went to the theatre (whenever there was a free show of
+ fighting gladiators) or starved in the slums of the big cities, utterly
+ ignorant of the fact that their empire had outlived its usefulness and was
+ doomed to perish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How could they realise the threatened danger? Rome made a fine showing of
+ outward glory. Well-paved roads connected the different provinces, the
+ imperial police were active and showed little tenderness for highwaymen.
+ The frontier was closely guarded against the savage tribes who seemed to
+ be occupying the waste lands of northern Europe. The whole world was
+ paying tribute to the mighty city of Rome, and a score of able men were
+ working day and night to undo the mistakes of the past and bring about a
+ return to the happier conditions of the early Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the underlying causes of the decay of the State, of which I have told
+ you in a former chapter, had not been removed and reform therefore was
+ impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rome was, first and last and all the time, a city-state as Athens and
+ Corinth had been city-states in ancient Hellas. It had been able to
+ dominate the Italian peninsula. But Rome as the ruler of the entire
+ civilised world was a political impossibility and could not endure. Her
+ young men were killed in her endless wars. Her farmers were ruined by long
+ military service and by taxation. They either became professional beggars
+ or hired themselves out to rich landowners who gave them board and lodging
+ in exchange for their services and made them "serfs," those unfortunate
+ human beings who are neither slaves nor freemen, but who have become part
+ of the soil upon which they work, like so many cows, and the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Empire, the State, had become everything. The common citizen had
+ dwindled down to less than nothing. As for the slaves, they had heard the
+ words that were spoken by Paul. They had accepted the message of the
+ humble carpenter of Nazareth. They did not rebel against their masters. On
+ the contrary, they had been taught to be meek and they obeyed their
+ superiors. But they had lost all interest in the affairs of this world
+ which had proved such a miserable place of abode. They were willing to
+ fight the good fight that they might enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. But
+ they were not willing to engage in warfare for the benefit of an ambitious
+ emperor who aspired to glory by way of a foreign campaign in the land of
+ the Parthians or the Numidians or the Scots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so conditions grew worse as the centuries went by. The first Emperors
+ had continued the tradition of "leadership" which had given the old tribal
+ chieftains such a hold upon their subjects. But the Emperors of the second
+ and third centuries were Barrack-Emperors, professional soldiers, who
+ existed by the grace of their body-guards, the so-called Praetorians. They
+ succeeded each other with terrifying rapidity, murdering their way into
+ the palace and being murdered out of it as soon as their successors had
+ become rich enough to bribe the guards into a new rebellion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the barbarians were hammering at the gates of the northern
+ frontier. As there were no longer any native Roman armies to stop their
+ progress, foreign mercenaries had to be hired to fight the invader. As the
+ foreign soldier happened to be of the same blood as his supposed enemy, he
+ was apt to be quite lenient when he engaged in battle. Finally, by way of
+ experiment, a few tribes were allowed to settle within the confines of the
+ Empire. Others followed. Soon these tribes complained bitterly of the
+ greedy Roman tax-gatherers, who took away their last penny. When they got
+ no redress they marched to Rome and loudly demanded that they be heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This made Rome very uncomfortable as an Imperial residence. Constantine
+ (who ruled from 323 to 337) looked for a new capital. He chose Byzantium,
+ the gate-way for the commerce between Europe and Asia. The city was
+ renamed Constantinople, and the court moved eastward. When Constantine
+ died, his two sons, for the sake of a more efficient administration,
+ divided the Empire between them. The elder lived in Rome and ruled in the
+ west. The younger stayed in Constantinople and was master of the east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the fourth century and the terrible visitation of the Huns,
+ those mysterious Asiatic horsemen who for more than two centuries
+ maintained themselves in Northern Europe and continued their career of
+ bloodshed until they were defeated near Chalons-sur-Marne in France in the
+ year 451. As soon as the Huns had reached the Danube they had begun to
+ press hard upon the Goths. The Goths, in order to save themselves, were
+ thereupon obliged to invade Rome. The Emperor Valens tried to stop them,
+ but was killed near Adrianople in the year 378. Twenty-two years later,
+ under their king, Alaric, these same West Goths marched westward and
+ attacked Rome. They did not plunder, and destroyed only a few palaces.
+ Next came the Vandals, and showed less respect for the venerable
+ traditions of the city. Then the Burgundians. Then the East Goths. Then
+ the Alemanni. Then the Franks. There was no end to the invasions. Rome at
+ last was at the mercy of every ambitious highway robber who could gather a
+ few followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 402 the Emperor fled to Ravenna, which was a sea-port and
+ strongly fortified, and there, in the year 475, Odoacer, commander of a
+ regiment of the German mercenaries, who wanted the farms of Italy to be
+ divided among themselves, gently but effectively pushed Romulus
+ Augustulus, the last of the emperors who ruled the western division, from
+ his throne, and proclaimed himself Patriarch or ruler of Rome. The eastern
+ Emperor, who was very busy with his own affairs, recognised him, and for
+ ten years Odoacer ruled what was left of the western provinces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years later, Theodoric, King of the East Goths, invaded the newly
+ formed Patriciat, took Ravenna, murdered Odoacer at his own dinner table,
+ and established a Gothic Kingdom amidst the ruins of the western part of
+ the Empire. This Patriciate state did not last long. In the sixth century
+ a motley crowd of Longobards and Saxons and Slavs and Avars invaded Italy,
+ destroyed the Gothic kingdom, and established a new state of which Pavia
+ became the capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then at last the imperial city sank into a state of utter neglect and
+ despair. The ancient palaces had been plundered time and again. The
+ schools had been burned down. The teachers had been starved to death. The
+ rich people had been thrown out of their villas which were now inhabited
+ by evil-smelling and hairy barbarians. The roads had fallen into decay.
+ The old bridges were gone and commerce had come to a standstill.
+ Civilisation&mdash;the product of thousands of years of patient labor on
+ the part of Egyptians and Babylonians and Greeks and Romans, which had
+ lifted man high above the most daring dreams of his earliest ancestors,
+ threatened to perish from the western continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that in the far east, Constantinople continued to be the centre
+ of an Empire for another thousand years. But it hardly counted as a part
+ of the European continent. Its interests lay in the east. It began to
+ forget its western origin. Gradually the Roman language was given up for
+ the Greek. The Roman alphabet was discarded and Roman law was written in
+ Greek characters and explained by Greek judges. The Emperor became an
+ Asiatic despot, worshipped as the god-like kings of Thebes had been
+ worshipped in the valley of the Nile, three thousand years before. When
+ missionaries of the Byzantine church looked for fresh fields of activity,
+ they went eastward and carried the civilisation of Byzantium into the vast
+ wilderness of Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the west, it was left to the mercies of the Barbarians. For twelve
+ generations, murder, war, arson, plundering were the order of the day. One
+ thing&mdash;and one thing alone&mdash;saved Europe from complete
+ destruction, from a return to the days of cave-men and the hyena.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the church&mdash;the flock of humble men and women who for many
+ centuries had confessed themselves the followers of Jesus, the carpenter
+ of Nazareth, who had been killed that the mighty Roman Empire might be
+ saved the trouble of a street-riot in a little city somewhere along the
+ Syrian frontier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ RISE OF THE CHURCH
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROME BECAME THE CENTRE OF THE CHRISTIAN WORLD
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE average intelligent Roman who lived under the Empire had taken very
+ little interest in the gods of his fathers. A few times a year he went to
+ the temple, but merely as a matter of custom. He looked on patiently when
+ the people celebrated a religious festival with a solemn procession. But
+ he regarded the worship of Jupiter and Minerva and Neptune as something
+ rather childish, a survival from the crude days of the early republic and
+ not a fit subject of study for a man who had mastered the works of the
+ Stoics and the Epicureans and the other great philosophers of Athens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This attitude made the Roman a very tolerant man. The government insisted
+ that all people, Romans, foreigners, Greeks, Babylonians, Jews, should pay
+ a certain outward respect to the image of the Emperor which was supposed
+ to stand in every temple, just as a picture of the President of the United
+ States is apt to hang in an American Post Office. But this was a formality
+ without any deeper meaning. Generally speaking everybody could honour,
+ revere and adore whatever gods he pleased, and as a result, Rome was
+ filled with all sorts of queer little temples and synagogues, dedicated to
+ the worship of Egyptian and African and Asiatic divinities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the first disciples of Jesus reached Rome and began to preach their
+ new doctrine of a universal brotherhood of man, nobody objected. The man
+ in the street stopped and listened Rome, the capital of the world, had
+ always been full of wandering preachers, each proclaiming his own
+ "mystery." Most of the self-appointed priests appealed to the senses&mdash;promised
+ golden rewards and endless pleasure to the followers of their own
+ particular god. Soon the crowd in the street noticed that the so-called
+ Christians (the followers of the Christ or "anointed") spoke a very
+ different language. They did not appear to be impressed by great riches or
+ a noble position. They extolled the beauties of poverty and humility and
+ meekness. These were not exactly the virtues which had made Rome the
+ mistress of the world. It was rather interesting to listen to a "mystery"
+ which told people in the hey-day of their glory that their worldly success
+ could not possibly bring them lasting happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, the preachers of the Christian mystery told dreadful stories of
+ the fate that awaited those who refused to listen to the words of the true
+ God. It was never wise to take chances. Of course the old Roman gods still
+ existed, but were they strong enough to protect their friends against the
+ powers of this new deity who had been brought to Europe from distant Asia?
+ People began to have doubts. They returned to listen to further
+ explanations of the new creed. After a while they began to meet the men
+ and women who preached the words of Jesus. They found them very different
+ from the average Roman priests. They were all dreadfully poor. They were
+ kind to slaves and to animals. They did not try to gain riches, but gave
+ away whatever they had. The example of their unselfish lives forced many
+ Romans to forsake the old religion. They joined the small communities of
+ Christians who met in the back rooms of private houses or somewhere in an
+ open field, and the temples were deserted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This went on year after year and the number of Christians continued to
+ increase. Presbyters or priests (the original Greek meant "elder") were
+ elected to guard the interests of the small churches. A bishop was made
+ the head of all the communities within a single province. Peter, who had
+ fol-lowed Paul to Rome, was the first Bishop of Rome. In due time his
+ successors (who were addressed as Father or Papa) came to be known as
+ Popes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The church became a powerful institution within the Empire. The Christian
+ doctrines appealed to those who despaired of this world. They also
+ attracted many strong men who found it impossible to make a career under
+ the Imperial government, but who could exercise their gifts of leadership
+ among the humble followers of the Nazarene teacher. At last the state was
+ obliged to take notice. The Roman Empire (I have said this before) was
+ tolerant through indifference. It allowed everybody to seek salvation
+ after his or her own fashion. But it insisted that the different sects
+ keep the peace among themselves and obey the wise rule of "live and let
+ live."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Christian communities however, refused to practice any sort of
+ tolerance. They publicly declared that their God, and their God alone, was
+ the true ruler of Heaven and Earth, and that all other gods were
+ imposters. This seemed unfair to the other sects and the police
+ discouraged such utterances. The Christians persisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon there were further difficulties. The Christians refused to go through
+ the formalities of paying homage to the emperor. They refused to appear
+ when they were called upon to join the army. The Roman magistrates
+ threatened to punish them. The Christians answered that this miserable
+ world was only the ante-room to a very pleasant Heaven and that they were
+ more than willing to suffer death for their principles. The Romans,
+ puzzled by such conduct, sometimes killed the offenders, but more often
+ they did not. There was a certain amount of lynching during the earliest
+ years of the church, but this was the work of that part of the mob which
+ accused their meek Christian neighbours of every conceivable crime, (such
+ as slaughtering and eating babies, bringing about sickness and pestilence,
+ betraying the country in times of danger) because it was a harmless sport
+ and devoid of danger, as the Christians refused to fight back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, Rome continued to be invaded by the Barbarians and when her
+ armies failed, Christian missionaries went forth to preach their gospel of
+ peace to the wild Teutons. They were strong men without fear of death.
+ They spoke a language which left no doubt as to the future of unrepentant
+ sinners. The Teutons were deeply impressed. They still had a deep respect
+ for the wisdom of the ancient city of Rome. Those men were Romans. They
+ probably spoke the truth. Soon the Christian missionary became a power in
+ the savage regions of the Teutons and the Franks. Half a dozen
+ missionaries were as valuable as a whole regiment of soldiers. The
+ Emperors began to understand that the Christian might be of great use to
+ them. In some of the provinces they were given equal rights with those who
+ remained faithful to the old gods. The great change however came during
+ the last half of the fourth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Constantine, sometimes (Heaven knows why) called Constantine the Great,
+ was emperor. He was a terrible ruffian, but people of tender qualities
+ could hardly hope to survive in that hard-fighting age. During a long and
+ checkered career, Constantine had experienced many ups and downs. Once,
+ when almost defeated by his enemies, he thought that he would try the
+ power of this new Asiatic deity of whom everybody was talking. He promised
+ that he too would become a Christian if he were successful in the coming
+ battle. He won the victory and thereafter he was convinced of the power of
+ the Christian God and allowed himself to be baptised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that moment on, the Christian church was officially recognised and
+ this greatly strengthened the position of the new faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Christians still formed a very small minority of all the people,
+ (not more than five or six percent,) and in order to win, they were forced
+ to refuse all compromise. The old gods must be destroyed. For a short
+ spell the emperor Julian, a lover of Greek wisdom, managed to save the
+ pagan Gods from further destruction. But Julian died of his wounds during
+ a campaign in Persia and his successor Jovian re-established the church in
+ all its glory. One after the other the doors of the ancient temples were
+ then closed. Then came the emperor Justinian (who built the church of
+ Saint Sophia in Constantinople), who discontinued the school of philosophy
+ at Athens which had been founded by Plato.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the end of the old Greek world, in which man had been allowed to
+ think his own thoughts and dream his own dreams according to his desires.
+ The somewhat vague rules of conduct of the philosophers had proved a poor
+ compass by which to steer the ship of life after a deluge of savagery and
+ ignorance had swept away the established order of things. There was need
+ of something more positive and more definite. This the Church provided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During an age when nothing was certain, the church stood like a rock and
+ never receded from those principles which it held to be true and sacred.
+ This steadfast courage gained the admiration of the multitudes and carried
+ the church of Rome safely through the difficulties which destroyed the
+ Roman state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was however, a certain element of luck in the final success of the
+ Christian faith. After the disappearance of Theodoric's Roman-Gothic
+ kingdom, in the fifth century, Italy was comparatively free from foreign
+ invasion. The Lombards and Saxons and Slavs who succeeded the Goths were
+ weak and backward tribes. Under those circumstances it was possible for
+ the bishops of Rome to maintain the independence of their city. Soon the
+ remnants of the empire, scattered throughout the peninsula, recognised the
+ Dukes of Rome (or bishops) as their political and spiritual rulers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stage was set for the appearance of a strong man. He came in the year
+ 590 and his name was Gregory. He belonged to the ruling classes of ancient
+ Rome, and he had been "prefect" or mayor of the city. Then he had become a
+ monk and a bishop and finally, and much against his will, (for he wanted
+ to be a missionary and preach Christianity to the heathen of England,) he
+ had been dragged to the Church of Saint Peter to be made Pope. He ruled
+ only fourteen years but when he died the Christian world of western Europe
+ had officially recognised the bishops of Rome, the Popes, as the head of
+ the entire church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This power, however, did not extend to the east. In Constantinople the
+ Emperors continued the old custom which had recognised the successors of
+ Augustus and Tiberius both as head of the government and as High Priest of
+ the Established Religion. In the year 1453 the eastern Roman Empire was
+ conquered by the Turks. Constantinople was taken, and Constantine
+ Paleologue, the last Roman Emperor, was killed on the steps of the Church
+ of the Holy Sophia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years before, Zoe, the daughter of his brother Thomas, had married
+ Ivan III of Russia. In this way did the grand-dukes of Moscow fall heir to
+ the traditions of Constantinople. The double-eagle of old Byzantium
+ (reminiscent of the days when Rome had been divided into an eastern and a
+ western part) became the coat of arms of modern Russia. The Tsar who had
+ been merely the first of the Russian nobles, assumed the aloofness and the
+ dignity of a Roman emperor before whom all subjects, both high and low,
+ were inconsiderable slaves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The court was refashioned after the oriental pattern which the eastern
+ Emperors had imported from Asia and from Egypt and which (so they
+ flattered themselves) resembled the court of Alexander the Great. This
+ strange inheritance which the dying Byzantine Empire bequeathed to an
+ unsuspecting world continued to live with great vigour for six more
+ centuries, amidst the vast plains of Russia. The last man to wear the
+ crown with the double eagle of Constantinople, Tsar Nicholas, was murdered
+ only the other day, so to speak. His body was thrown into a well. His son
+ and his daughters were all killed. All his ancient rights and prerogatives
+ were abolished, and the church was reduced to the position which it had
+ held in Rome before the days of Constantine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The eastern church however fared very differently, as we shall see in the
+ next chapter when the whole Christian world is going to be threatened with
+ destruction by the rival creed of an Arab camel-driver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MOHAMMED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AHMED, THE CAMEL-DRIVER, WHO BECAME THE PROPHET OF THE ARABIAN DESERT AND
+ WHOSE FOLLOWERS ALMOST CONQUERED THE ENTIRE KNOWN WORLD FOR THE GREATER
+ GLORY OF ALLAH, THE ONLY TRUE GOD
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SINCE the days of Carthage and Hannibal we have said nothing of the
+ Semitic people. You will remember how they filled all the chapters devoted
+ to the story of the Ancient World. The Babylonians, the Assyrians, the
+ Phoenicians, the Jews, the Arameans, the Chaldeans, all of them Semites,
+ had been the rulers of western Asia for thirty or forty centuries. They
+ had been conquered by the Indo-European Persians who had come from the
+ east and by the Indo-European Greeks who had come from the west. A hundred
+ years after the death of Alexander the Great, Carthage, a colony of
+ Semitic Phoenicians, had fought the Indo-European Romans for the mastery
+ of the Mediterranean. Carthage had been defeated and destroyed and for
+ eight hundred years the Romans had been masters of the world. In the
+ seventh century, however, another Semitic tribe appeared upon the scene
+ and challenged the power of the west. They were the Arabs, peaceful
+ shepherds who had roamed through the desert since the beginning of time
+ without showing any signs of imperial ambitions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they listened to Mohammed, mounted their horses and in less than a
+ century they had pushed to the heart of Europe and proclaimed the glories
+ of Allah, "the only God," and Mohammed, "the prophet of the only God," to
+ the frightened peasants of France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The story of Ahmed, the son of Abdallah and Aminah (usually known as
+ Mohammed, or "he who will be praised,"); reads like a chapter in the
+ "Thousand and One Nights." He was a camel-driver, born in Mecca. He seems
+ to have been an epileptic and he suffered from spells of unconsciousness
+ when he dreamed strange dreams and heard the voice of the angel Gabriel,
+ whose words were afterwards written down in a book called the Koran. His
+ work as a caravan leader carried him all over Arabia and he was constantly
+ falling in with Jewish merchants and with Christian traders, and he came
+ to see that the worship of a single God was a very excellent thing. His
+ own people, the Arabs, still revered queer stones and trunks of trees as
+ their ancestors had done, tens of thousands of years before. In Mecca,
+ their holy city, stood a little square building, the Kaaba, full of idols
+ and strange odds and ends of Hoo-doo worship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mohammed decided to be the Moses of the Arab people. He could not well be
+ a prophet and a camel-driver at the same time. So he made himself
+ independent by marrying his employer, the rich widow Chadija. Then he told
+ his neighbours in Mecca that he was the long-expected prophet sent by
+ Allah to save the world. The neighbours laughed most heartily and when
+ Mohammed continued to annoy them with his speeches they decided to kill
+ him. They regarded him as a lunatic and a public bore who deserved no
+ mercy. Mohammed heard of the plot and in the dark of night he fled to
+ Medina together with Abu Bekr, his trusted pupil. This happened in the
+ year 622. It is the most important date in Mohammedan history and is known
+ as the Hegira&mdash;the year of the Great Flight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Medina, Mohammed, who was a stranger, found it easier to proclaim
+ himself a prophet than in his home city, where every one had known him as
+ a simple camel-driver. Soon he was surrounded by an increasing number of
+ followers, or Moslems, who accepted the Islam, "the submission to the will
+ of God," which Mohammed praised as the highest of all virtues. For seven
+ years he preached to the people of Medina. Then he believed himself strong
+ enough to begin a campaign against his former neighbours who had dared to
+ sneer at him and his Holy Mission in his old camel-driving days. At the
+ head of an army of Medinese he marched across the desert. His followers
+ took Mecca without great difficulty, and having slaughtered a number of
+ the inhabitants, they found it quite easy to convince the others that
+ Mohammed was really a great prophet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that time on until the year of his death, Mohammed was fortunate in
+ everything he undertook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two reasons for the success of Islam. In the first place, the
+ creed which Mohammed taught to his followers was very simple. The
+ disciples were told that they must love Allah, the Ruler of the World, the
+ Merciful and Compassionate. They must honour and obey their parents. They
+ were warned against dishonesty in dealing with their neighbours and were
+ admonished to be humble and charitable, to the poor and to the sick.
+ Finally they were ordered to abstain from strong drink and to be very
+ frugal in what they ate. That was all. There were no priests, who acted as
+ shepherds of their flocks and asked that they be supported at the common
+ expense. The Mohammedan churches or mosques were merely large stone halls
+ without benches or pictures, where the faithful could gather (if they felt
+ so inclined) to read and discuss chapters from the Koran, the Holy Book.
+ But the average Mohammedan carried his religion with him and never felt
+ himself hemmed in by the restrictions and regulations of an established
+ church. Five times a day he turned his face towards Mecca, the Holy City,
+ and said a simple prayer. For the rest of the time he let Allah rule the
+ world as he saw fit and accepted whatever fate brought him with patient
+ resignation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course such an attitude towards life did not encourage the Faithful to
+ go forth and invent electrical machinery or bother about railroads and
+ steamship lines. But it gave every Mohammedan a certain amount of
+ contentment. It bade him be at peace with himself and with the world in
+ which he lived and that was a very good thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second reason which explains the success of the Moslems in their
+ warfare upon the Christians, had to do with the conduct of those
+ Mohammedan soldiers who went forth to do battle for the true faith. The
+ Prophet promised that those who fell, facing the enemy, would go directly
+ to Heaven. This made sudden death in the field preferable to a long but
+ dreary existence upon this earth. It gave the Mohammedans an enormous
+ advantage over the Crusaders who were in constant dread of a dark
+ hereafter, and who stuck to the good things of this world as long as they
+ possibly could. Incidentally it explains why even to-day Moslem soldiers
+ will charge into the fire of European machine guns quite indifferent to
+ the fate that awaits them and why they are such dangerous and persistent
+ enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having put his religious house in order, Mohammed now began to enjoy his
+ power as the undisputed ruler of a large number of Arab tribes. But
+ success has been the undoing of a large number of men who were great in
+ the days of adversity. He tried to gain the good will of the rich people
+ by a number of regulations which could appeal to those of wealth. He
+ allowed the Faithful to have four wives. As one wife was a costly
+ investment in those olden days when brides were bought directly from the
+ parents, four wives became a positive luxury except to those who possessed
+ camels and dromedaries and date orchards beyond the dreams of avarice. A
+ religion which at first had been meant for the hardy hunters of the high
+ skied desert was gradually transformed to suit the needs of the smug
+ merchants who lived in the bazaars of the cities. It was a regrettable
+ change from the original program and it did very little good to the cause
+ of Mohammedanism. As for the prophet himself, he went on preaching the
+ truth of Allah and proclaiming new rules of conduct until he died, quite
+ suddenly, of a fever on June the seventh of the year 632.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His successor as Caliph (or leader) of the Moslems was his father-in-law,
+ Abu-Bekr, who had shared the early dangers of the prophet's life. Two
+ years later, Abu-Bekr died and Omar ibn Al-Khattab followed him. In less
+ than ten years he conquered Egypt, Persia, Phoenicia, Syria and Palestine
+ and made Damascus the capital of the first Mohammedan world empire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Omar was succeeded by Ali, the husband of Mohammed's daughter, Fatima, but
+ a quarrel broke out upon a point of Moslem doctrine and Ali was murdered.
+ After his death, the caliphate was made hereditary and the leaders of the
+ faithful who had begun their career as the spiritual head of a religious
+ sect became the rulers of a vast empire. They built a new city on the
+ shores of the Euphrates, near the ruins of Babylon and called it Bagdad,
+ and organising the Arab horsemen into regiments of cavalry, they set forth
+ to bring the happiness of their Moslem faith to all unbelievers. In the
+ year 700 A.D. a Mohammedan general by the name of Tarik crossed the old
+ gates of Hercules and reached the high rock on the European side which he
+ called the Gibel-al-tarik, the Hill of Tarik or Gibraltar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eleven years later in the battle of Xeres de la Frontera, he defeated the
+ king of the Visigoths and then the Moslem army moved northward and
+ following the route of Hannibal, they crossed the passes of the Pyrenees.
+ They defeated the Duke of Aquitania, who tried to halt them near Bordeaux,
+ and marched upon Paris. But in the year 732 (one hundred years after the
+ death of the prophet,) they were beaten in a battle between Tours and
+ Poitiers. On that day, Charles Martel (Charles with the Hammer) the
+ Frankish chieftain, saved Europe from a Mohammedan con-quest. He drove the
+ Moslems out of France, but they maintained themselves in Spain where
+ Abd-ar-Rahman founded the Caliphate of Cordova, which became the greatest
+ centre of science and art of mediaeval Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This Moorish kingdom, so-called because the people came from Mauretania in
+ Morocco, lasted seven centuries. It was only after the capture of Granada,
+ the last Moslem stronghold, in the year 1492, that Columbus received the
+ royal grant which allowed him to go upon a voyage of discovery. The
+ Mohammedans soon regained their strength in the new conquests which they
+ made in Asia and Africa and to-day there are as many followers of Mohammed
+ as there are of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHARLEMAGNE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW CHARLEMAGNE, THE KING OF THE FRANKS, CAME TO BEAR THE TITLE OF EMPEROR
+ AND TRIED TO REVIVE THE OLD IDEAL OF WORLD-EMPIRE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE battle of Poitiers had saved Europe from the Mohammedans. But the
+ enemy within&mdash;the hopeless disorder which had followed the
+ disappearance of the Roman police officer&mdash;that enemy remained. It is
+ true that the new converts of the Christian faith in Northern Europe felt
+ a deep respect for the mighty Bishop of Rome. But that poor bishop did not
+ feel any too safe when he looked toward the distant mountains. Heaven knew
+ what fresh hordes of barbarians were ready to cross the Alps and begin a
+ new attack on Rome. It was necessary&mdash;very necessary&mdash;for the
+ spiritual head of the world to find an ally with a strong sword and a
+ powerful fist who was willing to defend His Holiness in case of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so the Popes, who were not only very holy but also very practical,
+ cast about for a friend, and presently they made overtures to the most
+ promising of the Germanic tribes who had occupied north-western Europe
+ after the fall of Rome. They were called the Franks. One of their earliest
+ kings, called Merovech, had helped the Romans in the battle of the
+ Catalaunian fields in the year 451 when they defeated the Huns. His
+ descendants, the Merovingians, had continued to take little bits of
+ imperial territory until the year 486 when king Clovis (the old French
+ word for "Louis") felt himself strong enough to beat the Romans in the
+ open. But his descendants were weak men who left the affairs of state to
+ their Prime minister, the "Major Domus" or Master of the Palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pepin the Short, the son of the famous Charles Martel, who succeeded his
+ father as Master of the Palace, hardly knew how to handle the situation.
+ His royal master was a devout theologian, without any interest in
+ politics. Pepin asked the Pope for advice. The Pope who was a practical
+ person answered that the "power in the state belonged to him who was
+ actually possessed of it." Pepin took the hint. He persuaded Childeric,
+ the last of the Merovingians to become a monk and then made himself king
+ with the approval of the other Germanic chieftains. But this did not
+ satisfy the shrewd Pepin. He wanted to be something more than a barbarian
+ chieftain. He staged an elaborate ceremony at which Boniface, the great
+ missionary of the European northwest, anointed him and made him a "King by
+ the grace of God." It was easy to slip those words, "Del gratia," into the
+ coronation service. It took almost fifteen hundred years to get them out
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pepin was sincerely grateful for this kindness on the part of the church.
+ He made two expeditions to Italy to defend the Pope against his enemies.
+ He took Ravenna and several other cities away from the Longobards and
+ presented them to His Holiness, who incorporated these new domains into
+ the so-called Papal State, which remained an independent country until
+ half a century ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Pepin's death, the relations between Rome and Aix-la-Chapelle or
+ Nymwegen or Ingelheim, (the Frankish Kings did not have one official
+ residence, but travelled from place to place with all their ministers and
+ court officers,) became more and more cordial. Finally the Pope and the
+ King took a step which was to influence the history of Europe in a most
+ profound way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles, commonly known as Carolus Magnus or Charlemagne, succeeded Pepin
+ in the year 768. He had conquered the land of the Saxons in eastern
+ Germany and had built towns and monasteries all over the greater part of
+ northern Europe. At the request of certain enemies of Abd-ar-Rahman, he
+ had invaded Spain to fight the Moors. But in the Pyrenees he had been
+ attacked by the wild Basques and had been forced to retire. It was upon
+ this occasion that Roland, the great Margrave of Breton, showed what a
+ Frankish chieftain of those early days meant when he promised to be
+ faithful to his King, and gave his life and that of his trusted followers
+ to safeguard the retreat of the royal army.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the last ten years of the eighth century, however, Charles was
+ obliged to devote himself exclusively to affairs of the South. The Pope,
+ Leo III, had been attacked by a band of Roman rowdies and had been left
+ for dead in the street. Some kind people had bandaged his wounds and had
+ helped him to escape to the camp of Charles, where he asked for help. An
+ army of Franks soon restored quiet and carried Leo back to the Lateran
+ Palace which ever since the days of Constantine, had been the home of the
+ Pope. That was in December of the year 799. On Christmas day of the next
+ year, Charlemagne, who was staying in Rome, attended the service in the
+ ancient church of St. Peter. When he arose from prayer, the Pope placed a
+ crown upon his head, called him Emperor of the Romans and hailed him once
+ more with the title of "Augustus" which had not been heard for hundreds of
+ years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more Northern Europe was part of a Roman Empire, but the dignity was
+ held by a German chieftain who could read just a little and never learned
+ to write. But he could fight and for a short while there was order and
+ even the rival emperor in Constantinople sent a letter of approval to his
+ "dear Brother."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately this splendid old man died in the year 814. His sons and his
+ grandsons at once began to fight for the largest share of the imperial
+ inheritance. Twice the Carolingian lands were divided, by the treaties of
+ Verdun in the year 843 and by the treaty of Mersen-on-the-Meuse in the
+ year 870. The latter treaty divided the entire Frankish Kingdom into two
+ parts. Charles the Bold received the western half. It contained the old
+ Roman province called Gaul where the language of the people had become
+ thoroughly romanized. The Franks soon learned to speak this language and
+ this accounts for the strange fact that a purely Germanic land like France
+ should speak a Latin tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other grandson got the eastern part, the land which the Romans had
+ called Germania. Those inhospitable regions had never been part of the old
+ Empire. Augustus had tried to conquer this "far east," but his legions had
+ been annihilated in the Teutoburg Wood in the year 9 and the people had
+ never been influenced by the higher Roman civilisation. They spoke the
+ popular Germanic tongue. The Teuton word for "people" was "thiot." The
+ Christian missionaries therefore called the German language the "lingua
+ theotisca" or the "lingua teutisca," the "popular dialect" and this word
+ "teutisca" was changed into "Deutsch" which accounts for the name
+ "Deutschland."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the famous Imperial Crown, it very soon slipped off the heads of
+ the Carolingian successors and rolled back onto the Italian plain, where
+ it became a sort of plaything of a number of little potentates who stole
+ the crown from each other amidst much bloodshed and wore it (with or
+ without the permission of the Pope) until it was the turn of some more
+ ambitious neighbour. The Pope, once more sorely beset by his enemies, sent
+ north for help. He did not appeal to the ruler of the west-Frankish
+ kingdom, this time. His messengers crossed the Alps and addressed
+ themselves to Otto, a Saxon Prince who was recognised as the greatest
+ chieftain of the different Germanic tribes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Otto, who shared his people's affection for the blue skies and the gay and
+ beautiful people of the Italian peninsula, hastened to the rescue. In
+ return for his services, the Pope, Leo VIII, made Otto "Emperor," and the
+ eastern half of Charles' old kingdom was henceforth known as the "Holy
+ Roman Empire of the German Nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This strange political creation managed to live to the ripe old age of
+ eight hundred and thirty-nine years. In the year 1801, (during the
+ presidency of Thomas Jefferson,) it was most unceremoniously relegated to
+ the historical scrapheap. The brutal fellow who destroyed the old Germanic
+ Empire was the son of a Corsican notary-public who had made a brilliant
+ career in the service of the French Republic. He was ruler of Europe by
+ the grace of his famous Guard Regiments, but he desired to be something
+ more. He sent to Rome for the Pope and the Pope came and stood by while
+ General Napoleon placed the imperial crown upon his own head and
+ proclaimed himself heir to the tradition of Charlemagne. For history is
+ like life. The more things change, the more they remain the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE NORSEMEN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHY THE PEOPLE OF THE TENTH CENTURY PRAYED THE LORD TO PROTECT THEM FROM
+ THE FURY OF THE NORSEMEN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the third and fourth centuries, the Germanic tribes of central Europe
+ had broken through the defences of the Empire that they might plunder Rome
+ and live on the fat of the land. In the eighth century it became the turn
+ of the Germans to be the "plundered-ones." They did not like this at all,
+ even if their enemies were their first cousins, the Norsemen, who lived in
+ Denmark and Sweden and Norway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What forced these hardy sailors to turn pirate we do not know, but once
+ they had discovered the advantages and pleasures of a buccaneering career
+ there was no one who could stop them. They would suddenly descend upon a
+ peaceful Frankish or Frisian village, situated on the mouth of a river.
+ They would kill all the men and steal all the women. Then they would sail
+ away in their fast-sailing ships and when the soldiers of the king or
+ emperor arrived upon the scene, the robbers were gone and nothing remained
+ but a few smouldering ruins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the days of disorder which followed the death of Charlemagne, the
+ Northmen developed great activity. Their fleets made raids upon every
+ country and their sailors established small independent kingdoms along the
+ coast of Holland and France and England and Germany, and they even found
+ their way into Italy. The Northmen were very intelligent They soon learned
+ to speak the language of their subjects and gave up the uncivilised ways
+ of the early Vikings (or Sea-Kings) who had been very picturesque but also
+ very unwashed and terribly cruel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the tenth century a Viking by the name of Rollo had repeatedly
+ attacked the coast of France. The king of France, too weak to resist these
+ northern robbers, tried to bribe them into "being good." He offered them
+ the province of Normandy, if they would promise to stop bothering the rest
+ of his domains. Rollo accepted this bargain and became "Duke of Normandy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the passion of conquest was strong in the blood of his children.
+ Across the channel, only a few hours away from the European mainland, they
+ could see the white cliffs and the green fields of England. Poor England
+ had passed through difficult days. For two hundred years it had been a
+ Roman colony. After the Romans left, it had been conquered by the Angles
+ and the Saxons, two German tribes from Schleswig. Next the Danes had taken
+ the greater part of the country and had established the kingdom of Cnut.
+ The Danes had been driven away and now (it was early in the eleventh
+ century) another Saxon king, Edward the Confessor, was on the throne. But
+ Edward was not expected to live long and he had no children. The
+ circumstances favoured the ambitious dukes of Normandy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1066 Edward died. Immediately William of Normandy crossed the channel,
+ defeated and killed Harold of Wessex (who had taken the crown) at the
+ battle of Hastings, and proclaimed himself king of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another chapter I have told you how in the year 800 a German chieftain
+ had become a Roman Emperor. Now in the year 1066 the grandson of a Norse
+ pirate was recognised as King of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should we ever read fairy stories, when the truth of history is so
+ much more interesting and entertaining?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FEUDALISM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW CENTRAL EUROPE, ATTACKED FROM THREE SIDES, BECAME AN ARMED CAMP AND
+ WHY EUROPE WOULD HAVE PERISHED WITHOUT THOSE PROFESSIONAL SOLDIERS AND
+ ADMINISTRATORS WHO WERE PART OF THE FEUDAL SYSTEM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE following, then, is the state of Europe in the year one thousand, when
+ most people were so unhappy that they welcomed the prophecy foretelling
+ the approaching end of the world and rushed to the monasteries, that the
+ Day of Judgement might find them engaged upon devout duties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At an unknown date, the Germanic tribes had left their old home in Asia
+ and had moved westward into Europe. By sheer pressure of numbers they had
+ forced their way into the Roman Empire. They had destroyed the great
+ western empire, but the eastern part, being off the main route of the
+ great migrations, had managed to survive and feebly continued the
+ traditions of Rome's ancient glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the days of disorder which had followed, (the true "dark ages" of
+ history, the sixth and seventh centuries of our era,) the German tribes
+ had been persuaded to accept the Christian religion and had recognised the
+ Bishop of Rome as the Pope or spiritual head of the world. In the ninth
+ century, the organising genius of Charlemagne had revived the Roman Empire
+ and had united the greater part of western Europe into a single state.
+ During the tenth century this empire had gone to pieces. The western part
+ had become a separate kingdom, France. The eastern half was known as the
+ Holy Roman Empire of the German nation, and the rulers of this federation
+ of states then pretended that they were the direct heirs of Caesar and
+ Augustus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately the power of the kings of France did not stretch beyond the
+ moat of their royal residence, while the Holy Roman Emperor was openly
+ defied by his powerful subjects whenever it suited their fancy or their
+ profit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To increase the misery of the masses of the people, the triangle of
+ western Europe (look at page 128, please) was for ever exposed to attacks
+ from three sides. On the south lived the ever dangerous Mohammedans. The
+ western coast was ravaged by the Northmen. The eastern frontier
+ (defenceless except for the short stretch of the Carpathian mountains) was
+ at the mercy of hordes of Huns, Hungarians, Slavs and Tartars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peace of Rome was a thing of the remote past, a dream of the "Good Old
+ Days" that were gone for ever. It was a question of "fight or die," and
+ quite naturally people preferred to fight. Forced by circumstances, Europe
+ became an armed camp and there was a demand for strong leadership. Both
+ King and Emperor were far away. The frontiersmen (and most of Europe in
+ the year 1000 was "frontier") must help themselves. They willingly
+ submitted to the representatives of the king who were sent to administer
+ the outlying districts, PROVIDED THEY COULD PROTECT THEM AGAINST THEIR
+ ENEMIES.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon central Europe was dotted with small principalities, each one ruled
+ by a duke or a count or a baron or a bishop, as the case might be, and
+ organised as a fighting unit. These dukes and counts and barons had sworn
+ to be faithful to the king who had given them their "feudum" (hence our
+ word "feudal,") in return for their loyal services and a certain amount of
+ taxes. But travel in those days was slow and the means of communication
+ were exceedingly poor. The royal or imperial administrators therefore
+ enjoyed great independence, and within the boundaries of their own
+ province they assumed most of the rights which in truth belonged to the
+ king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But you would make a mistake if you supposed that the people of the
+ eleventh century objected to this form of government. They supported
+ Feudalism because it was a very practical and necessary institution. Their
+ Lord and Master usually lived in a big stone house erected on the top of a
+ steep rock or built between deep moats, but within sight of his subjects.
+ In case of danger the subjects found shelter behind the walls of the
+ baronial stronghold. That is why they tried to live as near the castle as
+ possible and it accounts for the many European cities which began their
+ career around a feudal fortress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the knight of the early middle ages was much more than a professional
+ soldier. He was the civil servant of that day. He was the judge of his
+ community and he was the chief of police. He caught the highwaymen and
+ protected the wandering pedlars who were the merchants of the eleventh
+ century. He looked after the dikes so that the countryside should not be
+ flooded (just as the first noblemen had done in the valley of the Nile
+ four thousand years before). He encouraged the Troubadours who wandered
+ from place to place telling the stories of the ancient heroes who had
+ fought in the great wars of the migrations. Besides, he protected the
+ churches and the monasteries within his territory, and although he could
+ neither read nor write, (it was considered unmanly to know such things,)
+ he employed a number of priests who kept his accounts and who registered
+ the marriages and the births and the deaths which occurred within the
+ baronial or ducal domains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the fifteenth century the kings once more became strong enough to
+ exercise those powers which belonged to them because they were "anointed
+ of God." Then the feudal knights lost their former independence. Reduced
+ to the rank of country squires, they no longer filled a need and soon they
+ became a nuisance. But Europe would have perished without the "feudal
+ system" of the dark ages. There were many bad knights as there are many
+ bad people to-day. But generally speaking, the rough-fisted barons of the
+ twelfth and thirteenth century were hard-working administrators who
+ rendered a most useful service to the cause of progress. During that era
+ the noble torch of learning and art which had illuminated the world of the
+ Egyptians and the Greeks and the Romans was burning very low. Without the
+ knights and their good friends, the monks, civilisation would have been
+ extinguished entirely, and the human race would have been forced to begin
+ once more where the cave-man had left off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHIVALRY
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CHIVALRY
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ IT was quite natural that the professional fighting-men of the Middle Ages
+ should try to establish some sort of organisation for their mutual benefit
+ and protection. Out of this need for close organisation, Knighthood or
+ Chivalry was born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We know very little about the origins of Knighthood. But as the system
+ developed, it gave the world something which it needed very badly&mdash;a
+ definite rule of conduct which softened the barbarous customs of that day
+ and made life more livable than it had been during the five hundred years
+ of the Dark Ages. It was not an easy task to civilise the rough
+ frontiersmen who had spent most of their time fighting Mohammedans and
+ Huns and Norsemen. Often they were guilty of backsliding, and having vowed
+ all sorts of oaths about mercy and charity in the morning, they would
+ murder all their prisoners before evening. But progress is ever the result
+ of slow and ceaseless labour, and finally the most unscrupulous of knights
+ was forced to obey the rules of his "class" or suffer the consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These rules were different in the various parts of Europe, but they all
+ made much of "service" and "loyalty to duty." The Middle Ages regarded
+ service as something very noble and beautiful. It was no disgrace to be a
+ servant, provided you were a good servant and did not slacken on the job.
+ As for loyalty, at a time when life depended upon the faithful
+ per-formance of many unpleasant duties, it was the chief virtue of the
+ fighting man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A young knight therefore was asked to swear that he would be faithful as a
+ servant to God and as a servant to his King. Furthermore, he promised to
+ be generous to those whose need was greater than his own. He pledged his
+ word that he would be humble in his personal behaviour and would never
+ boast of his own accomplishments and that he would be a friend of all
+ those who suffered, (with the exception of the Mohammedans, whom he was
+ expected to kill on sight).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Around these vows, which were merely the Ten Commandments expressed in
+ terms which the people of the Middle Ages could understand, there
+ developed a complicated system of manners and outward behaviour. The
+ knights tried to model their own lives after the example of those heroes
+ of Arthur's Round Table and Charlemagne's court of whom the Troubadours
+ had told them and of whom you may read in many delightful books which are
+ enumerated at the end of this volume. They hoped that they might prove as
+ brave as Lancelot and as faithful as Roland. They carried themselves with
+ dignity and they spoke careful and gracious words that they might be known
+ as True Knights, however humble the cut of their coat or the size of their
+ purse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way the order of Knighthood became a school of those good manners
+ which are the oil of the social machinery. Chivalry came to mean courtesy
+ and the feudal castle showed the rest of the world what clothes to wear,
+ how to eat, how to ask a lady for a dance and the thousand and one little
+ things of every-day behaviour which help to make life interesting and
+ agreeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like all human institutions, Knighthood was doomed to perish as soon as it
+ had outlived its usefulness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The crusades, about which one of the next chapters tells, were followed by
+ a great revival of trade. Cities grew overnight. The townspeople became
+ rich, hired good school teachers and soon were the equals of the knights.
+ The invention of gun-powder deprived the heavily armed "Chevalier" of his
+ former advantage and the use of mercenaries made it impossible to conduct
+ a battle with the delicate niceties of a chess tournament. The knight
+ became superfluous. Soon he became a ridiculous figure, with his devotion
+ to ideals that had no longer any practical value. It was said that the
+ noble Don Quixote de la Mancha had been the last of the true knights.
+ After his death, his trusted sword and his armour were sold to pay his
+ debts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But somehow or other that sword seems to have fallen into the hands of a
+ number of men. Washington carried it during the hopeless days of Valley
+ Forge. It was the only defence of Gordon, when he had refused to desert
+ the people who had been entrusted to his care, and stayed to meet his
+ death in the besieged fortress of Khartoum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And I am not quite sure but that it proved of invaluable strength in
+ winning the Great War.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ POPE vs. EMPEROR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE STRANGE DOUBLE LOYALTY OF THE PEOPLE OF THE MIDDLE AGES AND HOW IT LED
+ TO ENDLESS QUARRELS BETWEEN THE POPES AND THE HOLY ROMAN EMPERORS
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IT is very difficult to understand the people of by-gone ages. Your own
+ grandfather, whom you see every day, is a mysterious being who lives in a
+ different world of ideas and clothes and manners. I am now telling you the
+ story of some of your grandfathers who are twenty-five generations
+ removed, and I do not expect you to catch the meaning of what I write
+ without re-reading this chapter a number of times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The average man of the Middle Ages lived a very simple and uneventful
+ life. Even if he was a free citizen, able to come and go at will, he
+ rarely left his own neighbourhood. There were no printed books and only a
+ few manuscripts. Here and there, a small band of industrious monks taught
+ reading and writing and some arithmetic. But science and history and
+ geography lay buried beneath the ruins of Greece and Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever people knew about the past they had learned by listening to
+ stories and legends. Such information, which goes from father to son, is
+ often slightly incorrect in details, but it will preserve the main facts
+ of history with astonishing accuracy. After more than two thousand years,
+ the mothers of India still frighten their naughty children by telling them
+ that "Iskander will get them," and Iskander is none other than Alexander
+ the Great, who visited India in the year 330 before the birth of Christ,
+ but whose story has lived through all these ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of the early Middle Ages never saw a textbook of Roman history.
+ They were ignorant of many things which every school-boy to-day knows
+ before he has entered the third grade. But the Roman Empire, which is
+ merely a name to you, was to them something very much alive. They felt it.
+ They willingly recognised the Pope as their spiritual leader because he
+ lived in Rome and represented the idea of the Roman super-power. And they
+ were profoundly grateful when Charlemagne, and afterwards Otto the Great,
+ revived the idea of a world-empire and created the Holy Roman Empire, that
+ the world might again be as it always had been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fact that there were two different heirs to the Roman tradition
+ placed the faithful burghers of the Middle Ages in a difficult position.
+ The theory behind the mediaeval political system was both sound and
+ simple. While the worldly master (the emperor) looked after the physical
+ well-being of his subjects, the spiritual master (the Pope) guarded their
+ souls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In practice, however, the system worked very badly. The Emperor invariably
+ tried to interfere with the affairs of the church and the Pope retaliated
+ and told the Emperor how he should rule his domains. Then they told each
+ other to mind their own business in very unceremonious language and the
+ inevitable end was war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under those circumstances, what were the people to do, A good Christian
+ obeyed both the Pope and his King. But the Pope and the Emperor were
+ enemies. Which side should a dutiful subject and an equally dutiful
+ Christian take?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was never easy to give the correct answer. When the Emperor happened to
+ be a man of energy and was sufficiently well provided with money to
+ organise an army, he was very apt to cross the Alps and march on Rome,
+ besiege the Pope in his own palace if need be, and force His Holiness to
+ obey the imperial instructions or suffer the consequences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But more frequently the Pope was the stronger. Then the Emperor or the
+ King together with all his subjects was excommunicated. This meant that
+ all churches were closed, that no one could be baptised, that no dying man
+ could be given absolution&mdash;in short, that half of the functions of
+ mediaeval government came to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More than that, the people were absolved from their oath of loyalty to
+ their sovereign and were urged to rebel against their master. But if they
+ followed this advice of the distant Pope and were caught, they were hanged
+ by their near-by Lege Lord and that too was very unpleasant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the poor fellows were in a difficult position and none fared worse
+ than those who lived during the latter half of the eleventh century, when
+ the Emperor Henry IV of Germany and Pope Gregory VII fought a two-round
+ battle which decided nothing and upset the peace of Europe for almost
+ fifty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the middle of the eleventh century there had been a strong movement for
+ reform in the church. The election of the Popes, thus far, had been a most
+ irregular affair. It was to the advantage of the Holy Roman Emperors to
+ have a well-disposed priest elected to the Holy See. They frequently came
+ to Rome at the time of election and used their influence for the benefit
+ of one of their friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1059 this had been changed. By a decree of Pope Nicholas II
+ the principal priests and deacons of the churches in and around Rome were
+ organised into the so-called College of Cardinals, and this gathering of
+ prominent churchmen (the word "Cardinal" meant principal) was given the
+ exclusive power of electing the future Popes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1073 the College of Cardinals elected a priest by the name of
+ Hildebrand, the son of very simple parents in Tuscany, as Pope, and he
+ took the name of Gregory VII. His energy was unbounded. His belief in the
+ supreme powers of his Holy Office was built upon a granite rock of
+ conviction and courage. In the mind of Gregory, the Pope was not only the
+ absolute head of the Christian church, but also the highest Court of
+ Appeal in all worldly matters. The Pope who had elevated simple German
+ princes to the dignity of Emperor could depose them at will. He could veto
+ any law passed by duke or king or emperor, but whosoever should question a
+ papal decree, let him beware, for the punishment would be swift and
+ merciless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gregory sent ambassadors to all the European courts to inform the
+ potentates of Europe of his new laws and asked them to take due notice of
+ their contents. William the Conqueror promised to be good, but Henry IV,
+ who since the age of six had been fighting with his subjects, had no
+ intention of submitting to the Papal will. He called together a college of
+ German bishops, accused Gregory of every crime under the sun and then had
+ him deposed by the council of Worms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope answered with excommunication and a demand that the German
+ princes rid themselves of their unworthy ruler. The German princes, only
+ too happy to be rid of Henry, asked the Pope to come to Augsburg and help
+ them elect a new Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gregory left Rome and travelled northward. Henry, who was no fool,
+ appreciated the danger of his position. At all costs he must make peace
+ with the Pope, and he must do it at once. In the midst of winter he
+ crossed the Alps and hastened to Canossa where the Pope had stopped for a
+ short rest. Three long days, from the 25th to the 28th of January of the
+ year 1077, Henry, dressed as a penitent pilgrim (but with a warm sweater
+ underneath his monkish garb), waited outside the gates of the castle of
+ Canossa. Then he was allowed to enter and was pardoned for his sins. But
+ the repentance did not last long. As soon as Henry had returned to
+ Germany, he behaved exactly as before. Again he was excommunicated. For
+ the second time a council of German bishops deposed Gregory, but this
+ time, when Henry crossed the Alps he was at the head of a large army,
+ besieged Rome and forced Gregory to retire to Salerno, where he died in
+ exile. This first violent outbreak decided nothing. As soon as Henry was
+ back in Germany, the struggle between Pope and Emperor was continued.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hohenstaufen family which got hold of the Imperial German Throne
+ shortly afterwards, were even more independent than their predecessors.
+ Gregory had claimed that the Popes were superior to all kings because they
+ (the Popes) at the Day of Judgement would be responsible for the behaviour
+ of all the sheep of their flock, and in the eyes of God, a king was one of
+ that faithful herd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Frederick of Hohenstaufen, commonly known as Barbarossa or Red Beard, set
+ up the counter-claim that the Empire had been bestowed upon his
+ predecessor "by God himself" and as the Empire included Italy and Rome, he
+ began a campaign which was to add these "lost provinces" to the northern
+ country. Barbarossa was accidentally drowned in Asia Minor during the
+ second Crusade, but his son Frederick II, a brilliant young man who in his
+ youth had been exposed to the civilisation of the Mohammedans of Sicily,
+ continued the war. The Popes accused him of heresy. It is true that
+ Frederick seems to have felt a deep and serious contempt for the rough
+ Christian world of the North, for the boorish German Knights and the
+ intriguing Italian priests. But he held his tongue, went on a Crusade and
+ took Jerusalem from the infidel and was duly crowned as King of the Holy
+ City. Even this act did not placate the Popes. They deposed Frederick and
+ gave his Italian possessions to Charles of Anjou, the brother of that King
+ Louis of France who became famous as Saint Louis. This led to more
+ warfare. Conrad V, the son of Conrad IV, and the last of the
+ Hohenstaufens, tried to regain the kingdom, and was defeated and
+ decapitated at Naples. But twenty years later, the French who had made
+ themselves thoroughly unpopular in Sicily were all murdered during the
+ so-called Sicilian Vespers, and so it went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The quarrel between the Popes and the Emperors was never settled, but
+ after a while the two enemies learned to leave each other alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1278, Rudolph of Hapsburg was elected Emperor. He did not take
+ the trouble to go to Rome to be crowned. The Popes did not object and in
+ turn they kept away from Germany. This meant peace but two entire
+ centuries which might have been used for the purpose of internal
+ organisation had been wasted in useless warfare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is an ill wind however that bloweth no good to some one. The little
+ cities of Italy, by a process of careful balancing, had managed to
+ increase their power and their independence at the expense of both
+ Emperors and Popes. When the rush for the Holy Land began, they were able
+ to handle the transportation problem of the thousands of eager pilgrims
+ who were clamoring for passage, and at the end of the Crusades they had
+ built themselves such strong defences of brick and of gold that they could
+ defy Pope and Emperor with equal indifference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Church and State fought each other and a third party&mdash;the mediaeval
+ city&mdash;ran away with the spoils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE CRUSADES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BUT ALL THESE DIFFERENT QUARRELS WERE FORGOTTEN WHEN THE TURKS TOOK THE
+ HOLY LAND, DESECRATED THE HOLY PLACES AND INTERFERED SERIOUSLY WITH THE
+ TRADE FROM EAST TO WEST. EUROPE WENT CRUSADING
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DURING three centuries there had been peace between Christians and Moslems
+ except in Spain and in the eastern Roman Empire, the two states defending
+ the gateways of Europe. The Mohammedans having conquered Syria in the
+ seventh century were in possession of the Holy Land. But they regarded
+ Jesus as a great prophet (though not quite as great as Mohammed), and they
+ did not interfere with the pilgrims who wished to pray in the church which
+ Saint Helena, the mother of the Emperor Constantine, had built on the spot
+ of the Holy Grave. But early in the eleventh century, a Tartar tribe from
+ the wilds of Asia, called the Seljuks or Turks, became masters of the
+ Mohammedan state in western Asia and then the period of tolerance came to
+ an end. The Turks took all of Asia Minor away from the eastern Roman
+ Emperors and they made an end to the trade between east and west.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexis, the Emperor, who rarely saw anything of his Christian neighbours
+ of the west, appealed for help and pointed to the danger which threatened
+ Europe should the Turks take Constantinople.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Italian cities which had established colonies along the coast of Asia
+ Minor and Palestine, in fear for their possessions, reported terrible
+ stories of Turkish atrocities and Christian suffering. All Europe got
+ excited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pope Urban II, a Frenchman from Reims, who had been educated at the same
+ famous cloister of Cluny which had trained Gregory VII, thought that the
+ time had come for action. The general state of Europe was far from
+ satisfactory. The primitive agricultural methods of that day (unchanged
+ since Roman times) caused a constant scarcity of food. There was
+ unemployment and hunger and these are apt to lead to discontent and riots.
+ Western Asia in older days had fed millions. It was an excellent field for
+ the purpose of immigration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore at the council of Clermont in France in the year 1095 the Pope
+ arose, described the terrible horrors which the infidels had inflicted
+ upon the Holy Land, gave a glowing description of this country which ever
+ since the days of Moses had been overflowing with milk and honey, and
+ exhorted the knights of France and the people of Europe in general to
+ leave wife and child and deliver Palestine from the Turks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wave of religious hysteria swept across the continent. All reason
+ stopped. Men would drop their hammer and saw, walk out of their shop and
+ take the nearest road to the east to go and kill Turks. Children would
+ leave their homes to "go to Palestine" and bring the terrible Turks to
+ their knees by the mere appeal of their youthful zeal and Christian piety.
+ Fully ninety percent of those enthusiasts never got within sight of the
+ Holy Land. They had no money. They were forced to beg or steal to keep
+ alive. They became a danger to the safety of the highroads and they were
+ killed by the angry country people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first Crusade, a wild mob of honest Christians, defaulting bankrupts,
+ penniless noblemen and fugitives from justice, following the lead of
+ half-crazy Peter the Hermit and Walter-without-a-Cent, began their
+ campaign against the Infidels by murdering all the Jews whom they met by
+ the way. They got as far as Hungary and then they were all killed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This experience taught the Church a lesson. Enthusiasm alone would not set
+ the Holy Land free. Organisation was as necessary as good-will and
+ courage. A year was spent in training and equipping an army of 200,000
+ men. They were placed under command of Godfrey of Bouillon, Robert, duke
+ of Normandy, Robert, count of Flanders, and a number of other noblemen,
+ all experienced in the art of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1096 this second crusade started upon its long voyage. At
+ Constantinople the knights did homage to the Emperor. (For as I have told
+ you, traditions die hard, and a Roman Emperor, however poor and powerless,
+ was still held in great respect). Then they crossed into Asia, killed all
+ the Moslems who fell into their hands, stormed Jerusalem, massacred the
+ Mohammedan population, and marched to the Holy Sepulchre to give praise
+ and thanks amidst tears of piety and gratitude. But soon the Turks were
+ strengthened by the arrival of fresh troops. Then they retook Jerusalem
+ and in turn killed the faithful followers of the Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the next two centuries, seven other crusades took place. Gradually
+ the Crusaders learned the technique of the trip. The land voyage was too
+ tedious and too dangerous. They preferred to cross the Alps and go to
+ Genoa or Venice where they took ship for the east. The Genoese and the
+ Venetians made this trans-Mediterranean passenger service a very
+ profitable business. They charged exorbitant rates, and when the Crusaders
+ (most of whom had very little money) could not pay the price, these
+ Italian "profiteers" kindly allowed them to "work their way across." In
+ return for a fare from Venice to Acre, the Crusader undertook to do a
+ stated amount of fighting for the owners of his vessel. In this way Venice
+ greatly increased her territory along the coast of the Adriatic and in
+ Greece, where Athens became a Venetian colony, and in the islands of
+ Cyprus and Crete and Rhodes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, however, helped little in settling the question of the Holy
+ Land. After the first enthusiasm had worn off, a short crusading trip
+ became part of the liberal education of every well-bred young man, and
+ there never was any lack of candidates for service in Palestine. But the
+ old zeal was gone. The Crusaders, who had begun their warfare with deep
+ hatred for the Mohammedans and great love for the Christian people of the
+ eastern Roman Empire and Armenia, suffered a complete change of heart.
+ They came to despise the Greeks of Byzantium, who cheated them and
+ frequently betrayed the cause of the Cross, and the Armenians and all the
+ other Levantine races, and they began to appreciate the virtues of their
+ enemies who proved to be generous and fair opponents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, it would never do to say this openly. But when the Crusader
+ returned home, he was likely to imitate the manners which he had learned
+ from his heathenish foe, compared to whom the average western knight was
+ still a good deal of a country bumpkin. He also brought with him several
+ new food-stuffs, such as peaches and spinach which he planted in his
+ garden and grew for his own benefit. He gave up the barbarous custom of
+ wearing a load of heavy armour and appeared in the flowing robes of silk
+ or cotton which were the traditional habit of the followers of the Prophet
+ and were originally worn by the Turks. Indeed the Crusades, which had
+ begun as a punitive expedition against the Heathen, became a course of
+ general instruction in civilisation for millions of young Europeans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From a military and political point of view the Crusades were a failure.
+ Jerusalem and a number of cities were taken and lost. A dozen little
+ kingdoms were established in Syria and Palestine and Asia Minor, but they
+ were re-conquered by the Turks and after the year 1244 (when Jerusalem
+ became definitely Turkish) the status of the Holy Land was the same as it
+ had been before 1095.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Europe had undergone a great change. The people of the west had been
+ allowed a glimpse of the light and the sunshine and the beauty of the
+ east. Their dreary castles no longer satisfied them. They wanted a broader
+ life. Neither Church nor State could give this to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They found it in the cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MEDIAEVAL CITY
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ WHY THE PEOPLE OF THE MIDDLE AGES SAID THAT "CITY AIR IS FREE AIR"
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE early part of the Middle Ages had been an era of pioneering and of
+ settlement. A new people, who thus far had lived outside the wild range of
+ forest, mountains and marshes which protected the north-eastern frontier
+ of the Roman Empire, had forced its way into the plains of western Europe
+ and had taken possession of most of the land. They were restless, as all
+ pioneers have been since the beginning of time. They liked to be "on the
+ go." They cut down the forests and they cut each other's throats with
+ equal energy. Few of them wanted to live in cities. They insisted upon
+ being "free," they loved to feel the fresh air of the hillsides fill their
+ lungs while they drove their herds across the wind-swept pastures. When
+ they no longer liked their old homes, they pulled up stakes and went away
+ in search of fresh adventures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The weaker ones died. The hardy fighters and the courageous women who had
+ followed their men into the wilderness survived. In this way they
+ developed a strong race of men. They cared little for the graces of life.
+ They were too busy to play the fiddle or write pieces of poetry. They had
+ little love for discussions. The priest, "the learned man" of the village
+ (and before the middle of the thirteenth century, a layman who could read
+ and write was regarded as a "sissy") was supposed to settle all questions
+ which had no direct practical value. Meanwhile the German chieftain, the
+ Frankish Baron, the Northman Duke (or whatever their names and titles)
+ occupied their share of the territory which once had been part of the
+ great Roman Empire and among the ruins of past glory, they built a world
+ of their own which pleased them mightily and which they considered quite
+ perfect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They managed the affairs of their castle and the surrounding country to
+ the best of their ability. They were as faithful to the commandments of
+ the Church as any weak mortal could hope to be. They were sufficiently
+ loyal to their king or emperor to keep on good terms with those distant
+ but always dangerous potentates. In short, they tried to do right and to
+ be fair to their neighbours without being exactly unfair to their own
+ interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not an ideal world in which they found themselves. The greater part
+ of the people were serfs or "villains," farm-hands who were as much a part
+ of the soil upon which they lived as the cows and sheep whose stables they
+ shared. Their fate was not particularly happy nor was it particularly
+ unhappy. But what was one to do? The good Lord who ruled the world of the
+ Middle Ages had undoubtedly ordered everything for the best. If He, in his
+ wisdom, had decided that there must be both knights and serfs, it was not
+ the duty of these faithful sons of the church to question the arrangement.
+ The serfs therefore did not complain but when they were too hard driven,
+ they would die off like cattle which are not fed and stabled in the right
+ way, and then something would be hastily done to better their condition.
+ But if the progress of the world had been left to the serf and his feudal
+ master, we would still be living after the fashion of the twelfth century,
+ saying "abracadabra" when we tried to stop a tooth-ache, and feeling a
+ deep contempt and hatred for the dentist who offered to help us with his
+ "science," which most likely was of Mohammedan or heathenish origin and
+ therefore both wicked and useless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you grow up you will discover that many people do not believe in
+ "progress" and they will prove to you by the terrible deeds of some of our
+ own contemporaries that "the world does not change." But I hope that you
+ will not pay much attention to such talk. You see, it took our ancestors
+ almost a million years to learn how to walk on their hind legs. Other
+ centuries had to go by before their animal-like grunts developed into an
+ understandable language. Writing&mdash;the art of preserving our ideas for
+ the benefit of future generations, without which no progress is possible
+ was invented only four thousand years ago. The idea of turning the forces
+ of nature into the obedient servants of man was quite new in the days of
+ your own grandfather. It seems to me, therefore, that we are making
+ progress at an unheard-of rate of speed. Perhaps we have paid a little too
+ much attention to the mere physical comforts of life. That will change in
+ due course of time and we shall then attack the problems which are not
+ related to health and to wages and plumbing and machinery in general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But please do not be too sentimental about the "good old days." Many
+ people who only see the beautiful churches and the great works of art
+ which the Middle Ages have left behind grow quite eloquent when they
+ compare our own ugly civilisation with its hurry and its noise and the
+ evil smells of backfiring motor trucks with the cities of a thousand years
+ ago. But these mediaeval churches were invariably surrounded by miserable
+ hovels compared to which a modern tenement house stands forth as a
+ luxurious palace. It is true that the noble Lancelot and the equally noble
+ Parsifal, the pure young hero who went in search of the Holy Grail, were
+ not bothered by the odor of gasoline. But there were other smells of the
+ barnyard variety&mdash;odors of decaying refuse which had been thrown into
+ the street&mdash;of pig-sties surrounding the Bishop's palace&mdash;of
+ unwashed people who had inherited their coats and hats from their
+ grandfathers and who had never learned the blessing of soap. I do not want
+ to paint too unpleasant a picture. But when you read in the ancient
+ chronicles that the King of France, looking out of the windows of his
+ palace, fainted at the stench caused by the pigs rooting in the streets of
+ Paris, when an ancient manuscript recounts a few details of an epidemic of
+ the plague or of small-pox, then you begin to under-stand that "progress"
+ is something more than a catchword used by modern advertising men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No, the progress of the last six hundred years would not have been
+ possible without the existence of cities. I shall, therefore, have to make
+ this chapter a little longer than many of the others. It is too important
+ to be reduced to three or four pages, devoted to mere political events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ancient world of Egypt and Babylonia and Assyria had been a world of
+ cities. Greece had been a country of City-States. The history of Phoenicia
+ was the history of two cities called Sidon and Tyre. The Roman Empire was
+ the "hinterland" of a single town. Writing, art, science, astronomy,
+ architecture, literature, the theatre&mdash;the list is endless&mdash;have
+ all been products of the city.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For almost four thousand years the wooden bee-hive which we call a town
+ had been the workshop of the world. Then came the great migrations. The
+ Roman Empire was destroyed. The cities were burned down and Europe once
+ more became a land of pastures and little agricultural villages. During
+ the Dark Ages the fields of civilisation had lain fallow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Crusades had prepared the soil for a new crop. It was time for the
+ harvest, but the fruit was plucked by the burghers of the free cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have told you the story of the castles and the monasteries, with their
+ heavy stone enclosures&mdash;the homes of the knights and the monks, who
+ guarded men's bodies and their souls. You have seen how a few artisans
+ (butchers and bakers and an occasional candle-stick maker) came to live
+ near the castle to tend to the wants of their masters and to find
+ protection in case of danger. Sometimes the feudal lord allowed these
+ people to surround their houses with a stockade. But they were dependent
+ for their living upon the good-will of the mighty Seigneur of the castle.
+ When he went about they knelt before him and kissed his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the Crusades and many things changed. The migrations had driven
+ people from the north-east to the west. The Crusades made millions of
+ people travel from the west to the highly civilised regions of the
+ south-east. They discovered that the world was not bounded by the four
+ walls of their little settlement. They came to appreciate better clothes,
+ more comfortable houses, new dishes, products of the mysterious Orient.
+ After their return to their old homes, they insisted that they be supplied
+ with those articles. The peddler with his pack upon his back&mdash;the
+ only merchant of the Dark Ages&mdash;added these goods to his old
+ merchandise, bought a cart, hired a few ex-crusaders to protect him
+ against the crime wave which followed this great international war, and
+ went forth to do business upon a more modern and larger scale. His career
+ was not an easy one. Every time he entered the domains of another Lord he
+ had to pay tolls and taxes. But the business was profitable all the same
+ and the peddler continued to make his rounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon certain energetic merchants discovered that the goods which they had
+ always imported from afar could be made at home. They turned part of their
+ homes into a workgshop.{sic} They ceased to be merchants and became
+ manufacturers. They sold their products not only to the lord of the castle
+ and to the abbot in his monastery, but they exported them to nearby towns.
+ The lord and the abbot paid them with products of their farms, eggs and
+ wines, and with honey, which in those early days was used as sugar. But
+ the citizens of distant towns were obliged to pay in cash and the
+ manufacturer and the merchant began to own little pieces of gold, which
+ entirely changed their position in the society of the early Middle Ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult for you to imagine a world without money. In a modern city
+ one cannot possible live without money. All day long you carry a pocket
+ full of small discs of metal to "pay your way." You need a nickel for the
+ street-car, a dollar for a dinner, three cents for an evening paper. But
+ many people of the early Middle Ages never saw a piece of coined money
+ from the time they were born to the day of their death. The gold and
+ silver of Greece and Rome lay buried beneath the ruins of their cities.
+ The world of the migrations, which had succeeded the Empire, was an
+ agricultural world. Every farmer raised enough grain and enough sheep and
+ enough cows for his own use.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mediaeval knight was a country squire and was rarely forced to pay for
+ materials in money. His estates produced everything that he and his family
+ ate and drank and wore on their backs. The bricks for his house were made
+ along the banks of the nearest river. Wood for the rafters of the hall was
+ cut from the baronial forest. The few articles that had to come from
+ abroad were paid for in goods&mdash;in honey&mdash;in eggs&mdash;in
+ fagots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Crusades upset the routine of the old agricultural life in a very
+ drastic fashion. Suppose that the Duke of Hildesheim was going to the Holy
+ Land. He must travel thousands of miles and he must pay his passage and
+ his hotel-bills. At home he could pay with products of his farm. But he
+ could not well take a hundred dozen eggs and a cart-load of hams with him
+ to satisfy the greed of the shipping agent of Venice or the inn-keeper of
+ the Brenner Pass. These gentlemen insisted upon cash. His Lordship
+ therefore was obliged to take a small quantity of gold with him upon his
+ voyage. Where could he find this gold? He could borrow it from the
+ Lombards, the descendants of the old Longobards, who had turned
+ professional money-lenders, who seated behind their exchange-table
+ (commonly known as "banco" or bank) were glad to let his Grace have a few
+ hundred gold pieces in exchange for a mortgage upon his estates, that they
+ might be repaid in case His Lordship should die at the hands of the Turks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was dangerous business for the borrower. In the end, the Lombards
+ invariably owned the estates and the Knight became a bankrupt, who hired
+ himself out as a fighting man to a more powerful and more careful
+ neighbour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Grace could also go to that part of the town where the Jews were
+ forced to live. There he could borrow money at a rate of fifty or sixty
+ percent. interest. That, too, was bad business. But was there a way out?
+ Some of the people of the little city which surrounded the castle were
+ said to have money. They had known the young lord all his life. His father
+ and their fathers had been good friends. They would not be unreasonable in
+ their demands. Very well. His Lordship's clerk, a monk who could write and
+ keep accounts, sent a note to the best known merchants and asked for a
+ small loan. The townspeople met in the work-room of the jeweller who made
+ chalices for the nearby churches and discussed this demand. They could not
+ well refuse. It would serve no purpose to ask for "interest." In the first
+ place, it was against the religious principles of most people to take
+ interest and in the second place, it would never be paid except in
+ agricultural products and of these the people had enough and to spare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," suggested the tailor who spent his days quietly sitting upon his
+ table and who was somewhat of a philosopher, "suppose that we ask some
+ favour in return for our money. We are all fond of fishing. But his
+ Lordship won't let us fish in his brook. Suppose that we let him have a
+ hundred ducats and that he give us in return a written guarantee allowing
+ us to fish all we want in all of his rivers. Then he gets the hundred
+ which he needs, but we get the fish and it will be good business all
+ around."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day his Lordship accepted this proposition (it seemed such an easy way
+ of getting a hundred gold pieces) he signed the death-warrant of his own
+ power. His clerk drew up the agreement. His Lordship made his mark (for he
+ could not sign his name) and departed for the East. Two years later he
+ came back, dead broke. The townspeople were fishing in the castle pond.
+ The sight of this silent row of anglers annoyed his Lordship. He told his
+ equerry to go and chase the crowd away. They went, but that night a
+ delegation of merchants visited the castle. They were very polite. They
+ congratulated his Lordship upon his safe return. They were sorry his
+ Lordship had been annoyed by the fishermen, but as his Lordship might
+ perhaps remember he had given them permission to do so himself, and the
+ tailor produced the Charter which had been kept in the safe of the
+ jeweller ever since the master had gone to the Holy Land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Lordship was much annoyed. But once more he was in dire need of some
+ money. In Italy he had signed his name to certain documents which were now
+ in the possession of Salvestro dei Medici, the well-known banker. These
+ documents were "promissory notes" and they were due two months from date.
+ Their total amount came to three hundred and forty pounds, Flemish gold.
+ Under these circumstances, the noble knight could not well show the rage
+ which filled his heart and his proud soul. Instead, he suggested another
+ little loan. The merchants retired to discuss the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After three days they came back and said "yes." They were only too happy
+ to be able to help their master in his difficulties, but in return for the
+ 345 golden pounds would he give them another written promise (another
+ charter) that they, the townspeople, might establish a council of their
+ own to be elected by all the merchants and free citizens of the city, said
+ council to manage civic affairs without interference from the side of the
+ castle?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His Lordship was confoundedly angry. But again, he needed the money. He
+ said yes, and signed the charter. Next week, he repented. He called his
+ soldiers and went to the house of the jeweller and asked for the documents
+ which his crafty subjects had cajoled out of him under the pressure of
+ circumstances. He took them away and burned them. The townspeople stood by
+ and said nothing. But when next his Lordship needed money to pay for the
+ dowry of his daughter, he was unable to get a single penny. After that
+ little affair at the jeweller's his credit was not considered good. He was
+ forced to eat humble-pie and offer to make certain reparations. Before his
+ Lordship got the first installment of the stipulated sum, the townspeople
+ were once more in possession of all their old charters and a brand new one
+ which permitted them to build a "city-hall" and a strong tower where all
+ the charters might be kept protected against fire and theft, which really
+ meant protected against future violence on the part of the Lord and his
+ armed followers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, in a very general way, is what happened during the centuries which
+ followed the Crusades. It was a slow process, this gradual shifting of
+ power from the castle to the city. There was some fighting. A few tailors
+ and jewellers were killed and a few castles went up in smoke. But such
+ occurrences were not common. Almost imperceptibly the towns grew richer
+ and the feudal lords grew poorer. To maintain themselves they were for
+ ever forced to exchange charters of civic liberty in return for ready
+ cash. The cities grew. They offered an asylum to run-away serfs who gained
+ their liberty after they had lived a number of years behind the city
+ walls. They came to be the home of the more energetic elements of the
+ surrounding country districts. They were proud of their new importance and
+ expressed their power in the churches and public buildings which they
+ erected around the old market place, where centuries before the barter of
+ eggs and sheep and honey and salt had taken place. They wanted their
+ children to have a better chance in life than they had enjoyed themselves.
+ They hired monks to come to their city and be school teachers. When they
+ heard of a man who could paint pictures upon boards of wood, they offered
+ him a pension if he would come and cover the walls of their chapels and
+ their town hall with scenes from the Holy Scriptures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile his Lordship, in the dreary and drafty halls of his castle, saw
+ all this up-start splendour and regretted the day when first he had signed
+ away a single one of his sovereign rights and prerogatives. But he was
+ helpless. The townspeople with their well-filled strong-boxes snapped
+ their fingers at him. They were free men, fully prepared to hold what they
+ had gained by the sweat of their brow and after a struggle which had
+ lasted for more than ten generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MEDIAEVAL SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE PEOPLE OF THE CITIES ASSERTED THEIR RIGHT TO BE HEARD IN THE ROYAL
+ COUNCILS OF THEIR COUNTRY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as people were "nomads," wandering tribes of shepherds, all men
+ had been equal and had been responsible for the welfare and safety of the
+ entire community.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But after they had settled down and some had become rich and others had
+ grown poor, the government was apt to fall into the hands of those who
+ were not obliged to work for their living and who could devote themselves
+ to politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have told you how this had happened in Egypt and in Mesopotamia and in
+ Greece and in Rome. It occurred among the Germanic population of western
+ Europe as soon as order had been restored. The western European world was
+ ruled in the first place by an emperor who was elected by the seven or
+ eight most important kings of the vast Roman Empire of the German nation
+ and who enjoyed a great deal of imaginary and very little actual power. It
+ was ruled by a number of kings who sat upon shaky thrones. The every-day
+ government was in the hands of thousands of feudal princelets. Their
+ subjects were peasants or serfs. There were few cities. There was hardly
+ any middle class. But during the thirteenth century (after an absence of
+ almost a thousand years) the middle class&mdash;the merchant class&mdash;once
+ more appeared upon the historical stage and its rise in power, as we saw
+ in the last chapter, had meant a decrease in the influence of the castle
+ folk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus far, the king, in ruling his domains, had only paid attention to the
+ wishes of his noblemen and his bishops. But the new world of trade and
+ commerce which grew out of the Crusades forced him to recognise the middle
+ class or suffer from an ever-increasing emptiness of his exchequer. Their
+ majesties (if they had followed their hidden wishes) would have as lief
+ consulted their cows and their pigs as the good burghers of their cities.
+ But they could not help themselves. They swallowed the bitter pill because
+ it was gilded, but not without a struggle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England, during the absence of Richard the Lion Hearted (who had gone
+ to the Holy Land, but who was spending the greater part of his crusading
+ voyage in an Austrian jail) the government of the country had been placed
+ in the hands of John, a brother of Richard, who was his inferior in the
+ art of war, but his equal as a bad administrator. John had begun his
+ career as a regent by losing Normandy and the greater part of the French
+ possessions. Next, he had managed to get into a quarrel with Pope Innocent
+ III, the famous enemy of the Hohenstaufens. The Pope had excommunicated
+ John (as Gregory VII had excommunicated the Emperor Henry IV two centuries
+ before). In the year 1213 John had been obliged to make an ignominious
+ peace just as Henry IV had been obliged to do in the year 1077.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Undismayed by his lack of success, John continued to abuse his royal power
+ until his disgruntled vassals made a prisoner of their anointed ruler and
+ forced him to promise that he would be good and would never again
+ interfere with the ancient rights of his subjects. All this happened on a
+ little island in the Thames, near the village of Runnymede, on the 15th of
+ June of the year 1215. The document to which John signed his name was
+ called the Big Charter&mdash;the Magna Carta. It contained very little
+ that was new. It re-stated in short and direct sentences the ancient
+ duties of the king and enumerated the privileges of his vassals. It paid
+ little attention to the rights (if any) of the vast majority of the
+ people, the peasants, but it offered certain securities to the rising
+ class of the merchants. It was a charter of great importance because it
+ defined the powers of the king with more precision than had ever been done
+ before. But it was still a purely mediaeval document. It did not refer to
+ common human beings, unless they happened to be the property of the
+ vassal, which must be safe-guarded against royal tyranny just as the
+ Baronial woods and cows were protected against an excess of zeal on the
+ part of the royal foresters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few years later, however, we begin to hear a very different note in the
+ councils of His Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John, who was bad, both by birth and inclination, solemnly had promised to
+ obey the great charter and then had broken every one of its many
+ stipulations. Fortunately, he soon died and was succeeded by his son Henry
+ III, who was forced to recognise the charter anew. Meanwhile, Uncle
+ Richard, the Crusader, had cost the country a great deal of money and the
+ king was obliged to ask for a few loans that he might pay his obligations
+ to the Jewish money-lenders. The large land-owners and the bishops who
+ acted as councillors to the king could not provide him with the necessary
+ gold and silver. The king then gave orders that a few representatives of
+ the cities be called upon to attend the sessions of his Great Council.
+ They made their first appearance in the year 1265. They were supposed to
+ act only as financial experts who were not supposed to take a part in the
+ general discussion of matters of state, but to give advice exclusively
+ upon the question of taxation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually, however, these representatives of the "commons" were consulted
+ upon many of the problems and the meeting of noblemen, bishops and city
+ delegates developed into a regular Parliament, a place "ou l'on parfait,"
+ which means in English where people talked, before important affairs of
+ state were decided upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the institution of such a general advisory-board with certain
+ executive powers was not an English invention, as seems to ke the general
+ belief, and government by a "king and his parliament" was by no means
+ restricted to the British Isles. You will find it in every part of Europe.
+ In some countries, like France, the rapid increase of the Royal power
+ after the Middle Ages reduced the influence of the "parliament" to
+ nothing. In the year 1302 representatives of the cities had been admitted
+ to the meeting of the French Parliament, but five centuries had to pass
+ before this "Parliament" was strong enough to assert the rights of the
+ middle class, the so-called Third Estate, and break the power of the king.
+ Then they made up for lost time and during the French Revolution,
+ abolished the king, the clergy and the nobles and made the representatives
+ of the common people the rulers of the land. In Spain the "cortex" (the
+ king's council) had been opened to the commoners as early as the first
+ half of the twelfth century. In the Germain Empire, a number of important
+ cities had obtained the rank of "imperial cities" whose representatives
+ must be heard in the imperial diet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Sweden, representatives of the people attended the sessions of the
+ Riksdag at the first meeting of the year 1359. In Denmark the Daneholf,
+ the ancient national assembly, was re-established in 1314, and, although
+ the nobles often regained control of the country at the expense of the
+ king and the people, the representatives of the cities were never
+ completely deprived of their power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Scandinavian country, the story of representative government is
+ particularly interesting. In Iceland, the "Althing," the assembly of all
+ free landowners, who managed the affairs of the island, began to hold
+ regular meetings in the ninth century and continued to do so for more than
+ a thousand years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Switzerland, the freemen of the different cantons defended their
+ assemblies against the attempts of a number of feudal neighbours with
+ great success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, in the Low Countries, in Holland, the councils of the different
+ duchies and counties were attended by representatives of the third estate
+ as early as the thirteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the sixteenth century a number of these small provinces rebelled
+ against their king, abjured his majesty in a solemn meeting of the
+ "Estates General," removed the clergy from the discussions, broke the
+ power of the nobles and assumed full executive authority over the
+ newly-established Republic of the United Seven Netherlands. For two
+ centuries, the representatives of the town-councils ruled the country
+ without a king, without bishops and without noblemen. The city had become
+ supreme and the good burghers had become the rulers of the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MEDIAEVAL WORLD
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ WHAT THE PEOPLE OF THE MIDDLE AGES THOUGHT OF THE WORLD IN WHICH THEY
+ HAPPENED TO LIVE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ DATES are a very useful invention. We could not do without them but unless
+ we are very careful, they will play tricks with us. They are apt to make
+ history too precise. For example, when I talk of the point-of-view of
+ mediaeval man, I do not mean that on the 31st of December of the year 476,
+ suddenly all the people of Europe said, "Ah, now the Roman Empire has come
+ to an end and we are living in the Middle Ages. How interesting!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You could have found men at the Frankish court of Charlemagne who were
+ Romans in their habits, in their manners, in their out-look upon life. On
+ the other hand, when you grow up you will discover that some of the people
+ in this world have never passed beyond the stage of the cave-man. All
+ times and all ages overlap, and the ideas of succeeding generations play
+ tag with each other. But it is possible to study the minds of a good many
+ true representatives of the Middle Ages and then give you an idea of the
+ average man's attitude toward life and the many difficult problems of
+ living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First of all, remember that the people of the Middle Ages never thought of
+ themselves as free-born citizens, who could come and go at will and shape
+ their fate according to their ability or energy or luck. On the contrary,
+ they all considered themselves part of the general scheme of things, which
+ included emperors and serfs, popes and heretics, heroes and swashbucklers,
+ rich men, poor men, beggar men and thieves. They accepted this divine
+ ordinance and asked no questions. In this, of course, they differed
+ radically from modern people who accept nothing and who are forever trying
+ to improve their own financial and political situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the man and woman of the thirteenth century, the world hereafter&mdash;a
+ Heaven of wonderful delights and a Hell of brimstone and suffering&mdash;meant
+ something more than empty words or vague theological phrases. It was an
+ actual fact and the mediaeval burghers and knights spent the greater part
+ of their time preparing for it. We modern people regard a noble death
+ after a well-spent life with the quiet calm of the ancient Greeks and
+ Romans. After three score years of work and effort, we go to sleep with
+ the feeling that all will be well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But during the Middle Ages, the King of Terrors with his grinning skull
+ and his rattling bones was man's steady companion. He woke his victims up
+ with terrible tunes on his scratchy fiddle he sat down with them at dinner&mdash;he
+ smiled at them from behind trees and shrubs when they took a girl out for
+ a walk. If you had heard nothing but hair-raising yarns about cemeteries
+ and coffins and fearful diseases when you were very young, instead of
+ listening to the fairy stories of Anderson and Grimm, you, too, would have
+ lived all your days in a dread of the final hour and the gruesome day of
+ Judgment. That is exactly what happened to the children of the Middle
+ Ages. They moved in a world of devils and spooks and only a few occasional
+ angels. Sometimes, their fear of the future filled their souls with
+ humility and piety, but often it influenced them the other way and made
+ them cruel and sentimental. They would first of all murder all the women
+ and children of a captured city and then they would devoutly march to a
+ holy spot and with their hands gory with the blood of innocent victims,
+ they would pray that a merciful heaven forgive them their sins. Yea, they
+ would do more than pray, they would weep bitter tears and would confess
+ themselves the most wicked of sinners. But the next day, they would once
+ more butcher a camp of Saracen enemies without a spark of mercy in their
+ hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, the Crusaders were Knights and obeyed a somewhat different code
+ of manners from the common men. But in such respects the common man was
+ just the same as his master. He, too, resembled a shy horse, easily
+ frightened by a shadow or a silly piece of paper, capable of excellent and
+ faithful service but liable to run away and do terrible damage when his
+ feverish imagination saw a ghost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In judging these good people, however, it is wise to remember the terrible
+ disadvantages under which they lived. They were really barbarians who
+ posed as civilised people. Charlemagne and Otto the Great were called
+ "Roman Emperors," but they had as little resemblance to a real Roman
+ Emperor (say Augustus or Marcus Aurelius) as "King" Wumba Wumba of the
+ upper Congo has to the highly educated rulers of Sweden or Denmark. They
+ were savages who lived amidst glorious ruins but who did not share the
+ benefits of the civilisation which their fathers and grandfathers had
+ destroyed. They knew nothing. They were ignorant of almost every fact
+ which a boy of twelve knows to-day. They were obliged to go to one single
+ book for all their information. That was the Bible. But those parts of the
+ Bible which have influenced the history of the human race for the better
+ are those chapters of the New Testament which teach us the great moral
+ lessons of love, charity and forgiveness. As a handbook of astronomy,
+ zoology, botany, geometry and all the other sciences, the venerable book
+ is not entirely reliable. In the twelfth century, a second book was added
+ to the mediaeval library, the great encyclopaedia of useful knowledge,
+ compiled by Aristotle, the Greek philosopher of the fourth century before
+ Christ. Why the Christian church should have been willing to accord such
+ high honors to the teacher of Alexander the Great, whereas they condemned
+ all other Greek philosophers on account of their heathenish doctrines, I
+ really do not know. But next to the Bible, Aristotle was recognized as the
+ only reliable teacher whose works could be safely placed into the hands of
+ true Christians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His works had reached Europe in a somewhat roundabout way. They had gone
+ from Greece to Alexandria. They had then been translated from the Greek
+ into the Arabic language by the Mohammedans who conquered Egypt in the
+ seventh century. They had followed the Moslem armies into Spain and the
+ philosophy of the great Stagirite (Aristotle was a native of Stagira in
+ Macedonia) was taught in the Moorish universities of Cordova. The Arabic
+ text was then translated into Latin by the Christian students who had
+ crossed the Pyrenees to get a liberal education and this much travelled
+ version of the famous books was at last taught at the different schools of
+ northwestern Europe. It was not very clear, but that made it all the more
+ interesting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the help of the Bible and Aristotle, the most brilliant men of the
+ Middle Ages now set to work to explain all things between Heaven and Earth
+ in their relation to the expressed will of God. These brilliant men, the
+ so-called Scholasts or Schoolmen, were really very intelligent, but they
+ had obtained their information exclusively from books, and never from
+ actual observation. If they wanted to lecture on the sturgeon or on
+ caterpillars, they read the Old and New Testaments and Aristotle, and told
+ their students everything these good books had to say upon the subject of
+ caterpillars and sturgeons. They did not go out to the nearest river to
+ catch a sturgeon. They did not leave their libraries and repair to the
+ backyard to catch a few caterpillars and look at these animals and study
+ them in their native haunts. Even such famous scholars as Albertus Magnus
+ and Thomas Aquinas did not inquire whether the sturgeons in the land of
+ Palestine and the caterpillars of Macedonia might not have been different
+ from the sturgeons and the caterpillars of western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When occasionally an exceptionally curious person like Roger Bacon
+ appeared in the council of the learned and began to experiment with
+ magnifying glasses and funny little telescopes and actually dragged the
+ sturgen and the caterpillar into the lecturing room and proved that they
+ were different from the creatures described by the Old Testament and by
+ Aristotle, the Schoolmen shook their dignified heads. Bacon was going too
+ far. When he dared to suggest that an hour of actual observation was worth
+ more than ten years with Aristotle and that the works of that famous Greek
+ might as well have remained untranslated for all the good they had ever
+ done, the scholasts went to the police and said, "This man is a danger to
+ the safety of the state. He wants us to study Greek that we may read
+ Aristotle in the original. Why should he not be contented with our
+ Latin-Arabic translation which has satisfied our faithful people for so
+ many hundred years? Why is he so curious about the insides of fishes and
+ the insides of insects? He is probably a wicked magician trying to upset
+ the established order of things by his Black Magic." And so well did they
+ plead their cause that the frightened guardians of the peace forbade Bacon
+ to write a single word for more than ten years. When he resumed his
+ studies he had learned a lesson. He wrote his books in a queer cipher
+ which made it impossible for his contemporaries to read them, a trick
+ which became common as the Church became more desperate in its attempts to
+ prevent people from asking questions which would lead to doubts and
+ infidelity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, however, was not done out of any wicked desire to keep people
+ ignorant. The feeling which prompted the heretic hunters of that day was
+ really a very kindly one. They firmly believed&mdash;nay, they knew&mdash;that
+ this life was but the preparation for our real existence in the next
+ world. They felt convinced that too much knowledge made people
+ uncomfortable, filled their minds with dangerous opinions and led to doubt
+ and hence to perdition. A mediaeval Schoolman who saw one of his pupils
+ stray away from the revealed authority of the Bible and Aristotle, that he
+ might study things for himself, felt as uncomfortable as a loving mother
+ who sees her young child approach a hot stove. She knows that he will burn
+ his little fingers if he is allowed to touch it and she tries to keep him
+ back, if necessary she will use force. But she really loves the child and
+ if he will only obey her, she will be as good to him as she possibly can
+ be. In the same way the mediaeval guardians of people's souls, while they
+ were strict in all matters pertaining to the Faith, slaved day and night
+ to render the greatest possible service to the members of their flock.
+ They held out a helping hand whenever they could and the society of that
+ day shows the influence of thousands of good men and pious women who tried
+ to make the fate of the average mortal as bearable as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A serf was a serf and his position would never change. But the Good Lord
+ of the Middle Ages who allowed the serf to remain a slave all his life had
+ bestowed an immortal soul upon this humble creature and therefore he must
+ be protected in his rights, that he might live and die as a good
+ Christian. When he grew too old or too weak to work he must be taken care
+ of by the feudal master for whom he had worked. The serf, therefore, who
+ led a monotonous and dreary life, was never haunted by fear of to-morrow.
+ He knew that he was "safe"&mdash;that he could not be thrown out of
+ employment, that he would always have a roof over his head (a leaky roof,
+ perhaps, but roof all the same), and that he would always have something
+ to eat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This feeling of "stability" and of "safety" was found in all classes of
+ society. In the towns the merchants and the artisans established guilds
+ which assured every member of a steady income. It did not encourage the
+ ambitious to do better than their neighbours. Too often the guilds gave
+ protection to the "slacker" who managed to "get by." But they established
+ a general feeling of content and assurance among the labouring classes
+ which no longer exists in our day of general competition. The Middle Ages
+ were familiar with the dangers of what we modern people call "corners,"
+ when a single rich man gets hold of all the available grain or soap or
+ pickled herring, and then forces the world to buy from him at his own
+ price. The authorities, therefore, discouraged wholesale trading and
+ regulated the price at which merchants were allowed to sell their goods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Middle Ages disliked competition. Why compete and fill the world with
+ hurry and rivalry and a multitude of pushing men, when the Day of
+ Judgement was near at hand, when riches would count for nothing and when
+ the good serf would enter the golden gates of Heaven while the bad knight
+ was sent to do penance in the deepest pit of Inferno?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, the people of the Middle Ages were asked to surrender part of
+ their liberty of thought and action, that they might enjoy greater safety
+ from poverty of the body and poverty of the soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with a very few exceptions, they did not object. They firmly believed
+ that they were mere visitors upon this planet&mdash;that they were here to
+ be prepared for a greater and more important life. Deliberately they
+ turned their backs upon a world which was filled with suffering and
+ wickedness and injustice. They pulled down the blinds that the rays of the
+ sun might not distract their attention from that chapter in the Apocalypse
+ which told them of that heavenly light which was to illumine their
+ happiness in all eternity. They tried to close their eyes to most of the
+ joys of the world in which they lived that they might enjoy those which
+ awaited them in the near future. They accepted life as a necessary evil
+ and welcomed death as the beginning of a glorious day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks and the Romans had never bothered about the future but had
+ tried to establish their Paradise right here upon this earth. They had
+ succeeded in making life extremely pleasant for those of their fellow men
+ who did not happen to be slaves. Then came the other extreme of the Middle
+ Ages, when man built himself a Paradise beyond the highest clouds and
+ turned this world into a vale of tears for high and low, for rich and
+ poor, for the intelligent and the dumb. It was time for the pendulum to
+ swing back in the other direction, as I shall tell you in my next chapter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ MEDIAEVAL TRADE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE CRUSADES ONCE MORE MADE THE MEDITERRANEAN A BUSY CENTRE OF TRADE
+ AND HOW THE CITIES OF THE ITALIAN PENINSULA BECAME THE GREAT DISTRIBUTING
+ CENTRE FOR THE COMMERCE WITH ASIA AND AFRICA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THERE were three good reasons why the Italian cities should have been the
+ first to regain a position of great importance during the late Middle
+ Ages. The Italian peninsula had been settled by Rome at a very early date.
+ There had been more roads and more towns and more schools than anywhere
+ else in Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barbarians had burned as lustily in Italy as elsewhere, but there had
+ been so much to destroy that more had been able to survive. In the second
+ place, the Pope lived in Italy and as the head of a vast political
+ machine, which owned land and serfs and buildings and forests and rivers
+ and conducted courts of law, he was in constant receipt of a great deal of
+ money. The Papal authorities had to be paid in gold and silver as did the
+ merchants and ship-owners of Venice and Genoa. The cows and the eggs and
+ the horses and all the other agricultural products of the north and the
+ west must be changed into actual cash before the debt could be paid in the
+ distant city of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This made Italy the one country where there was a comparative abundance of
+ gold and silver. Finally, during the Crusades, the Italian cities had
+ become the point of embarkation for the Crusaders and had profiteered to
+ an almost unbelievable extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And after the Crusades had come to an end, these same Italian cities
+ remained the distributing centres for those Oriental goods upon which the
+ people of Europe had come to depend during the time they had spent in the
+ near east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of these towns, few were as famous as Venice. Venice was a republic built
+ upon a mud bank. Thither people from the mainland had fled during the
+ invasions of the barbarians in the fourth century. Surrounded on all sides
+ by the sea they had engaged in the business of salt-making. Salt had been
+ very scarce during the Middle Ages, and the price had been high. For
+ hundreds of years Venice had enjoyed a monopoly of this indispensable
+ table commodity (I say indispensable, because people, like sheep, fall ill
+ unless they get a certain amount of salt in their food). The people had
+ used this monopoly to increase the power of their city. At times they had
+ even dared to defy the power of the Popes. The town had grown rich and had
+ begun to build ships, which engaged in trade with the Orient. During the
+ Crusades, these ships were used to carry passengers to the Holy Land, and
+ when the passengers could not pay for their tickets in cash, they were
+ obliged to help the Venetians who were for ever increasing their colonies
+ in the AEgean Sea, in Asia Minor and in Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the end of the fourteenth century, the population had grown to two
+ hundred thousand, which made Venice the biggest city of the Middle Ages.
+ The people were without influence upon the government which was the
+ private affair of a small number of rich merchant families. They elected a
+ senate and a Doge (or Duke), but the actual rulers of the city were the
+ members of the famous Council of Ten,&mdash;who maintained themselves with
+ the help of a highly organised system of secret service men and
+ professional murderers, who kept watch upon all citizens and quietly
+ removed those who might be dangerous to the safety of their high-handed
+ and unscrupulous Committee of Public Safety.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other extreme of government, a democracy of very turbulent habits, was
+ to be found in Florence. This city controlled the main road from northern
+ Europe to Rome and used the money which it had derived from this fortunate
+ economic position to engage in manufacturing. The Florentines tried to
+ follow the example of Athens. Noblemen, priests and members of the guilds
+ all took part in the discussions of civic affairs. This led to great civic
+ upheaval. People were forever being divided into political parties and
+ these parties fought each other with intense bitterness and exiled their
+ enemies and confiscated their possessions as soon as they had gained a
+ victory in the council. After several centuries of this rule by organised
+ mobs, the inevitable happened. A powerful family made itself master of the
+ city and governed the town and the surrounding country after the fashion
+ of the old Greek "tyrants." They were called the Medici. The earliest
+ Medici had been physicians (medicus is Latin for physician, hence their
+ name), but later they had turned banker. Their banks and their pawnshops
+ were to be found in all the more important centres of trade. Even today
+ our American pawn-shops display the three golden balls which were part of
+ the coat of arms of the mighty house of the Medici, who became rulers of
+ Florence and married their daughters to the kings of France and were
+ buried in graves worthy of a Roman Caesar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there was Genoa, the great rival of Venice, where the merchants
+ specialised in trade with Tunis in Africa and the grain depots of the
+ Black Sea. Then there were more than two hundred other cities, some large
+ and some small, each a perfect commercial unit, all of them fighting their
+ neighbours and rivals with the undying hatred of neighbours who are
+ depriving each other of their profits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once the products of the Orient and Africa had been brought to these
+ distributing centres, they must be prepared for the voyage to the west and
+ the north.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Genoa carried her goods by water to Marseilles, from where they were
+ reshipped to the cities along the Rhone, which in turn served as the
+ market places of northern and western France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Venice used the land route to northern Europe. This ancient road led
+ across the Brenner pass, the old gateway for the barbarians who had
+ invaded Italy. Past Innsbruck, the merchandise was carried to Basel. From
+ there it drifted down the Rhine to the North Sea and England, or it was
+ taken to Augsburg where the Fugger family (who were both bankers and
+ manufacturers and who prospered greatly by "shaving" the coins with which
+ they paid their workmen), looked after the further distribution to
+ Nuremberg and Leipzig and the cities of the Baltic and to Wisby (on the
+ Island of Gotland) which looked after the needs of the Northern Baltic and
+ dealt directly with the Republic of Novgorod, the old commercial centre of
+ Russia which was destroyed by Ivan the Terrible in the middle of the
+ sixteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little cities on the coast of north-western Europe had an interesting
+ story of their own. The mediaeval world ate a great deal of fish. There
+ were many fast days and then people were not permitted to eat meat. For
+ those who lived away from the coast and from the rivers, this meant a diet
+ of eggs or nothing at all. But early in the thirteenth century a Dutch
+ fisherman had discovered a way of curing herring, so that it could be
+ transported to distant points. The herring fisheries of the North Sea then
+ became of great importance. But some time during the thirteenth century,
+ this useful little fish (for reasons of its own) moved from the North Sea
+ to the Baltic and the cities of that inland sea began to make money. All
+ the world now sailed to the Baltic to catch herring and as that fish could
+ only be caught during a few months each year (the rest of the time it
+ spends in deep water, raising large families of little herrings) the ships
+ would have been idle during the rest of the time unless they had found
+ another occupation. They were then used to carry the wheat of northern and
+ central Russia to southern and western Europe. On the return voyage they
+ brought spices and silks and carpets and Oriental rugs from Venice and
+ Genoa to Bruges and Hamburg and Bremen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out of such simple beginnings there developed an important system of
+ international trade which reached from the manufacturing cities of Bruges
+ and Ghent (where the almighty guilds fought pitched battles with the kings
+ of France and England and established a labour tyranny which completely
+ ruined both the employers and the workmen) to the Republic of Novgorod in
+ northern Russia, which was a mighty city until Tsar Ivan, who distrusted
+ all merchants, took the town and killed sixty thousand people in less than
+ a month's time and reduced the survivors to beggary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That they might protect themselves against pirates and excessive tolls and
+ annoying legislation, the merchants of the north founded a protective
+ league which was called the "Hansa." The Hansa, which had its headquarters
+ in Lubeck, was a voluntary association of more than one hundred cities.
+ The association maintained a navy of its own which patrolled the seas and
+ fought and defeated the Kings of England and Denmark when they dared to
+ interfere with the rights and the privileges of the mighty Hanseatic
+ merchants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wish that I had more space to tell you some of the wonderful stories of
+ this strange commerce which was carried on across the high mountains and
+ across the deep seas amidst such dangers that every voyage became a
+ glorious adventure. But it would take several volumes and it cannot be
+ done here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides, I hope that I have told you enough about the Middle Ages to make
+ you curious to read more in the excellent books of which I shall give you
+ a list at the end of this volume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Middle Ages, as I have tried to show you, had been a period of very
+ slow progress. The people who were in power believed that "progress" was a
+ very undesirable invention of the Evil One and ought to be discouraged,
+ and as they hap-pened to occupy the seats of the mighty, it was easy to
+ enforce their will upon the patient serfs and the illiterate knights. Here
+ and there a few brave souls sometimes ventured forth into the forbidden
+ region of science, but they fared badly and were considered lucky when
+ they escaped with their lives and a jail sentence of twenty years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the twelfth and thirteenth centuries the flood of international
+ commerce swept over western Europe as the Nile had swept across the valley
+ of ancient Egypt. It left behind a fertile sediment of prosperity.
+ Prosperity meant leisure hours and these leisure hours gave both men and
+ women a chance to buy manuscripts and take an interest in literature and
+ art and music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then once more was the world filled with that divine curiosity which has
+ elevated man from the ranks of those other mammals who are his distant
+ cousins but who have remained dumb, and the cities, of whose growth and
+ development I have told you in my last chapter, offered a safe shelter to
+ these brave pioneers who dared to leave the very narrow domain of the
+ established order of things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They set to work. They opened the windows of their cloistered and studious
+ cells. A flood of sunlight entered the dusty rooms and showed them the
+ cobwebs which had gathered during the long period of semi-darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They began to clean house. Next they cleaned their gardens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they went out into the open fields, outside the crumbling town walls,
+ and said, "This is a good world. We are glad that we live in it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that moment, the Middle Ages came to an end and a new world began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RENAISSANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ PEOPLE ONCE MORE DARED TO BE HAPPY JUST BECAUSE THEY WERE ALIVE. THEY
+ TRIED TO SAVE THE REMAINS OF THE OLDER AND MORE AGREEABLE CIVILISATION OF
+ ROME AND GREECE AND THEY WERE SO PROUD OF THEIR ACHIEVEMENTS THAT THEY
+ SPOKE OF A RENAISSANCE OR RE-BIRTH OF CIVILISATION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Renaissance was not a political or religious movement. It was a state
+ of mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men of the Renaissance continued to be the obedient sons of the mother
+ church. They were subjects of kings and emperors and dukes and murmured
+ not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But their outlook upon life was changed. They began to wear different
+ clothes&mdash;to speak a different language&mdash;to live different lives
+ in different houses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They no longer concentrated all their thoughts and their efforts upon the
+ blessed existence that awaited them in Heaven. They tried to establish
+ their Paradise upon this planet, and, truth to tell, they succeeded in a
+ remarkable degree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have quite often warned you against the danger that lies in historical
+ dates. People take them too literally. They think of the Middle Ages as a
+ period of darkness and ignorance. "Click," says the clock, and the
+ Renaissance begins and cities and palaces are flooded with the bright
+ sunlight of an eager intellectual curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a matter of fact, it is quite impossible to draw such sharp lines. The
+ thirteenth century belonged most decidedly to the Middle Ages. All
+ historians agree upon that. But was it a time of darkness and stagnation
+ merely? By no means. People were tremendously alive. Great states were
+ being founded. Large centres of commerce were being developed. High above
+ the turretted towers of the castle and the peaked roof of the town-hall,
+ rose the slender spire of the newly built Gothic cathedral. Everywhere the
+ world was in motion. The high and mighty gentlemen of the city-hall, who
+ had just become conscious of their own strength (by way of their recently
+ acquired riches) were struggling for more power with their feudal masters.
+ The members of the guilds who had just become aware of the important fact
+ that "numbers count" were fighting the high and mighty gentlemen of the
+ city-hall. The king and his shrewd advisers went fishing in these troubled
+ waters and caught many a shining bass of profit which they proceeded to
+ cook and eat before the noses of the surprised and disappointed
+ councillors and guild brethren.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To enliven the scenery during the long hours of evening when the badly
+ lighted streets did not invite further political and economic dispute, the
+ Troubadours and Minnesingers told their stories and sang their songs of
+ romance and adventure and heroism and loyalty to all fair women. Meanwhile
+ youth, impatient of the slowness of progress, flocked to the universities,
+ and thereby hangs a story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Middle Ages were "internationally minded." That sounds difficult, but
+ wait until I explain it to you. We modern people are "nationally minded."
+ We are Americans or Englishmen or Frenchmen or Italians and speak English
+ or French or Italian and go to English and French and Italian
+ universities, unless we want to specialise in some particular branch of
+ learning which is only taught elsewhere, and then we learn another
+ language and go to Munich or Madrid or Moscow. But the people of the
+ thirteenth or fourteenth century rarely talked of themselves as Englishmen
+ or Frenchmen or Italians. They said, "I am a citizen of Sheffield or
+ Bordeaux or Genoa." Because they all belonged to one and the same church
+ they felt a certain bond of brotherhood. And as all educated men could
+ speak Latin, they possessed an international language which removed the
+ stupid language barriers which have grown up in modern Europe and which
+ place the small nations at such an enormous disadvantage. Just as an
+ example, take the case of Erasmus, the great preacher of tolerance and
+ laughter, who wrote his books in the sixteenth century. He was the native
+ of a small Dutch village. He wrote in Latin and all the world was his
+ audience. If he were alive to-day, he would write in Dutch. Then only five
+ or six million people would be able to read him. To be understood by the
+ rest of Europe and America, his publishers would be obliged to translate
+ his books into twenty different languages. That would cost a lot of money
+ and most likely the publishers would never take the trouble or the risk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six hundred years ago that could not happen. The greater part of the
+ people were still very ignorant and could not read or write at all. But
+ those who had mastered the difficult art of handling the goose-quill
+ belonged to an international republic of letters which spread across the
+ entire continent and which knew of no boundaries and respected no
+ limitations of language or nationality. The universities were the
+ strongholds of this republic. Unlike modern fortifications, they did not
+ follow the frontier. They were to be found wherever a teacher and a few
+ pupils happened to find themselves together. There again the Middle Ages
+ and the Renaissance differed from our own time. Nowadays, when a new
+ university is built, the process (almost invariably) is as follows: Some
+ rich man wants to do something for the community in which he lives or a
+ particular religious sect wants to build a school to keep its faithful
+ children under decent supervision, or a state needs doc-tors and lawyers
+ and teachers. The university begins as a large sum of money which is
+ deposited in a bank. This money is then used to construct buildings and
+ laboratories and dormitories. Finally professional teachers are hired,
+ entrance examinations are held and the university is on the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the Middle Ages things were done differently. A wise man said to
+ himself, "I have discovered a great truth. I must impart my knowledge to
+ others." And he began to preach his wisdom wherever and whenever he could
+ get a few people to listen to him, like a modern soap-box orator. If he
+ was an interesting speaker, the crowd came and stayed. If he was dull,
+ they shrugged their shoulders and continued their way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by certain young men began to come regularly to hear the words of
+ wisdom of this great teacher. They brought copybooks with them and a
+ little bottle of ink and a goose quill and wrote down what seemed to be
+ important. One day it rained. The teacher and his pupils retired to an
+ empty basement or the room of the "Professor." The learned man sat in his
+ chair and the boys sat on the floor. That was the beginning of the
+ University, the "universitas," a corporation of professors and students
+ during the Middle Ages, when the "teacher" counted for everything and the
+ building in which he taught counted for very little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an example, let me tell you of something that happened in the ninth
+ century. In the town of Salerno near Naples there were a number of
+ excellent physicians. They attracted people desirous of learning the
+ medical profession and for almost a thousand years (until 1817) there was
+ a university of Salerno which taught the wisdom of Hippocrates, the great
+ Greek doctor who had practiced his art in ancient Hellas in the fifth
+ century before the birth of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there was Abelard, the young priest from Brittany, who early in the
+ twelfth century began to lecture on theology and logic in Paris. Thousands
+ of eager young men flocked to the French city to hear him. Other priests
+ who disagreed with him stepped forward to explain their point of view.
+ Paris was soon filled with a clamouring multitude of Englishmen and
+ Germans and Italians and students from Sweden and Hungary and around the
+ old cathedral which stood on a little island in the Seine there grew the
+ famous University of Paris. In Bologna in Italy, a monk by the name of
+ Gratian had compiled a text-book for those whose business it was to know
+ the laws of the church. Young priests and many laymen then came from all
+ over Europe to hear Gratian explain his ideas. To protect themselves
+ against the landlords and the innkeepers and the boarding-house ladies of
+ the city, they formed a corporation (or University) and behold the
+ beginning of the university of Bologna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next there was a quarrel in the University of Paris. We do not know what
+ caused it, but a number of disgruntled teachers together with their pupils
+ crossed the channel and found a hospitable home in a little village on the
+ Thames called Oxford, and in this way the famous University of Oxford came
+ into being. In the same way, in the year 1222, there had been a split in
+ the University of Bologna. The discontented teachers (again followed by
+ their pupils) had moved to Padua and their proud city thenceforward
+ boasted of a university of its own. And so it went from Valladolid in
+ Spain to Cracow in distant Poland and from Poitiers in France to Rostock
+ in Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite true that much of the teaching done by these early professors
+ would sound absurd to our ears, trained to listen to logarithms and
+ geometrical theorems. The point however, which I want to make is this&mdash;the
+ Middle Ages and especially the thirteenth century were not a time when the
+ world stood entirely still. Among the younger generation, there was life,
+ there was enthusiasm, and there was a restless if somewhat bashful asking
+ of questions. And out of this turmoil grew the Renaissance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But just before the curtain went down upon the last scene of the Mediaeval
+ world, a solitary figure crossed the stage, of whom you ought to know more
+ than his mere name. This man was called Dante. He was the son of a
+ Florentine lawyer who belonged to the Alighieri family and he saw the
+ light of day in the year 1265. He grew up in the city of his ancestors
+ while Giotto was painting his stories of the life of St. Francis of Assisi
+ upon the walls of the Church of the Holy Cross, but often when he went to
+ school, his frightened eyes would see the puddles of blood which told of
+ the terrible and endless warfare that raged forever between the Guelphs
+ and the Ghibellines, the followers of the Pope and the adherents of the
+ Emperors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he grew up, he became a Guelph, because his father had been one
+ before him, just as an American boy might become a Democrat or a
+ Republican, simply because his father had happened to be a Democrat or a
+ Republican. But after a few years, Dante saw that Italy, unless united
+ under a single head, threatened to perish as a victim of the disordered
+ jealousies of a thousand little cities. Then he became a Ghilbeiline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked for help beyond the Alps. He hoped that a mighty emperor might
+ come and re-establish unity and order. Alas! he hoped in vain. The
+ Ghibellines were driven out of Florence in the year 1802. From that time
+ on until the day of his death amidst the dreary ruins of Ravenna, in the
+ year 1321, Dante was a homeless wanderer, eating the bread of charity at
+ the table of rich patrons whose names would have sunk into the deepest pit
+ of oblivion but for this single fact, that they had been kind to a poet in
+ his misery. During the many years of exile, Dante felt compelled to
+ justify himself and his actions when he had been a political leader in his
+ home-town, and when he had spent his days walking along the banks of the
+ Arno that he might catch a glimpse of the lovely Beatrice Portinari, who
+ died the wife of another man, a dozen years before the Ghibelline
+ disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had failed in the ambitions of his career. He had faithfully served the
+ town of is birth and before a corrupt court he had been accused of
+ stealing the public funds and had been condemned to be burned alive should
+ he venture back within the realm of the city of Florence. To clear himself
+ before his own conscience and before his contemporaries, Dante then
+ created an Imaginary World and with great detail he described the
+ circumstances which had led to his defeat and depicted the hopeless
+ condition of greed and lust and hatred which had turned his fair and
+ beloved Italy into a battlefield for the pitiless mercenaries of wicked
+ and selfish tyrants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He tells us how on the Thursday before Easter of the year 1300 he had lost
+ his way in a dense forest and how he found his path barred by a leopard
+ and a lion and a wolf. He gave himself up for lost when a white figure
+ appeared amidst the trees. It was Virgil, the Roman poet and philosopher,
+ sent upon his errand of mercy by the Blessed Virgin and by Beatrice, who
+ from high Heaven watched over the fate of her true lover. Virgil then
+ takes Dante through Purgatory and through Hell. Deeper and deeper the path
+ leads them until they reach the lowest pit where Lucifer himself stands
+ frozen into the eternal ice surrounded by the most terrible of sinners,
+ traitors and liars and those who have achieved fame and success by lies
+ and by deceit. But before the two wanderers have reached this terrible
+ spot, Dante has met all those who in some way or other have played a role
+ in the history of his beloved city. Emperors and Popes, dashing knights
+ and whining usurers, they are all there, doomed to eternal punishment or
+ awaiting the day of deliverance, when they shall leave Purgatory for
+ Heaven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a curious story. It is a handbook of everything the people of the
+ thirteenth century did and felt and feared and prayed for. Through it all
+ moves the figure of the lonely Florentine exile, forever followed by the
+ shadow of his own despair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And behold! when the gates of death were closing upon the sad poet of the
+ Middle Ages, the portals of life swung open to the child who was to be the
+ first of the men of the Renaissance. That was Francesco Petrarca, the son
+ of the notary public of the little town of Arezzo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Francesco's father had belonged to the same political party as Dante. He
+ too had been exiled and thus it happened that Petrarca (or Petrarch, as we
+ call him) was born away from Florence. At the age of fifteen he was sent
+ to Montpellier in France that he might become a lawyer like his father.
+ But the boy did not want to be a jurist. He hated the law. He wanted to be
+ a scholar and a poet&mdash;and because he wanted to be a scholar and a
+ poet beyond everything else, he became one, as people of a strong will are
+ apt to do. He made long voyages, copying manuscripts in Flanders and in
+ the cloisters along the Rhine and in Paris and Liege and finally in Rome.
+ Then he went to live in a lonely valley of the wild mountains of Vaucluse,
+ and there he studied and wrote and soon he had become so famous for his
+ verse and for his learning that both the University of Paris and the king
+ of Naples invited him to come and teach their students and subjects. On
+ the way to his new job, he was obliged to pass through Rome. The people
+ had heard of his fame as an editor of half-forgotten Roman authors. They
+ decided to honour him and in the ancient forum of the Imperial City,
+ Petrarch was crowned with the laurel wreath of the Poet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that moment on, his life was an endless career of honour and
+ appreciation. He wrote the things which people wanted most to hear. They
+ were tired of theological disputations. Poor Dante could wander through
+ hell as much as he wanted. But Petrarch wrote of love and of nature and
+ the sun and never mentioned those gloomy things which seemed to have been
+ the stock in trade of the last generation. And when Petrarch came to a
+ city, all the people flocked out to meet him and he was received like a
+ conquering hero. If he happened to bring his young friend Boccaccio, the
+ story teller, with him, so much the better. They were both men of their
+ time, full of curiosity, willing to read everything once, digging in
+ forgotten and musty libraries that they might find still another
+ manuscript of Virgil or Ovid or Lucrece or any of the other old Latin
+ poets. They were good Christians. Of course they were! Everyone was. But
+ no need of going around with a long face and wearing a dirty coat just
+ because some day or other you were going to die. Life was good. People
+ were meant to be happy. You desired proof of this? Very well. Take a spade
+ and dig into the soil. What did you find? Beautiful old statues. Beautiful
+ old vases. Ruins of ancient buildings. All these things were made by the
+ people of the greatest empire that ever existed. They ruled all the world
+ for a thousand years. They were strong and rich and handsome (just look at
+ that bust of the Emperor Augustus!). Of course, they were not Christians
+ and they would never be able to enter Heaven. At best they would spend
+ their days in purgatory, where Dante had just paid them a visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But who cared? To have lived in a world like that of ancient Rome was
+ heaven enough for any mortal being. And anyway, we live but once. Let us
+ be happy and cheerful for the mere joy of existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, in short, was the spirit that had begun to fill the narrow and
+ crooked streets of the many little Italian cities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You know what we mean by the "bicycle craze" or the "automobile craze."
+ Some one invents a bicycle. People who for hundreds of thousands of years
+ have moved slowly and painfully from one place to another go "crazy" over
+ the prospect of rolling rapidly and easily over hill and dale. Then a
+ clever mechanic makes the first automobile. No longer is it necessary to
+ pedal and pedal and pedal. You just sit and let little drops of gasoline
+ do the work for you. Then everybody wants an automobile. Everybody talks
+ about Rolls-Royces and Flivvers and carburetors and mileage and oil.
+ Explorers penetrate into the hearts of unknown countries that they may
+ find new supplies of gas. Forests arise in Sumatra and in the Congo to
+ supply us with rubber. Rubber and oil become so valuable that people fight
+ wars for their possession. The whole world is "automobile mad" and little
+ children can say "car" before they learn to whisper "papa" and "mamma."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the fourteenth century, the Italian people went crazy about the newly
+ discovered beauties of the buried world of Rome. Soon their enthusiasm was
+ shared by all the people of western Europe. The finding of an unknown
+ manuscript became the excuse for a civic holiday. The man who wrote a
+ grammar became as popular as the fellow who nowadays invents a new
+ spark-plug. The humanist, the scholar who devoted his time and his
+ energies to a study of "homo" or mankind (instead of wasting his hours
+ upon fruitless theological investigations), that man was regarded with
+ greater honour and a deeper respect than was ever bestowed upon a hero who
+ had just conquered all the Cannibal Islands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the midst of this intellectual upheaval, an event occurred which
+ greatly favoured the study of the ancient philosophers and authors. The
+ Turks were renewing their attacks upon Europe. Constantinople, capital of
+ the last remnant of the original Roman Empire, was hard pressed. In the
+ year 1393 the Emperor, Manuel Paleologue, sent Emmanuel Chrysoloras to
+ western Europe to explain the desperate state of old Byzantium and to ask
+ for aid. This aid never came. The Roman Catholic world was more than
+ willing to see the Greek Catholic world go to the punishment that awaited
+ such wicked heretics. But however indifferent western Europe might be to
+ the fate of the Byzantines, they were greatly interested in the ancient
+ Greeks whose colonists had founded the city on the Bosphorus ten centuries
+ after the Trojan war. They wanted to learn Greek that they might read
+ Aristotle and Homer and Plato. They wanted to learn it very badly, but
+ they had no books and no grammars and no teachers. The magistrates of
+ Florence heard of the visit of Chrysoloras. The people of their city were
+ "crazy to learn Greek." Would he please come and teach them? He would, and
+ behold! the first professor of Greek teaching alpha, beta, gamma to
+ hundreds of eager young men, begging their way to the city of the Arno,
+ living in stables and in dingy attics that they night learn how to decline
+ the verb [gr paidenw paideneis paidenei] and enter into the companionship
+ of Sophocles and Homer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile in the universities, the old schoolmen, teaching their ancient
+ theology and their antiquated logic; explaining the hidden mysteries of
+ the old Testament and discussing the strange science of their
+ Greek-Arabic-Spanish-Latin edition of Aristotle, looked on in dismay and
+ horror. Next, they turned angry. This thing was going too far. The young
+ men were deserting the lecture halls of the established universities to go
+ and listen to some wild-eyed "humanist" with his newfangled notions about
+ a "reborn civilization."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went to the authorities. They complained. But one cannot force an
+ unwilling horse to drink and one cannot make unwilling ears listen to
+ something which does not really interest them. The schoolmen were losing
+ ground rapidly. Here and there they scored a short victory. They combined
+ forces with those fanatics who hated to see other people enjoy a happiness
+ which was foreign to their own souls. In Florence, the centre of the Great
+ Rebirth, a terrible fight was fought between the old order and the new. A
+ Dominican monk, sour of face and bitter in his hatred of beauty, was the
+ leader of the mediaeval rear-guard. He fought a valiant battle. Day after
+ day he thundered his warnings of God's holy wrath through the wide halls
+ of Santa Maria del Fiore. "Repent," he cried, "repent of your godlessness,
+ of your joy in things that are not holy!" He began to hear voices and to
+ see flaming swords that flashed through the sky. He preached to the little
+ children that they might not fall into the errors of these ways which were
+ leading their fathers to perdition. He organised companies of boy-scouts,
+ devoted to the service of the great God whose prophet he claimed to be. In
+ a sudden moment of frenzy, the frightened people promised to do penance
+ for their wicked love of beauty and pleasure. They carried their books and
+ their statues and their paintings to the market place and celebrated a
+ wild "carnival of the vanities" with holy singing and most unholy dancing,
+ while Savonarola applied his torch to the accumulated treasures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But when the ashes cooled down, the people began to realise what they had
+ lost. This terrible fanatic had made them destroy that which they had come
+ to love above all things. They turned against him, Savonarola was thrown
+ into jail. He was tortured. But he refused to repent for anything he had
+ done. He was an honest man. He had tried to live a holy life. He had
+ willingly destroyed those who deliberately refused to share his own point
+ of view. It had been his duty to eradicate evil wherever he found it. A
+ love of heathenish books and heathenish beauty in the eyes of this
+ faithful son of the Church, had been an evil. But he stood alone. He had
+ fought the battle of a time that was dead and gone. The Pope in Rome never
+ moved a finger to save him. On the contrary, he approved of his "faithful
+ Florentines" when they dragged Savonarola to the gallows, hanged him and
+ burned his body amidst the cheerful howling and yelling of the mob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a sad ending, but quite inevitable. Savonarola would have been a
+ great man in the eleventh century. In the fifteenth century he was merely
+ the leader of a lost cause. For better or worse, the Middle Ages had come
+ to an end when the Pope had turned humanist and when the Vatican became
+ the most important museum of Roman and Greek antiquities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE AGE OF EXPRESSION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE PEOPLE BEGAN TO FEEL THE NEED OF GIVING EXPRESSION TO THEIR NEWLY
+ DISCOVERED JOY OF LIVING. THEY EXPRESSED THEIR HAPPINESS IN POETRY AND IN
+ SCULPTURE AND IN ARCHITECTURE AND IN PAINTING AND IN THE BOOKS THEY
+ PRINTED
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the year 1471 there died a pious old man who had spent seventy-two of
+ his ninety-one years behind the sheltering walls of the cloister of Mount
+ St. Agnes near the good town of Zwolle, the old Dutch Hanseatic city on
+ the river Ysel. He was known as Brother Thomas and because he had been
+ born in the village of Kempen, he was called Thomas a Kempis. At the age
+ of twelve he had been sent to Deventer, where Gerhard Groot, a brilliant
+ graduate of the universities of Paris, Cologne and Prague, and famous as a
+ wandering preacher, had founded the Society of the Brothers of the Common
+ Life. The good brothers were humble laymen who tried to live the simple
+ life of the early Apostles of Christ while working at their regular jobs
+ as carpenters and house-painters and stone masons. They maintained an
+ excellent school, that deserving boys of poor parents might be taught the
+ wisdom of the Fathers of the church. At this school, little Thomas had
+ learned how to conjugate Latin verbs and how to copy manuscripts. Then he
+ had taken his vows, had put his little bundle of books upon his back, had
+ wandered to Zwolle and with a sigh of relief he had closed the door upon a
+ turbulent world which did not attract him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas lived in an age of turmoil, pestilence and sudden death. In central
+ Europe, in Bohemia, the devoted disciples of Johannus Huss, the friend and
+ follower of John Wycliffe, the English reformer, were avenging with a
+ terrible warfare the death of their beloved leader who had been burned at
+ the stake by order of that same Council of Constance, which had promised
+ him a safe-conduct if he would come to Switzerland and explain his
+ doctrines to the Pope, the Emperor, twenty-three cardinals, thirty-three
+ archbishops and bishops, one hundred and fifty abbots and more than a
+ hundred princes and dukes who had gathered together to reform their
+ church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the west, France had been fighting for a hundred years that she might
+ drive the English from her territories and just then was saved from utter
+ defeat by the fortunate appearance of Joan of Arc. And no sooner had this
+ struggle come to an end than France and Burgundy were at each other's
+ throats, engaged upon a struggle of life and death for the supremacy of
+ western Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the south, a Pope at Rome was calling the curses of Heaven down upon a
+ second Pope who resided at Avignon, in southern France, and who retaliated
+ in kind. In the far east the Turks were destroying the last remnants of
+ the Roman Empire and the Russians had started upon a final crusade to
+ crush the power of their Tartar masters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of all this, Brother Thomas in his quiet cell never heard. He had his
+ manuscripts and his own thoughts and he was contented. He poured his love
+ of God into a little volume. He called it the Imitation of Christ. It has
+ since been translated into more languages than any other book save the
+ Bible. It has been read by quite as many people as ever studied the Holy
+ Scriptures. It has influenced the lives of countless millions. And it was
+ the work of a man whose highest ideal of existence was expressed in the
+ simple wish that "he might quietly spend his days sitting in a little
+ corner with a little book."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good Brother Thomas represented the purest ideals of the Middle Ages.
+ Surrounded on all sides by the forces of the victorious Renaissance, with
+ the humanists loudly proclaiming the coming of modern times, the Middle
+ Ages gathered strength for a last sally. Monasteries were reformed. Monks
+ gave up the habits of riches and vice. Simple, straightforward and honest
+ men, by the example of their blameless and devout lives, tried to bring
+ the people back to the ways of righteousness and humble resignation to the
+ will of God. But all to no avail. The new world rushed past these good
+ people. The days of quiet meditation were gone. The great era of
+ "expression" had begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here and now let me say that I am sorry that I must use so many "big
+ words." I wish that I could write this history in words of one syllable.
+ But it cannot be done. You cannot write a text-book of geometry without
+ reference to a hypotenuse and triangles and a rectangular parallelopiped.
+ You simply have to learn what those words mean or do without mathematics.
+ In history (and in all life) you will eventually be obliged to learn the
+ meaning of many strange words of Latin and Greek origin. Why not do it
+ now?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When I say that the Renaissance was an era of expression, I mean this:
+ People were no longer contented to be the audience and sit still while the
+ emperor and the pope told them what to do and what to think. They wanted
+ to be actors upon the stage of life. They insisted upon giving
+ "expression" to their own individual ideas. If a man happened to be
+ interested in statesmanship like the Florentine historian, Niccolo
+ Macchiavelli, then he "expressed" himself in his books which revealed his
+ own idea of a successful state and an efficient ruler. If on the other
+ hand he had a liking for painting, he "expressed" his love for beautiful
+ lines and lovely colours in the pictures which have made the names of
+ Giotto, Fra Angelico, Rafael and a thousand others household words
+ wherever people have learned to care for those things which express a true
+ and lasting beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If this love for colour and line happened to be combined with an interest
+ in mechanics and hydraulics, the result was a Leonardo da Vinci, who
+ painted his pictures, experimented with his balloons and flying machines,
+ drained the marshes of the Lombardian plains and "expressed" his joy and
+ interest in all things between Heaven and Earth in prose, in painting, in
+ sculpture and in curiously conceived engines. When a man of gigantic
+ strength, like Michael Angelo, found the brush and the palette too soft
+ for his strong hands, he turned to sculpture and to architecture, and
+ hacked the most terrific creatures out of heavy blocks of marble and drew
+ the plans for the church of St. Peter, the most concrete "expression" of
+ the glories of the triumphant church. And so it went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All Italy (and very soon all of Europe) was filled with men and women who
+ lived that they might add their mite to the sum total of our accumulated
+ treasures of knowledge and beauty and wisdom. In Germany, in the city of
+ Mainz, Johann zum Gansefleisch, commonly known as Johann Gutenberg, had
+ just invented a new method of copying books. He had studied the old
+ woodcuts and had perfected a system by which individual letters of soft
+ lead could be placed in such a way that they formed words and whole pages.
+ It is true, he soon lost all his money in a law-suit which had to do with
+ the original invention of the press. He died in poverty, but the
+ "expression" of his particular inventive genius lived after him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon Aldus in Venice and Etienne in Paris and Plantin in Antwerp and
+ Froben in Basel were flooding the world with carefully edited editions of
+ the classics printed in the Gothic letters of the Gutenberg Bible, or
+ printed in the Italian type which we use in this book, or printed in Greek
+ letters, or in Hebrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the whole world became the eager audience of those who had something
+ to say. The day when learning had been a monopoly of a privileged few came
+ to an end. And the last excuse for ignorance was removed from this world,
+ when Elzevier of Haarlem began to print his cheap and popular editions.
+ Then Aristotle and Plato, Virgil and Horace and Pliny, all the goodly
+ company of the ancient authors and philosophers and scientists, offered to
+ become man's faithful friend in exchange for a few paltry pennies.
+ Humanism had made all men free and equal before the printed word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GREAT DISCOVERIES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BUT NOW THAT PEOPLE HAD BROKEN THROUGH THE BONDS OF THEIR NARROW MEDIAEVAL
+ LIMITATIONS, THEY HAD TO HAVE MORE ROOM FOR THEIR WANDERINGS. THE EUROPEAN
+ WORLD HAD GROWN TOO SMALL FOR THEIR AMBITIONS. IT WAS THE TIME OF THE
+ GREAT VOYAGES OF DISCOVERY
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Crusades had been a lesson in the liberal art of travelling. But very
+ few people had ever ventured beyond the well-known beaten track which led
+ from Venice to Jaffe. In the thirteenth century the Polo brothers,
+ merchants of Venice, had wandered across the great Mongolian desert and
+ after climbing mountains as high as the moon, they had found their way to
+ the court of the great Khan of Cathay, the mighty emperor of China. The
+ son of one of the Polos, by the name of Marco, had written a book about
+ their adventures, which covered a period of more than twenty years. The
+ astonished world had gaped at his descriptions of the golden towers of the
+ strange island of Zipangu, which was his Italian way of spelling Japan.
+ Many people had wanted to go east, that they might find this gold-land and
+ grow rich. But the trip was too far and too dangerous and so they stayed
+ at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, there was always the possibility of making the voyage by sea.
+ But the sea was very unpopular in the Middle Ages and for many very good
+ reasons. In the first place, ships were very small. The vessels on which
+ Magellan made his famous trip around the world, which lasted many years,
+ were not as large as a modern ferryboat. They carried from twenty to fifty
+ men, who lived in dingy quarters (too low to allow any of them to stand up
+ straight) and the sailors were obliged to eat poorly cooked food as the
+ kitchen arrangements were very bad and no fire could be made whenever the
+ weather was the least bit rough. The mediaeval world knew how to pickle
+ herring and how to dry fish. But there were no canned goods and fresh
+ vegetables were never seen on the bill of fare as soon as the coast had
+ been left behind. Water was carried in small barrels. It soon became stale
+ and then tasted of rotten wood and iron rust and was full of slimy growing
+ things. As the people of the Middle Ages knew nothing about microbes
+ (Roger Bacon, the learned monk of the thirteenth century seems to have
+ suspected their existence, but he wisely kept his discovery to himself)
+ they often drank unclean water and sometimes the whole crew died of
+ typhoid fever. Indeed the mortality on board the ships of the earliest
+ navigators was terrible. Of the two hundred sailors who in the year 1519
+ left Seville to accompany Magellan on his famous voyage around the world,
+ only eighteen returned. As late as the seventeenth century when there was
+ a brisk trade between western Europe and the Indies, a mortality of 40
+ percent was nothing unusual for a trip from Amsterdam to Batavia and back.
+ The greater part of these victims died of scurvy, a disease which is
+ caused by lack of fresh vegetables and which affects the gums and poisons
+ the blood until the patient dies of sheer exhaustion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under those circumstances you will understand that the sea did not attract
+ the best elements of the population. Famous discoverers like Magellan and
+ Columbus and Vasco da Gama travelled at the head of crews that were almost
+ entirely composed of ex-jailbirds, future murderers and pickpockets out of
+ a Job.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These navigators certainly deserve our admiration for the courage and the
+ pluck with which they accomplished their hopeless tasks in the face of
+ difficulties of which the people of our own comfortable world can have no
+ conception. Their ships were leaky. The rigging was clumsy. Since the
+ middle of the thirteenth century they had possessed some sort of a compass
+ (which had come to Europe from China by way of Arabia and the Crusades)
+ but they had very bad and incorrect maps. They set their course by God and
+ by guess. If luck was with them they returned after one or two or three
+ years. In the other case, their bleeched bones remained behind on some
+ lonely beach. But they were true pioneers. They gambled with luck. Life to
+ them was a glorious adventure. And all the suffering, the thirst and the
+ hunger and the pain were forgotten when their eyes beheld the dim outlines
+ of a new coast or the placid waters of an ocean that had lain forgotten
+ since the beginning of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again I wish that I could make this book a thousand pages long. The
+ subject of the early discoveries is so fascinating. But history, to give
+ you a true idea of past times, should be like those etchings which
+ Rembrandt used to make. It should cast a vivid light on certain important
+ causes, on those which are best and greatest. All the rest should be left
+ in the shadow or should be indicated by a few lines. And in this chapter I
+ can only give you a short list of the most important discoveries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Keep in mind that all during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the
+ navigators were trying to accomplish just ONE THING&mdash;they wanted to
+ find a comfortable and safe road to the empire of Cathay (China), to the
+ island of Zipangu (Japan) and to those mysterious islands, where grew the
+ spices which the mediaeval world had come to like since the days of the
+ Crusades, and which people needed in those days before the introduction of
+ cold storage, when meat and fish spoiled very quickly and could only be
+ eaten after a liberal sprinkling of pepper or nutmeg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Venetians and the Genoese had been the great navigators of the
+ Mediterranean, but the honour for exploring the coast of the Atlantic goes
+ to the Portuguese. Spain and Portugal were full of that patriotic energy
+ which their age-old struggle against the Moorish invaders had developed.
+ Such energy, once it exists, can easily be forced into new channels. In
+ the thirteenth century, King Alphonso III had conquered the kingdom of
+ Algarve in the southwestern corner of the Spanish peninsula and had added
+ it to his dominions. In the next century, the Portuguese had turned the
+ tables on the Mohammedans, had crossed the straits of Gibraltar and had
+ taken possession of Ceuta, opposite the Arabic city of Ta'Rifa (a word
+ which in Arabic means "inventory" and which by way of the Spanish language
+ has come down to us as "tariff,") and Tangiers, which became the capital
+ of an African addition to Algarve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were ready to begin their career as explorers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1415, Prince Henry, known as Henry the Navigator, the son of
+ John I of Portugal and Philippa, the daughter of John of Gaunt (about whom
+ you can read in Richard II, a play by William Shakespeare) began to make
+ preparations for the systematic exploration of northwestern Africa. Before
+ this, that hot and sandy coast had been visited by the Phoenicians and by
+ the Norsemen, who remembered it as the home of the hairy "wild man" whom
+ we have come to know as the gorilla. One after another, Prince Henry and
+ his captains discovered the Canary Islands&mdash;re-discovered the island
+ of Madeira which a century before had been visited by a Genoese ship,
+ carefully charted the Azores which had been vaguely known to both the
+ Portuguese and the Spaniards, and caught a glimpse of the mouth of the
+ Senegal River on the west coast of Africa, which they supposed to be the
+ western mouth of the Nile. At last, by the middle of the Fifteenth
+ Century, they saw Cape Verde, or the Green Cape, and the Cape Verde
+ Islands, which lie almost halfway between the coast of Africa and Brazil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Henry did not restrict himself in his investigations to the waters of
+ the Ocean. He was Grand Master of the Order of Christ. This was a
+ Portuguese continuation of the crusading order of the Templars which had
+ been abolished by Pope Clement V in the year 1312 at the request of King
+ Philip the Fair of France, who had improved the occasion by burning his
+ own Templars at the stake and stealing all their possessions. Prince Henry
+ used the revenues of the domains of his religious order to equip several
+ expeditions which explored the hinterland of the Sahara and of the coast
+ of Guinea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was still very much a son of the Middle Ages and spent a great deal
+ of time and wasted a lot of money upon a search for the mysterious
+ "Presser John," the mythical Christian Priest who was said to be the
+ Emperor of a vast empire "situated somewhere in the east." The story of
+ this strange potentate had first been told in Europe in the middle of the
+ twelfth century. For three hundred years people had tried to find "Presser
+ John" and his descendants Henry took part in the search. Thirty years
+ after his death, the riddle was solved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1486 Bartholomew Diaz, trying to find the land of Prester John
+ by sea, had reached the southernmost point of Africa. At first he called
+ it the Storm Cape, on account of the strong winds which had prevented him
+ from continuing his voyage toward the east, but the Lisbon pilots who
+ understood the importance of this discovery in their quest for the India
+ water route, changed the name into that of the Cape of Good Hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One year later, Pedro de Covilham, provided with letters of credit on the
+ house of Medici, started upon a similar mission by land. He crossed the
+ Mediterranean and after leaving Egypt, he travelled southward. He reached
+ Aden, and from there, travelling through the waters of the Persian Gulf
+ which few white men had seen since the days of Alexander the Great,
+ eighteen centuries before, he visited Goa and Calicut on the coast of
+ India where he got a great deal of news about the island of the Moon
+ (Madagascar) which was supposed to lie halfway between Africa and India.
+ Then he returned, paid a secret visit to Mecca and to Medina, crossed the
+ Red Sea once more and in the year 1490 he discovered the realm of Prester
+ John, who was no one less than the Black Negus (or King) of Abyssinia,
+ whose ancestors had adopted Christianity in the fourth century, seven
+ hundred years before the Christian missionaries had found their way to
+ Scandinavia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These many voyages had convinced the Portuguese geographers and
+ cartographers that while the voyage to the Indies by an eastern sea-route
+ was possible, it was by no means easy. Then there arose a great debate.
+ Some people wanted to continue the explorations east of the Cape of Good
+ Hope. Others said, "No, we must sail west across the Atlantic and then we
+ shall reach Cathay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us state right here that most intelligent people of that day were
+ firmly convinced that the earth was not as flat as a pancake but was
+ round. The Ptolemean system of the universe, invented and duly described
+ by Claudius Ptolemy, the great Egyptian geographer, who had lived in the
+ second century of our era, which had served the simple needs of the men of
+ the Middle Ages, had long been discarded by the scientists of the
+ Renaissance. They had accepted the doctrine of the Polish mathematician,
+ Nicolaus Copernicus, whose studies had convinced him that the earth was
+ one of a number of round planets which turned around the sun, a discovery
+ which he did not venture to publish for thirty-six years (it was printed
+ in 1548, the year of his death) from fear of the Holy Inquisition, a Papal
+ court which had been established in the thirteenth century when the
+ heresies of the Albigenses and the Waldenses in France and in Italy (very
+ mild heresies of devoutly pious people who did not believe in private
+ property and preferred to live in Christ-like poverty) had for a moment
+ threatened the absolute power of the bishops of Rome. But the belief in
+ the roundness of the earth was common among the nautical experts and, as I
+ said, they were now debating the respective advantages of the eastern and
+ the western routes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the advocates of the western route was a Genoese mariner by the name
+ of Cristoforo Colombo. He was the son of a wool merchant. He seems to have
+ been a student at the University of Pavia where he specialised in
+ mathematics and geometry. Then he took up his father's trade but soon we
+ find him in Chios in the eastern Mediterranean travelling on business.
+ Thereafter we hear of voyages to England but whether he went north in
+ search of wool or as the captain of a ship we do not know. In February of
+ the year 1477, Colombo (if we are to believe his own words) visited
+ Iceland, but very likely he only got as far as the Faroe Islands which are
+ cold enough in February to be mistaken for Iceland by any one. Here
+ Colombo met the descendants of those brave Norsemen who in the tenth
+ century had settled in Greenland and who had visited America in the
+ eleventh century, when Leif's vessel had been blown to the coast of
+ Vineland, or Labrador.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What had become of those far western colonies no one knew. The American
+ colony of Thorfinn Karlsefne, the husband of the widow of Leif's brother
+ Thorstein, founded in the year 1003, had been discontinued three years
+ later on account of the hostility of the Esquimaux. As for Greenland, not
+ a word had been heard from the settlers since the year 1440. Very likely
+ the Greenlanders had all died of the Black Death, which had just killed
+ half the people of Norway. However that might be, the tradition of a "vast
+ land in the distant west" still survived among the people of the Faroe and
+ Iceland, and Colombo must have heard of it. He gathered further
+ information among the fishermen of the northern Scottish islands and then
+ went to Portugal where he married the daughter of one of the captains who
+ had served under Prince Henry the Navigator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From that moment on (the year 1478) he devoted himself to the quest of the
+ western route to the Indies. He sent his plans for such a voyage to the
+ courts of Portugal and Spain. The Portuguese, who felt certain that they
+ possessed a monopoly of the eastern route, would not listen to his plans.
+ In Spain, Ferdinand of Aragon and Isabella of Castile, whose marriage in
+ 1469 had made Spain into a single kingdom, were busy driving the Moors
+ from their last stronghold, Granada. They had no money for risky
+ expeditions. They needed every peseta for their soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few people were ever forced to fight as desperately for their ideas as
+ this brave Italian. But the story of Colombo (or Colon or Columbus, as we
+ call him,) is too well known to bear repeating. The Moors surrendered
+ Granada on the second of January of the year 1492. In the month of April
+ of the same year, Columbus signed a contract with the King and Queen of
+ Spain. On Friday, the 3rd of August, he left Palos with three little ships
+ and a crew of 88 men, many of whom were criminals who had been offered
+ indemnity of punishment if they joined the expedition. At two o'clock in
+ the morning of Friday, the 12th of October, Columbus discovered land. On
+ the fourth of January of the year 1493, Columbus waved farewell to the 44
+ men of the little fortress of La Navidad (none of whom was ever again seen
+ alive) and returned homeward. By the middle of February he reached the
+ Azores where the Portuguese threatened to throw him into gaol. On the
+ fifteenth of March, 1493, the admiral reached Palos and together with his
+ Indians (for he was convinced that he had discovered some outlying islands
+ of the Indies and called the natives red Indians) he hastened to Barcelona
+ to tell his faithful patrons that he had been successful and that the road
+ to the gold and the silver of Cathay and Zipangu was at the disposal of
+ their most Catholic Majesties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alas, Columbus never knew the truth. Towards the end of his life, on his
+ fourth voyage, when he had touched the mainland of South America, he may
+ have suspected that all was not well with his discovery. But he died in
+ the firm belief that there was no solid continent between Europe and Asia
+ and that he had found the direct route to China.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the Portuguese, sticking to their eastern route, had been more
+ fortunate. In the year 1498, Vasco da Gama had been able to reach the
+ coast of Malabar and return safely to Lisbon with a cargo of spice. In the
+ year 1502 he had repeated the visit. But along the western route, the work
+ of exploration had been most disappointing. In 1497 and 1498 John and
+ Sebastian Cabot had tried to find a passage to Japan but they had seen
+ nothing but the snowbound coasts and the rocks of Newfoundland, which had
+ first been sighted by the Northmen, five centuries before. Amerigo
+ Vespucci, a Florentine who became the Pilot Major of Spain, and who gave
+ his name to our continent, had explored the coast of Brazil, but had found
+ not a trace of the Indies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1513, seven years after the death of Columbus, the truth at
+ last began to dawn upon the geographers of Europe. Vasco Nunez de Balboa
+ had crossed the Isthmus of Panama, had climbed the famous peak in Darien,
+ and had looked down upon a vast expanse of water which seemed to suggest
+ the existence of another ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally in the year 1519 a fleet of five small Spanish ships under command
+ of the Portuguese navigator, Ferdinand de Magellan, sailed westward (and
+ not eastward since that route, was absolutely in the hands of the
+ Portuguese who allowed no competition) in search of the Spice Islands.
+ Magellan crossed the Atlantic between Africa and Brazil and sailed
+ southward. He reached a narrow channel between the southernmost point of
+ Patagonia, the "land of the people with the big feet," and the Fire Island
+ (so named on account of a fire, the only sign of the existence of natives,
+ which the sailors watched one night). For almost five weeks the ships of
+ Magellan were at the mercy of the terrible storms and blizzards which
+ swept through the straits. A mutiny broke out among the sailors. Magellan
+ suppressed it with terrible severity and sent two of his men on shore
+ where they were left to repent of their sins at leisure. At last the
+ storms quieted down, the channel broadened, and Magellan entered a new
+ ocean. Its waves were quiet and placid. He called it the Peaceful Sea, the
+ Mare Pacifico. Then he continued in a western direction. He sailed for
+ ninety-eight days without seeing land. His people almost perished from
+ hunger and thirst and ate the rats that infested the ships, and when these
+ were all gone they chewed pieces of sail to still their gnawing hunger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In March of the year 1521 they saw land. Magellan called it the land of
+ the Ladrones (which means robbers) because the natives stole everything
+ they could lay hands on. Then further westward to the Spice Islands!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again land was sighted. A group of lonely islands. Magellan called them
+ the Philippines, after Philip, the son of his master Charles V, the Philip
+ II of unpleasant historical memory. At first Magellan was well received,
+ but when he used the guns of his ships to make Christian converts he was
+ killed by the aborigines, together with a number of his captains and
+ sailors. The survivors burned one of the three remaining ships and
+ continued their voyage. They found the Moluccas, the famous Spice Islands;
+ they sighted Borneo and reached Tidor. There, one of the two ships, too
+ leaky to be of further use, remained behind with her crew. The "Vittoria,"
+ under Sebastian del Cano, crossed the Indian Ocean, missed seeing the
+ northern coast of Australia (which was not discovered until the first half
+ of the seventeenth century when ships of the Dutch East India Company
+ explored this flat and inhospitable land), and after great hardships
+ reached Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the most notable of all voyages. It had taken three years. It had
+ been accomplished at a great cost both of men and money. But it had
+ established the fact that the earth was round and that the new lands
+ discovered by Columbus were not a part of the Indies but a separate
+ continent. From that time on, Spain and Portugal devoted all their
+ energies to the development of their Indian and American trade. To prevent
+ an armed conflict between the rivals, Pope Alexander VI (the only avowed
+ heathen who was ever elected to this most holy office) had obligingly
+ divided the world into two equal parts by a line of demarcation which
+ followed the 50th degree of longitude west of Greenwich, the so-called
+ division of Tordesillas of 1494. The Portuguese were to establish their
+ colonies to the east of this line, the Spaniards were to have theirs to
+ the west. This accounts for the fact that the entire American continent
+ with the exception of Brazil became Spanish and that all of the Indies and
+ most of Africa became Portuguese until the English and the Dutch colonists
+ (who had no respect for Papal decisions) took these possessions away in
+ the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When news of the discovery of Columbus reached the Rialto of Venice, the
+ Wall street of the Middle Ages, there was a terrible panic. Stocks and
+ bonds went down 40 and 50 percent. After a short while, when it appeared
+ that Columbus had failed to find the road to Cathay, the Venetian
+ merchants recovered from their fright. But the voyages of da Gama and
+ Magellan proved the practical possibilities of an eastern water-route to
+ the Indies. Then the rulers of Genoa and Venice, the two great commercial
+ centres of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, began to be sorry that
+ they had refused to listen to Columbus. But it was too late. Their
+ Mediterranean became an inland sea. The overland trade to the Indies and
+ China dwindled to insignificant proportions. The old days of Italian glory
+ were gone. The Atlantic became the new centre of commerce and therefore
+ the centre of civilisation. It has remained so ever since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ See how strangely civilisation has progressed since those early days,
+ fifty centuries before, when the inhabitants of the Valley of the Nile
+ began to keep a written record of history, From the river Nile, it went to
+ Mesopotamia, the land between the rivers. Then came the turn of Crete and
+ Greece and Rome. An inland sea became the centre of trade and the cities
+ along the Mediterranean were the home of art and science and philosophy
+ and learning. In the sixteenth century it moved westward once more and
+ made the countries that border upon the Atlantic become the masters of the
+ earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are those who say that the world war and the suicide of the great
+ European nations has greatly diminished the importance of the Atlantic
+ Ocean. They expect to see civilisation cross the American continent and
+ find a new home in the Pacific. But I doubt this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The westward trip was accompanied by a steady increase in the size of
+ ships and a broadening of the knowledge of the navigators. The
+ flat-bottomed vessels of the Nile and the Euphrates were replaced by the
+ sailing vessels of the Phoenicians, the AEgeans, the Greeks, the
+ Carthaginians and the Romans. These in turn were discarded for the square
+ rigged vessels of the Portuguese and the Spaniards. And the latter were
+ driven from the ocean by the full-rigged craft of the English and the
+ Dutch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At present, however, civilisation no longer depends upon ships. Aircraft
+ has taken and will continue to take the place of the sailing vessel and
+ the steamer. The next centre of civilisation will depend upon the
+ development of aircraft and water power. And the sea once more shall be
+ the undisturbed home of the little fishes, who once upon a time shared
+ their deep residence with the earliest ancestors of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BUDDHA AND CONFUCIUS
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ CONCERNING BUDDHA AND CONFUCIUS
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE discoveries of the Portuguese and the Spaniards had brought the
+ Christians of western Europe into close contact with the people of India
+ and of China. They knew of course that Christianity was not the only
+ religion on this earth. There were the Mohammedans and the heathenish
+ tribes of northern Africa who worshipped sticks and stones and dead trees.
+ But in India and in China the Christian conquerors found new millions who
+ had never heard of Christ and who did not want to hear of Him, because
+ they thought their own religion, which was thousands of years old, much
+ better than that of the West. As this is a story of mankind and not an
+ exclusive history of the people of Europe and our western hemisphere, you
+ ought to know something of two men whose teaching and whose example
+ continue to influence the actions and the thoughts of the majority of our
+ fellow-travellers on this earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In India, Buddha was recognised as the great religious teacher. His
+ history is an interesting one. He was born in the Sixth Century before the
+ birth of Christ, within sight of the mighty Himalaya Mountains, where four
+ hundred years before Zarathustra (or Zoroaster), the first of the great
+ leaders of the Aryan race (the name which the Eastern branch of the
+ Indo-European race had given to itself), had taught his people to regard
+ life as a continuous struggle between Ahriman, and Ormuzd, the Gods of
+ Evil and Good. Buddha's father was Suddhodana, a mighty chief among the
+ tribe of the Sakiyas. His mother, Maha Maya, was the daughter of a
+ neighbouring king. She had been married when she was a very young girl.
+ But many moons had passed beyond the distant ridge of hills and still her
+ husband was without an heir who should rule his lands after him. At last,
+ when she was fifty years old, her day came and she went forth that she
+ might be among her own people when her baby should come into this world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a long trip to the land of the Koliyans, where Maha Maya had spent
+ her earliest years. One night she was resting among the cool trees of the
+ garden of Lumbini. There her son was born. He was given the name of
+ Siddhartha, but we know him as Buddha, which means the Enlightened One.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In due time, Siddhartha grew up to be a handsome young prince and when he
+ was nineteen years old, he was married to his cousin Yasodhara. During the
+ next ten years he lived far away from all pain and all suffering, behind
+ the protecting walls of the royal palace, awaiting the day when he should
+ succeed his father as King of the Sakiyas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it happened that when he was thirty years old, he drove outside of the
+ palace gates and saw a man who was old and worn out with labour and whose
+ weak limbs could hardly carry the burden of life. Siddhartha pointed him
+ out to his coachman, Channa, but Channa answered that there were lots of
+ poor people in this world and that one more or less did not matter. The
+ young prince was very sad but he did not say anything and went back to
+ live with his wife and his father and his mother and tried to be happy. A
+ little while later he left the palace a second time. His carriage met a
+ man who suffered from a terrible disease. Siddhartha asked Channa what had
+ been the cause of this man's suffering, but the coachman answered that
+ there were many sick people in this world and that such things could not
+ be helped and did not matter very much. The young prince was very sad when
+ he heard this but again he returned to his people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few weeks passed. One evening Siddhartha ordered his carriage in order
+ to go to the river and bathe. Suddenly his horses were frightened by the
+ sight of a dead man whose rotting body lay sprawling in the ditch beside
+ the road. The young prince, who had never been allowed to see such things,
+ was frightened, but Channa told him not to mind such trifles. The world
+ was full of dead people. It was the rule of life that all things must come
+ to an end. Nothing was eternal. The grave awaited us all and there was no
+ escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening, when Siddhartha returned to his home, he was received with
+ music. While he was away his wife had given birth to a son. The people
+ were delighted because now they knew that there was an heir to the throne
+ and they celebrated the event by the beating of many drums. Siddhartha,
+ however, did not share their joy. The curtain of life had been lifted and
+ he had learned the horror of man's existence. The sight of death and
+ suffering followed him like a terrible dream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night the moon was shining brightly. Siddhartha woke up and began to
+ think of many things. Never again could he be happy until he should have
+ found a solution to the riddle of existence. He decided to find it far
+ away from all those whom he loved. Softly he went into the room where
+ Yasodhara was sleeping with her baby. Then he called for his faithful
+ Channa and told him to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Together the two men went into the darkness of the night, one to find rest
+ for his soul, the other to be a faithful servant unto a beloved master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of India among whom Siddhartha wandered for many years were
+ just then in a state of change. Their ancestors, the native Indians, had
+ been conquered without great difficulty by the war-like Aryans (our
+ distant cousins) and thereafter the Aryans had been the rulers and masters
+ of tens of millions of docile little brown men. To maintain themselves in
+ the seat of the mighty, they had divided the population into different
+ classes and gradually a system of "caste" of the most rigid sort had been
+ enforced upon the natives. The descendants of the Indo-European conquerors
+ belonged to the highest "caste," the class of warriors and nobles. Next
+ came the caste of the priests. Below these followed the peasants and the
+ business men. The ancient natives, however, who were called Pariahs,
+ formed a class of despised and miserable slaves and never could hope to be
+ anything else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the religion of the people was a matter of caste. The old
+ Indo-Europeans, during their thousands of years of wandering, had met with
+ many strange adventures. These had been collected in a book called the
+ Veda. The language of this book was called Sanskrit, and it was closely
+ related to the different languages of the European continent, to Greek and
+ Latin and Russian and German and two-score others. The three highest
+ castes were allowed to read these holy scriptures. The Pariah, however,
+ the despised member of the lowest caste, was not permitted to know its
+ contents. Woe to the man of noble or priestly caste who should teach a
+ Pariah to study the sacred volume!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The majority of the Indian people, therefore, lived in misery. Since this
+ planet offered them very little joy, salvation from suffering must be
+ found elsewhere. They tried to derive a little consolation from meditation
+ upon the bliss of their future existence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brahma, the all-creator who was regarded by the Indian people as the
+ supreme ruler of life and death, was worshipped as the highest ideal of
+ perfection. To become like Brahma, to lose all desires for riches and
+ power, was recognised as the most exalted purpose of existence. Holy
+ thoughts were regarded as more important than holy deeds, and many people
+ went into the desert and lived upon the leaves of trees and starved their
+ bodies that they might feed their souls with the glorious contemplation of
+ the splendours of Brahma, the Wise, the Good and the Merciful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Siddhartha, who had often observed these solitary wanderers who were
+ seeking the truth far away from the turmoil of the cities and the
+ villages, decided to follow their example. He cut his hair. He took his
+ pearls and his rubies and sent them back to his family with a message of
+ farewell, which the ever faithful Channa carried. Without a single
+ follower, the young prince then moved into the wilderness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon the fame of his holy conduct spread among the mountains. Five young
+ men came to him and asked that they might be allowed to listen to his
+ words of wisdom. He agreed to be their master if they would follow him.
+ They consented, and he took them into the hills and for six years he
+ taught them all he knew amidst the lonely peaks of the Vindhya Mountains.
+ But at the end of this period of study, he felt that he was still far from
+ perfection. The world that he had left continued to tempt him. He now
+ asked that his pupils leave him and then he fasted for forty-nine days and
+ nights, sitting upon the roots of an old tree. At last he received his
+ reward. In the dusk of the fiftieth evening, Brahma revealed himself to
+ his faithful servant. From that moment on, Siddhartha was called Buddha
+ and he was revered as the Enlightened One who had come to save men from
+ their unhappy mortal fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last forty-five years of his life, Buddha spent within the valley of
+ the Ganges River, teaching his simple lesson of submission and meekness
+ unto all men. In the year 488 before our era, he died, full of years and
+ beloved by millions of people. He had not preached his doctrines for the
+ benefit of a single class. Even the lowest Pariah might call himself his
+ disciple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, however, did not please the nobles and the priests and the merchants
+ who did their best to destroy a creed which recognised the equality of all
+ living creatures and offered men the hope of a second life (a
+ reincarnation) under happier circumstances. As soon as they could, they
+ encouraged the people of India to return to the ancient doctrines of the
+ Brahmin creed with its fasting and its tortures of the sinful body. But
+ Buddhism could not be destroyed. Slowly the disciples of the Enlightened
+ One wandered across the valleys of the Himalayas, and moved into China.
+ They crossed the Yellow Sea and preached the wisdom of their master unto
+ the people of Japan, and they faithfully obeyed the will of their great
+ master, who had forbidden them to use force. To-day more people recognise
+ Buddha as their teacher than ever before and their number surpasses that
+ of the combined followers of Christ and Mohammed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Confucius, the wise old man of the Chinese, his story is a simple
+ one. He was born in the year 550 B.C. He led a quiet, dignified and
+ uneventful life at a time when China was without a strong central
+ government and when the Chinese people were at the mercy of bandits and
+ robber-barons who went from city to city, pillaging and stealing and
+ murdering and turning the busy plains of northern and central China into a
+ wilderness of starving people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confucius, who loved his people, tried to save them. He did not have much
+ faith in the use of violence. He was a very peaceful person. He did not
+ think that he could make people over by giving them a lot of new laws. He
+ knew that the only possible salvation would come from a change of heart,
+ and he set out upon the seemingly hopeless task of changing the character
+ of his millions of fellow men who inhabited the wide plains of eastern
+ Asia. The Chinese had never been much interested in religion as we
+ understand that word. They believed in devils and spooks as most primitive
+ people do. But they had no prophets and recognised no "revealed truth."
+ Confucius is almost the only one among the great moral leaders who did not
+ see visions, who did not proclaim himself as the messenger of a divine
+ power; who did not, at some time or another, claim that he was inspired by
+ voices from above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was just a very sensible and kindly man, rather given to lonely
+ wanderings and melancholy tunes upon his faithful flute. He asked for no
+ recognition. He did not demand that any one should follow him or worship
+ him. He reminds us of the ancient Greek philosophers, especially those of
+ the Stoic School, men who believed in right living and righteous thinking
+ without the hope of a reward but simply for the peace of the soul that
+ comes with a good conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confucius was a very tolerant man. He went out of his way to visit
+ Lao-Tse, the other great Chinese leader and the founder of a philosophic
+ system called "Taoism," which was merely an early Chinese version of the
+ Golden Rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confucius bore no hatred to any one. He taught the virtue of supreme
+ self-possession. A person of real worth, according to the teaching of
+ Confucius, did not allow himself to be ruffled by anger and suffered
+ whatever fate brought him with the resignation of those sages who
+ understand that everything which happens, in one way or another, is meant
+ for the best.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first he had only a few students. Gradually the number increased.
+ Before his death, in the year 478 B.C., several of the kings and the
+ princes of China confessed themselves his disciples. When Christ was born
+ in Bethlehem, the philosophy of Confucius had already become a part of the
+ mental make-up of most Chinamen. It has continued to influence their lives
+ ever since. Not however in its pure, original form. Most religions change
+ as time goes on. Christ preached humility and meekness and absence from
+ worldly ambitions, but fifteen centuries after Golgotha, the head of the
+ Christian church was spending millions upon the erection of a building
+ that bore little relation to the lonely stable of Bethlehem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lao-Tse taught the Golden Rule, and in less than three centuries the
+ ignorant masses had made him into a real and very cruel God and had buried
+ his wise commandments under a rubbish-heap of superstition which made the
+ lives of the average Chinese one long series of frights and fears and
+ horrors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Confucius had shown his students the beauties of honouring their Father
+ and their Mother. They soon began to be more interested in the memory of
+ their departed parents than in the happiness of their children and their
+ grandchildren. Deliberately they turned their backs upon the future and
+ tried to peer into the vast darkness of the past. The worship of the
+ ancestors became a positive religious system. Rather than disturb a
+ cemetery situated upon the sunny and fertile side of a mountain, they
+ would plant their rice and wheat upon the barren rocks of the other slope
+ where nothing could possibly grow. And they preferred hunger and famine to
+ the desecration of the ancestral grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time the wise words of Confucius never quite lost their hold
+ upon the increasing millions of eastern Asia. Confucianism, with its
+ profound sayings and shrewd observations, added a touch of common-sense
+ philosophy to the soul of every Chinaman and influenced his entire life,
+ whether he was a simple laundry man in a steaming basement or the ruler of
+ vast provinces who dwelt behind the high walls of a secluded palace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the sixteenth century the enthusiastic but rather uncivilised
+ Christians of the western world came face to face with the older creeds of
+ the East. The early Spaniards and Portuguese looked upon the peaceful
+ statues of Buddha and contemplated the venerable pictures of Confucius and
+ did not in the least know what to make of those worthy prophets with their
+ far-away smile. They came to the easy conclusion that these strange
+ divinities were just plain devils who represented something idolatrous and
+ heretical and did not deserve the respect of the true sons of the Church.
+ Whenever the spirit of Buddha or Confucius seemed to interfere with the
+ trade in spices and silks, the Europeans attacked the "evil influence"
+ with bullets and grape-shot. That system had certain very definite
+ disadvantages. It has left us an unpleasant heritage of ill-will which
+ promises little good for the immediate future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE REFORMATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE PROGRESS OF THE HUMAN RACE IS BEST COMPARED TO A GIGANTIC PENDULUM
+ WHICH FOREVER SWINGS FORWARD AND BACKWARD. THE RELIGIOUS INDIFFERENCE AND
+ THE ARTISTIC AND LITERARY ENTHUSIASM OF THE RENAISSANCE WERE FOLLOWED BY
+ THE ARTISTIC AND LITERARY INDIFFERENCE AND THE RELIGIOUS ENTHUSIASM OF THE
+ REFORMATION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ OF course you have heard of the Reformation. You think of a small but
+ courageous group of pilgrims who crossed the ocean to have "freedom of
+ religious worship." Vaguely in the course of time (and more especially in
+ our Protestant countries) the Reformation has come to stand for the idea
+ of "liberty of thought." Martin Luther is represented as the leader of the
+ vanguard of progress. But when history is something more than a series of
+ flattering speeches addressed to our own glorious ancestors, when to use
+ the words of the German historian Ranke, we try to discover what "actually
+ happened," then much of the past is seen in a very different light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Few things in human life are either entirely good or entirely bad. Few
+ things are either black or white. It is the duty of the honest chronicler
+ to give a true account of all the good and bad sides of every historical
+ event. It is very difficult to do this because we all have our personal
+ likes and dislikes. But we ought to try and be as fair as we can be, and
+ must not allow our prejudices to influence us too much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take my own case as an example. I grew up in the very Protestant centre of
+ a very Protestant country. I never saw any Catholics until I was about
+ twelve years old. Then I felt very uncomfortable when I met them. I was a
+ little bit afraid. I knew the story of the many thousand people who had
+ been burned and hanged and quartered by the Spanish Inquisition when the
+ Duke of Alba tried to cure the Dutch people of their Lutheran and
+ Calvinistic heresies. All that was very real to me. It seemed to have
+ happened only the day before. It might occur again. There might be another
+ Saint Bartholomew's night, and poor little me would be slaughtered in my
+ nightie and my body would be thrown out of the window, as had happened to
+ the noble Admiral de Coligny.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much later I went to live for a number of years in a Catholic country. I
+ found the people much pleasanter and much more tolerant and quite as
+ intelligent as my former countrymen. To my great surprise, I began to
+ discover that there was a Catholic side to the Reformation, quite as much
+ as a Protestant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the good people of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, who
+ actually lived through the Reformation, did not see things that way. They
+ were always right and their enemy was always wrong. It was a question of
+ hang or be hanged, and both sides preferred to do the hanging. Which was
+ no more than human and for which they deserve no blame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we look at the world as it appeared in the year 1500, an easy date to
+ remember, and the year in which the Emperor Charles V was born, this is
+ what we see. The feudal disorder of the Middle Ages has given way before
+ the order of a number of highly centralised kingdoms. The most powerful of
+ all sovereigns is the great Charles, then a baby in a cradle. He is the
+ grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella and of Maximilian of Habsburg, the last
+ of the mediaeval knights, and of his wife Mary, the daughter of Charles
+ the Bold, the ambitious Burgundian duke who had made successful war upon
+ France but had been killed by the independent Swiss peasants. The child
+ Charles, therefore, has fallen heir to the greater part of the map, to all
+ the lands of his parents, grandparents, uncles, cousins and aunts in
+ Germany, in Austria, in Holland, in Belgium, in Italy, and in Spain,
+ together with all their colonies in Asia, Africa and America. By a strange
+ irony of fate, he has been born in Ghent, in that same castle of the
+ counts of Flanders, which the Germans used as a prison during their recent
+ occupation of Belgium, and although a Spanish king and a German emperor,
+ he receives the training of a Fleming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As his father is dead (poisoned, so people say, but this is never proved),
+ and his mother has lost her mind (she is travelling through her domains
+ with the coffin containing the body of her departed husband), the child is
+ left to the strict discipline of his Aunt Margaret. Forced to rule Germans
+ and Italians and Spaniards and a hundred strange races, Charles grows up a
+ Fleming, a faithful son of the Catholic Church, but quite averse to
+ religious intolerance. He is rather lazy, both as a boy and as a man. But
+ fate condemns him to rule the world when the world is in a turmoil of
+ religious fervour. Forever he is speeding from Madrid to Innsbruck and
+ from Bruges to Vienna. He loves peace and quiet and he is always at war.
+ At the age of fifty-five, we see him turn his back upon the human race in
+ utter disgust at so much hate and so much stupidity. Three years later he
+ dies, a very tired and disappointed man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So much for Charles the Emperor. How about the Church, the second great
+ power in the world? The Church has changed greatly since the early days of
+ the Middle Ages, when it started out to conquer the heathen and show them
+ the advantages of a pious and righteous life. In the first place, the
+ Church has grown too rich. The Pope is no longer the shepherd of a flock
+ of humble Christians. He lives in a vast palace and surrounds himself with
+ artists and musicians and famous literary men. His churches and chapels
+ are covered with new pictures in which the saints look more like Greek
+ Gods than is strictly necessary. He divides his time unevenly between
+ affairs of state and art. The affairs of state take ten percent of his
+ time. The other ninety percent goes to an active interest in Roman
+ statues, recently discovered Greek vases, plans for a new summer home, the
+ rehearsal of a new play. The Archbishops and the Cardinals follow the
+ example of their Pope. The Bishops try to imitate the Archbishops. The
+ village priests, however, have remained faithful to their duties. They
+ keep themselves aloof from the wicked world and the heathenish love of
+ beauty and pleasure. They stay away from the monasteries where the monks
+ seem to have forgotten their ancient vows of simplicity and poverty and
+ live as happily as they dare without causing too much of a public scandal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally, there are the common people. They are much better off than they
+ have ever been before. They are more prosperous, they live in better
+ houses, their children go to better schools, their cities are more
+ beautiful than before, their firearms have made them the equal of their
+ old enemies, the robber-barons, who for centuries have levied such heavy
+ taxes upon their trade. So much for the chief actors in the Reformation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now let us see what the Renaissance has done to Europe, and then you will
+ understand how the revival of learning and art was bound to be followed by
+ a revival of religious interests. The Renaissance began in Italy. From
+ there it spread to France. It was not quite successful in Spain, where
+ five hundred years of warfare with the Moors had made the people very
+ narrow minded and very fanatical in all religious matters. The circle had
+ grown wider and wider, but once the Alps had been crossed, the Renaissance
+ had suffered a change.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The people of northern Europe, living in a very different climate, had an
+ outlook upon life which contrasted strangely with that of their southern
+ neighbours. The Italians lived out in the open, under a sunny sky. It was
+ easy for them to laugh and to sing and to be happy. The Germans, the
+ Dutch, the English, the Swedes, spent most of their time indoors,
+ listening to the rain beating on the closed windows of their comfortable
+ little houses. They did not laugh quite so much. They took everything more
+ seriously. They were forever conscious of their immortal souls and they
+ did not like to be funny about matters which they considered holy and
+ sacred. The "humanistic" part of the Renaissance, the books, the studies
+ of ancient authors, the grammar and the text-books, interested them
+ greatly. But the general return to the old pagan civilisation of Greece
+ and Rome, which was one of the chief results of the Renaissance in Italy,
+ filled their hearts with horror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Papacy and the College of Cardinals was almost entirely composed
+ of Italians and they had turned the Church into a pleasant club where
+ people discussed art and music and the theatre, but rarely mentioned
+ religion. Hence the split between the serious north and the more civilised
+ but easy-going and indifferent south was growing wider and wider all the
+ time and nobody seemed to be aware of the danger that threatened the
+ Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were a few minor reasons which will explain why the Reformation took
+ place in Germany rather than in Sweden or England. The Germans bore an
+ ancient grudge against Rome. The endless quarrels between Emperor and Pope
+ had caused much mutual bitterness. In the other European countries where
+ the government rested in the hands of a strong king, the ruler had often
+ been able to protect his subjects against the greed of the priests. In
+ Germany, where a shadowy emperor ruled a turbulent crowd of little
+ princelings, the good burghers were more directly at the mercy of their
+ bishops and prelates. These dignitaries were trying to collect large sums
+ of money for the benefit of those enormous churches which were a hobby of
+ the Popes of the Renaissance. The Germans felt that they were being
+ mulcted and quite naturally they did not like it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then there is the rarely mentioned fact that Germany was the home of
+ the printing press. In northern Europe books were cheap and the Bible was
+ no longer a mysterious manu-script owned and explained by the priest. It
+ was a household book of many families where Latin was understood by the
+ father and by the children. Whole families began to read it, which was
+ against the law of the Church. They discovered that the priests were
+ telling them many things which, according to the original text of the Holy
+ Scriptures, were somewhat different. This caused doubt. People began to
+ ask questions. And questions, when they cannot be answered, often cause a
+ great deal of trouble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The attack began when the humanists of the North opened fire upon the
+ monks. In their heart of hearts they still had too much respect and
+ reverence for the Pope to direct their sallies against his Most Holy
+ Person. But the lazy, ignorant monks, living behind the sheltering walls
+ of their rich monasteries, offered rare sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The leader in this warfare, curiously enough, was a very faithful son of
+ the church Gerard Gerardzoon, or Desiderius Erasmus, as he is usually
+ called, was a poor boy, born in Rotterdam in Holland, and educated at the
+ same Latin school of Deventer from which Thomas a Kempis had graduated. He
+ had become a priest and for a time he had lived in a monastery. He had
+ travelled a great deal and knew whereof he wrote, When he began his career
+ as a public pamphleteer (he would have been called an editorial writer in
+ our day) the world was greatly amused at an anonymous series of letters
+ which had just appeared under the title of "Letters of Obscure Men." In
+ these letters, the general stupidity and arrogance of the monks of the
+ late Middle Ages was exposed in a strange German-Latin doggerel which
+ reminds one of our modern limericks. Erasmus himself was a very learned
+ and serious scholar, who knew both Latin and Greek and gave us the first
+ reliable version of the New Testament, which he translated into Latin
+ together with a corrected edition of the original Greek text. But he
+ believed with Sallust, the Roman poet, that nothing prevents us from
+ "stating the truth with a smile upon our lips."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1500, while visiting Sir Thomas More in Eng-land, he took a
+ few weeks off and wrote a funny little book, called the "Praise of Folly,"
+ in which he attacked the monks and their credulous followers with that
+ most dangerous of all weapons, humor. The booklet was the best seller of
+ the sixteenth century. It was translated into almost every language and it
+ made people pay attention to those other books of Erasmus in which he
+ advocated reform of the many abuses of the church and appealed to his
+ fellow humanists to help him in his task of bringing about a great rebirth
+ of the Christian faith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But nothing came of these excellent plans. Erasmus was too reasonable and
+ too tolerant to please most of the enemies of the church. They were
+ waiting for a leader of a more robust nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came, and his name was Martin Luther.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Luther was a North-German peasant with a first-class brain and possessed
+ of great personal courage. He was a university man, a master of arts of
+ the University of Erfurt; afterwards he joined a Dominican monastery. Then
+ he became a college professor at the theological school of Wittenberg and
+ began to explain the scriptures to the indifferent ploughboys of his Saxon
+ home. He had a lot of spare time and this he used to study the original
+ texts of the Old and New Testaments. Soon he began to see the great
+ difference which existed between the words of Christ and those that were
+ preached by the Popes and the Bishops. In the year 1511, he visited Rome
+ on official business. Alexander VI, of the family of Borgia, who had
+ enriched himself for the benefit of his son and daughter, was dead. But
+ his successor, Julius II, a man of irreproachable personal character, was
+ spending most of his time fighting and building and did not impress this
+ serious minded German theologian with his piety. Luther returned to
+ Wittenberg a much disappointed man. But worse was to follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gigantic church of St. Peter which Pope Julius had wished upon his
+ innocent successors, although only half begun, was already in need of
+ repair. Alexander VI had spent every penny of the Papal treasury. Leo X,
+ who succeeded Julius in the year 1513, was on the verge of bankruptcy. He
+ reverted to an old method of raising ready cash. He began to sell
+ "indulgences." An indulgence was a piece of parchment which in return for
+ a certain sum of money, promised a sinner a decrease of the time which he
+ would have to spend in purgatory. It was a perfectly correct thing
+ according to the creed of the late Middle Ages. Since the church had the
+ power to forgive the sins of those who truly repented before they died,
+ the church also had the right to shorten, through its intercession with
+ the Saints, the time during which the soul must be purified in the shadowy
+ realms of Purgatory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was unfortunate that these Indulgences must be sold for money. But they
+ offered an easy form of revenue and besides, those who were too poor to
+ pay, received theirs for nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it happened in the year 1517 that the exclusive territory for the sale
+ of indulgences in Saxony was given to a Dominican monk by the name of
+ Johan Tetzel. Brother Johan was a hustling salesman. To tell the truth he
+ was a little too eager. His business methods outraged the pious people of
+ the little duchy. And Luther, who was an honest fellow, got so angry that
+ he did a rash thing. On the 31st of October of the year 1517, he went to
+ the court church and upon the doors thereof he posted a sheet of paper
+ with ninety-five statements (or theses), attacking the sale of
+ indulgences. These statements had been written in Latin. Luther had no
+ intention of starting a riot. He was not a revolutionist. He objected to
+ the institution of the Indulgences and he wanted his fellow professors to
+ know what he thought about them. But this was still a private affair of
+ the clerical and professorial world and there was no appeal to the
+ prejudices of the community of laymen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, at that moment when the whole world had begun to take an
+ interest in the religious affairs of the day it was utterly impossible to
+ discuss anything, without at once creating a serious mental disturbance.
+ In less than two months, all Europe was discussing the ninety-five theses
+ of the Saxon monk. Every one must take sides. Every obscure little
+ theologian must print his own opinion. The papal authorities began to be
+ alarmed. They ordered the Wittenberg professor to proceed to Rome and give
+ an account of his action. Luther wisely remembered what had happened to
+ Huss. He stayed in Germany and he was punished with excommunication.
+ Luther burned the papal bull in the presence of an admiring multitude and
+ from that moment, peace between himself and the Pope was no longer
+ possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without any desire on his part, Luther had become the leader of a vast
+ army of discontented Christians. German patriots like Ulrich von Hutten,
+ rushed to his defence. The students of Wittenberg and Erfurt and Leipzig
+ offered to defend him should the authorities try to imprison him. The
+ Elector of Saxony reassured the eager young men. No harm would befall
+ Luther as long as he stayed on Saxon ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this happened in the year 1520. Charles V was twenty years old and as
+ the ruler of half the world, was forced to remain on pleasant terms with
+ the Pope. He sent out calls for a Diet or general assembly in the good
+ city of Worms on the Rhine and commanded Luther to be present and give an
+ account of his extraordinary behaviour. Luther, who now was the national
+ hero of the Germans, went. He refused to take back a single word of what
+ he had ever written or said. His conscience was controlled only by the
+ word of God. He would live and die for his conscience
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Diet of Worms, after due deliberation, declared Luther an outlaw
+ before God and man, and forbade all Germans to give him shelter or food or
+ drink, or to read a single word of the books which the dastardly heretic
+ had written. But the great reformer was in no danger. By the majority of
+ the Germans of the north the edict was denounced as a most unjust and
+ outrageous document. For greater safety, Luther was hidden in the
+ Wartburg, a castle belonging to the Elector of Saxony, and there he defied
+ all papal authority by translating the entire Bible into the German
+ language, that all the people might read and know the word of God for
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time, the Reformation was no longer a spiritual and religious
+ affair. Those who hated the beauty of the modern church building used this
+ period of unrest to attack and destroy what they did not like because they
+ did not understand it. Impoverished knights tried to make up for past
+ losses by grabbing the territory which belonged to the monasteries.
+ Discontented princes made use of the absence of the Emperor to increase
+ their own power. The starving peasants, following the leadership of
+ half-crazy agitators, made the best of the opportunity and attacked the
+ castles of their masters and plundered and murdered and burned with the
+ zeal of the old Crusaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A veritable reign of disorder broke loose throughout the Empire. Some
+ princes became Protestants (as the "protesting" adherents of Luther were
+ called) and persecuted their Catholic subjects. Others remained Catholic
+ and hanged their Protestant subjects. The Diet of Speyer of the year 1526
+ tried to settle this difficult question of allegiance by ordering that
+ "the subjects should all be of the same religious denomination as their
+ princes." This turned Germany into a checkerboard of a thousand hostile
+ little duchies and principalities and created a situation which prevented
+ the normal political growth for hundreds of years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In February of the year 1546 Luther died and was put to rest in the same
+ church where twenty-nine years before he had proclaimed his famous
+ objections to the sale of Indulgences. In less than thirty years, the
+ indifferent, joking and laughing world of the Renaissance had been
+ transformed into the arguing, quarrelling, back-biting, debating-society
+ of the Reformation. The universal spiritual empire of the Popes came to a
+ sudden end and the whole Western Europe was turned into a battle-field,
+ where Protestants and Catholics killed each other for the greater glory of
+ certain theological doctrines which are as incomprehensible to the present
+ generation as the mysterious inscriptions of the ancient Etruscans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ RELIGIOUS WARFARE
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE AGE OF THE GREAT RELIGIOUS CONTROVERSIES
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were the age of religious
+ controversy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you will notice you will find that almost everybody around you is
+ forever "talking economics" and discussing wages and hours of labor and
+ strikes in their relation to the life of the community, for that is the
+ main topic of interest of our own time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor little children of the year 1600 or 1650 fared worse. They never
+ heard anything but "religion." Their heads were filled with
+ "predestination," "transubstantition," "free will," and a hundred other
+ queer words, expressing obscure points of "the true faith," whether
+ Catholic or Protestant. According to the desire of their parents they were
+ baptised Catholics or Lutherans or Calvinists or Zwinglians or
+ Anabaptists. They learned their theology from the Augsburg catechism,
+ composed by Luther, or from the "institutes of Christianity," written by
+ Calvin, or they mumbled the Thirty-Nine Articles of Faith which were
+ printed in the English Book of Common Prayer, and they were told that
+ these alone represented the "True Faith."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They heard of the wholesale theft of church property perpetrated by King
+ Henry VIII, the much-married monarch of England, who made himself the
+ supreme head of the English church, and assumed the old papal rights of
+ appointing bishops and priests. They had a nightmare whenever some one
+ mentioned the Holy Inquisition, with its dungeons and its many torture
+ chambers, and they were treated to equally horrible stories of how a mob
+ of outraged Dutch Protestants had got hold of a dozen defenceless old
+ priests and hanged them for the sheer pleasure of killing those who
+ professed a different faith. It was unfortunate that the two contending
+ parties were so equally matched. Otherwise the struggle would have come to
+ a quick solution. Now it dragged on for eight generations, and it grew so
+ complicated that I can only tell you the most important details, and must
+ ask you to get the rest from one of the many histories of the Reformation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great reform movement of the Protestants had been followed by a
+ thoroughgoing reform within the bosom of the Church. Those popes who had
+ been merely amateur humanists and dealers in Roman and Greek antiquities,
+ disappeared from the scene and their place was taken by serious men who
+ spent twenty hours a day administering those holy duties which had been
+ placed in their hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long and rather disgraceful happiness of the monasteries came to an
+ end. Monks and nuns were forced to be up at sunrise, to study the Church
+ Fathers, to tend the sick and console the dying. The Holy Inquisition
+ watched day and night that no dangerous doctrines should be spread by way
+ of the printing press. Here it is customary to mention poor Galileo, who
+ was locked up because he had been a little too indiscreet in explaining
+ the heavens with his funny little telescope and had muttered certain
+ opinions about the behaviour of the planets which were entirely opposed to
+ the official views of the church. But in all fairness to the Pope, the
+ clergy and the Inquisition, it ought to be stated that the Protestants
+ were quite as much the enemies of science and medicine as the Catholics
+ and with equal manifestations of ignorance and intolerance regarded the
+ men who investigated things for themselves as the most dangerous enemies
+ of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Calvin, the great French reformer and the tyrant (both political and
+ spiritual) of Geneva, not only assisted the French authorities when they
+ tried to hang Michael Servetus (the Spanish theologian and physician who
+ had become famous as the assistant of Vesalius, the first great
+ anatomist), but when Servetus had managed to escape from his French jail
+ and had fled to Geneva, Calvin threw this brilliant man into prison and
+ after a prolonged trial, allowed him to be burned at the stake on account
+ of his heresies, totally indifferent to his fame as a scientist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it went. We have few reliable statistics upon the subject, but on
+ the whole, the Protestants tired of this game long before the Catholics,
+ and the greater part of honest men and women who were burned and hanged
+ and decapitated on account of their religious beliefs fell as victims of
+ the very energetic but also very drastic church of Rome.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For tolerance (and please remember this when you grow older), is of very
+ recent origin and even the people of our own so-called "modern world" are
+ apt to be tolerant only upon such matters as do not interest them very
+ much. They are tolerant towards a native of Africa, and do not care whether
+ he becomes a Buddhist or a Mohammedan, because neither Buddhism nor
+ Mohammedanism means anything to them. But when they hear that their
+ neighbour who was a Republican and believed in a high protective tariff,
+ has joined the Socialist party and now wants to repeal all tariff laws,
+ their tolerance ceases and they use almost the same words as those
+ employed by a kindly Catholic (or Protestant) of the seventeenth century,
+ who was informed that his best friend whom he had always respected and
+ loved had fallen a victim to the terrible heresies of the Protestant (or
+ Catholic) church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heresy" until a very short time ago was regarded as a disease. Nowadays
+ when we see a man neglecting the personal cleanliness of his body and his
+ home and exposing himself and his children to the dangers of typhoid fever
+ or another preventable disease, we send for the board-of-health and the
+ health officer calls upon the police to aid him in removing this person
+ who is a danger to the safety of the entire community. In the sixteenth
+ and seventeenth centuries, a heretic, a man or a woman who openly doubted
+ the fundamental principles upon which his Protestant or Catholic religion
+ had been founded, was considered a more terrible menace than a typhoid
+ carrier. Typhoid fever might (very likely would) destroy the body. But
+ heresy, according to them, would positively destroy the immortal soul. It
+ was therefore the duty of all good and logical citizens to warn the police
+ against the enemies of the established order of things and those who
+ failed to do so were as culpable as a modern man who does not telephone to
+ the nearest doctor when he discovers that his fellow-tenants are suffering
+ from cholera or small-pox.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the years to come you will hear a great deal about preventive medicine.
+ Preventive medicine simply means that our doctors do not wait until their
+ patients are sick, then step forward and cure them. On the contrary, they
+ study the patient and the conditions under which he lives when he (the
+ patient) is perfectly well and they remove every possible cause of illness
+ by cleaning up rubbish, by teaching him what to eat and what to avoid, and
+ by giving him a few simple ideas of personal hygiene. They go even further
+ than that, and these good doctors enter the schools and teach the children
+ how to use tooth-brushes and how to avoid catching colds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sixteenth century which regarded (as I have tried to show you) bodily
+ illness as much less important than sickness which threatened the soul,
+ organised a system of spiritual preventive medicine. As soon as a child
+ was old enough to spell his first words, he was educated in the true (and
+ the "only true") principles of the Faith. Indirectly this proved to be a
+ good thing for the general progress of the people of Europe. The
+ Protestant lands were soon dotted with schools. They used a great deal of
+ very valuable time to explain the Catechism, but they gave instruction in
+ other things besides theology. They encouraged reading and they were
+ responsible for the great prosperity of the printing trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Catholics did not lag behind. They too devoted much time and
+ thought to education. The Church, in this matter, found an invaluable
+ friend and ally in the newly-founded order of the Society of Jesus. The
+ founder of this remarkable organisation was a Spanish soldier who after a
+ life of unholy adventures had been converted and thereupon felt himself
+ bound to serve the church just as many former sinners, who have been shown
+ the errors of their way by the Salvation Army, devote the remaining years
+ of their lives to the task of aiding and consoling those who are less
+ fortunate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of this Spaniard was Ignatius de Loyola. He was born in the year
+ before the discovery of America. He had been wounded and lamed for life
+ and while he was in the hospital he had seen a vision of the Holy Virgin
+ and her Son, who bade him give up the wickedness of his former life. He
+ decided to go to the Holy Land and finish the task of the Crusades. But a
+ visit to Jerusalem had shown him the impossibility of the task and he
+ returned west to help in the warfare upon the heresies of the Lutherans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1534 he was studying in Paris at the Sorbonne. Together with
+ seven other students he founded a fraternity. The eight men promised each
+ other that they would lead holy lives, that they would not strive after
+ riches but after righteousness, and would devote themselves, body and
+ soul, to the service of the Church. A few years later this small
+ fraternity had grown into a regular organisation and was recognised by
+ Pope Paul III as the Society of Jesus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loyola had been a military man. He believed in discipline, and absolute
+ obedience to the orders of the superior dignitaries became one of the main
+ causes for the enormous success of the Jesuits. They specialised in
+ education. They gave their teachers a most thorough-going education before
+ they allowed them to talk to a single pupil. They lived with their
+ students and they entered into their games. They watched them with tender
+ care. And as a result they raised a new generation of faithful Catholics
+ who took their religious duties as seriously as the people of the early
+ Middle Ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shrewd Jesuits, however, did not waste all their efforts upon the
+ education of the poor. They entered the palaces of the mighty and became
+ the private tutors of future emperors and kings. And what this meant you
+ will see for yourself when I tell you about the Thirty Years War. But
+ before this terrible and final outbreak of religious fanaticism, a great
+ many other things had happened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles V was dead. Germany and Austria had been left to his brother
+ Ferdinand. All his other possessions, Spain and the Netherlands and the
+ Indies and America had gone to his son Philip. Philip was the son of
+ Charles and a Portuguese princess who had been first cousin to her own
+ husband. The children that are born of such a union are apt to be rather
+ queer. The son of Philip, the unfortunate Don Carlos, (murdered afterwards
+ with his own father's consent,) was crazy. Philip was not quite crazy, but
+ his zeal for the Church bordered closely upon religious insanity. He
+ believed that Heaven had appointed him as one of the saviours of mankind.
+ Therefore, whosoever was obstinate and refused to share his Majesty's
+ views, proclaimed himself an enemy of the human race and must be
+ exterminated lest his example corrupt the souls of his pious neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spain, of course, was a very rich country. All the gold and silver of the
+ new world flowed into the Castilian and Aragonian treasuries. But Spain
+ suffered from a curious economic disease. Her peasants were hard working
+ men and even harder working women. But the better classes maintained a
+ supreme contempt for any form of labour, outside of employment in the army
+ or navy or the civil service. As for the Moors, who had been very
+ industrious artisans, they had been driven out of the country long before.
+ As a result, Spain, the treasure chest of the world, remained a poor
+ country because all her money had to be sent abroad in exchange for the
+ wheat and the other necessities of life which the Spaniards neglected to
+ raise for themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Philip, ruler of the most powerful nation of the sixteenth century,
+ depended for his revenue upon the taxes which were gathered in the busy
+ commercial bee-hive of the Netherlands. But these Flemings and Dutchmen
+ were devoted followers of the doctrines of Luther and Calvin and they had
+ cleansed their churches of all images and holy paintings and they had
+ informed the Pope that they no longer regarded him as their shepherd but
+ intended to follow the dictates of their consciences and the commands of
+ their newly translated Bible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This placed the king in a very difficult position. He could not possibly
+ tolerate the heresies of his Dutch subjects, but he needed their money. If
+ he allowed them to be Protestants and took no measures to save their souls
+ he was deficient in his duty toward God. If he sent the Inquisition to the
+ Netherlands and burned his subjects at the stake, he would lose the
+ greater part of his income.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Being a man of uncertain will-power he hesitated a long time. He tried
+ kindness and sternness and promises and threats. The Hollanders remained
+ obstinate, and continued to sing psalms and listen to the sermons of their
+ Lutheran and Calvinist preachers. Philip in his despair sent his "man of
+ iron," the Duke of Alba, to bring these hardened sinners to terms. Alba
+ began by decapitating those leaders who had not wisely left the country
+ before his arrival. In the year 1572 (the same year that the French
+ Protestant leaders were all killed during the terrible night of Saint
+ Bartholomew), he attacked a number of Dutch cities and massacred the
+ inhabitants as an example for the others. The next year he laid siege to
+ the town of Leyden, the manufacturing center of Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the seven small provinces of the northern Netherlands had
+ formed a defensive union, the so-called union of Utrecht, and had
+ recognised William of Orange, a German prince who had been the private
+ secretary of the Emperor Charles V, as the leader of their army and as
+ commander of their freebooting sailors, who were known as the Beggars of
+ the Sea. William, to save Leyden, cut the dykes, created a shallow inland
+ sea, and delivered the town with the help of a strangely equipped navy
+ consisting of scows and flat-bottomed barges which were rowed and pushed
+ and pulled through the mud until they reached the city walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the first time that an army of the invincible Spanish king had
+ suffered such a humiliating defeat. It surprised the world just as the
+ Japanese victory of Mukden, in the Russian-Japanese war, surprised our own
+ generation. The Protestant powers took fresh courage and Philip devised
+ new means for the purpose of conquering his rebellious subjects. He hired
+ a poor half-witted fanatic to go and murder William of Orange. But the
+ sight of their dead leader did not bring the Seven Provinces to their
+ knees. On the contrary it made them furiously angry. In the year 1581, the
+ Estates General (the meeting of the representatives of the Seven
+ Provinces) came together at the Hague and most solemnly abjured their
+ "wicked king Philip" and themselves assumed the burden of sovereignty
+ which thus far had been invested in their "King by the Grace of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This is a very important event in the history of the great struggle for
+ political liberty. It was a step which reached much further than the
+ uprising of the nobles which ended with the signing of the Magna Carta.
+ These good burghers said "Between a king and his subjects there is a
+ silent understanding that both sides shall perform certain services and
+ shall recognise certain definite duties. If either party fails to live up
+ to this contract, the other has the right to consider it terminated." The
+ American subjects of King George III in the year 1776 came to a similar
+ conclusion. But they had three thousand miles of ocean between themselves
+ and their ruler and the Estates General took their decision (which meant a
+ slow death in case of defeat) within hearing of the Spanish guns and
+ although in constant fear of an avenging Spanish fleet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stories about a mysterious Spanish fleet that was to conquer both
+ Holland and England, when Protestant Queen Elizabeth had succeeded
+ Catholic "Bloody Mary" was an old one. For years the sailors of the
+ waterfront had talked about it. In the eighties of the sixteenth century,
+ the rumour took a definite shape. According to pilots who had been in
+ Lisbon, all the Spanish and Portuguese wharves were building ships. And in
+ the southern Netherlands (in Belgium) the Duke of Parma was collecting a
+ large expeditionary force to be carried from Ostend to London and
+ Amsterdam as soon as the fleet should arrive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1586 the Great Armada set sail for the north. But the harbours
+ of the Flemish coast were blockaded by a Dutch fleet and the Channel was
+ guarded by the English, and the Spaniards, accustomed to the quieter seas
+ of the south, did not know how to navigate in this squally and bleak
+ northern climate. What happened to the Armada once it was attacked by
+ ships and by storms I need not tell you. A few ships, by sailing around
+ Ireland, escaped to tell the terrible story of defeat. The others perished
+ and lie at the bottom of the North Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turn about is fair play. The British nod the Dutch Protestants now carried
+ the war into the territory of the enemy. Before the end of the century,
+ Houtman, with the help of a booklet written by Linschoten (a Hollander who
+ had been in the Portuguese service), had at last discovered the route to
+ the Indies. As a result the great Dutch East India Company was founded and
+ a systematic war upon the Portuguese and Spanish colonies in Asia and
+ Africa was begun in all seriousness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was during this early era of colonial conquest that a curious lawsuit
+ was fought out in the Dutch courts. Early in the seventeenth century a
+ Dutch Captain by the name of van Heemskerk, a man who had made himself
+ famous as the head of an expedition which had tried to discover the North
+ Eastern Passage to the Indies and who had spent a winter on the frozen
+ shores of the island of Nova Zembla, had captured a Portuguese ship in the
+ straits of Malacca. You will remember that the Pope had divided the world
+ into two equal shares, one of which had been given to the Spaniards and
+ the other to the Portuguese. The Portuguese quite naturally regarded the
+ water which surrounded their Indian islands as part of their own property
+ and since, for the moment, they were not at war with the United Seven
+ Netherlands, they claimed that the captain of a private Dutch trading
+ company had no right to enter their private domain and steal their ships.
+ And they brought suit. The directors of the Dutch East India Company hired
+ a bright young lawyer, by the name of De Groot or Grotius, to defend their
+ case. He made the astonishing plea that the ocean is free to all comers.
+ Once outside the distance which a cannon ball fired from the land can
+ reach, the sea is or (according to Grotius) ought to be, a free and open
+ highway to all the ships of all nations. It was the first time that this
+ startling doctrine had been publicly pronounced in a court of law. It was
+ opposed by all the other seafaring people. To counteract the effect of
+ Grotius' famous plea for the "Mare Liberum," or "Open Sea," John Selden,
+ the Englishman, wrote his famous treatise upon the "Mare Clausum" or
+ "Closed Sea" which treated of the natural right of a sovereign to regard
+ the seas which surrounded his country as belonging to his territory. I
+ mention this here because the question had not yet been decided and during
+ the last war caused all sorts of difficulties and complications.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To return to the warfare between Spaniard and Hollander and Englishman,
+ before twenty years were over the most valuable colonies of the Indies and
+ the Cape of Good Hope and Ceylon and those along the coast of China and
+ even Japan were in Protestant hands. In 1621 a West Indian Company was
+ founded which conquered Brazil and in North America built a fortress
+ called Nieuw Amsterdam at the mouth of the river which Henry Hudson had
+ discovered in the year 1609
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These new colonies enriched both England and the Dutch Republic to such an
+ extent that they could hire foreign soldiers to do their fighting on land
+ while they devoted themselves to commerce and trade. To them the
+ Protestant revolt meant independence and prosperity. But in many other
+ parts of Europe it meant a succession of horrors compared to which the
+ last war was a mild excursion of kindly Sunday-school boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Thirty Years War which broke out in the year 1618 and which ended with
+ the famous treaty of Westphalia in 1648 was the perfectly natural result
+ of a century of ever increasing religious hatred. It was, as I have said,
+ a terrible war. Everybody fought everybody else and the struggle ended
+ only when all parties had been thoroughly exhausted and could fight no
+ longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In less than a generation it turned many parts of central Europe into a
+ wilderness, where the hungry peasants fought for the carcass of a dead
+ horse with the even hungrier wolf. Five-sixths of all the German towns and
+ villages were destroyed. The Palatinate, in western Germany, was plundered
+ twenty-eight times. And a population of eighteen million people was
+ reduced to four million.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hostilities began almost as soon as Ferdinand II of the House of
+ Habsburg had been elected Emperor. He was the product of a most careful
+ Jesuit training and was a most obedient and devout son of the Church. The
+ vow which he had made as a young man, that he would eradicate all sects
+ and all heresies from his domains, Ferdinand kept to the best of his
+ ability. Two days before his election, his chief opponent, Frederick, the
+ Protestant Elector of the Palatinate and a son-in-law of James I of
+ England, had been made King of Bohemia, in direct violation of Ferdinand's
+ wishes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At once the Habsburg armies marched into Bohemia. The young king looked in
+ vain for assistance against this formidable enemy. The Dutch Republic was
+ willing to help, but, engaged in a desperate war of its own with the
+ Spanish branch of the Habsburgs, it could do little. The Stuarts in
+ England were more interested in strengthening their own absolute power at
+ home than spending money and men upon a forlorn adventure in far away
+ Bohemia. After a struggle of a few months, the Elector of the Palatinate
+ was driven away and his domains were given to the Catholic house of
+ Bavaria. This was the beginning of the great war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Habsburg armies, under Tilly and Wallenstein, fought their way
+ through the Protestant part of Germany until they had reached the shores
+ of the Baltic. A Catholic neighbour meant serious danger to the Protestant
+ king of Denmark. Christian IV tried to defend himself by attacking his
+ enemies before they had become too strong for him. The Danish armies
+ marched into Germany but were defeated. Wallenstein followed up his
+ victory with such energy and violence that Denmark was forced to sue for
+ peace. Only one town of the Baltic then remained in the hands of the
+ Protestants. That was Stralsund.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There, in the early summer of the year 1630, landed King Gustavus Adolphus
+ of the house of Vasa, king of Sweden, and famous as the man who had
+ defended his country against the Russians. A Protestant prince of
+ unlimited ambition, desirous of making Sweden the centre of a great
+ Northern Empire, Gustavus Adolphus was welcomed by the Protestant princes
+ of Europe as the saviour of the Lutheran cause. He defeated Tilly, who had
+ just successfully butchered the Protestant inhabitants of Magdeburg. Then
+ his troops began their great march through the heart of Germany in an
+ attempt to reach the Habsburg possessions in Italy. Threatened in the rear
+ by the Catholics, Gustavus suddenly veered around and defeated the main
+ Habsburg army in the battle of Lutzen. Unfortunately the Swedish king was
+ killed when he strayed away from his troops. But the Habsburg power had
+ been broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ferdinand, who was a suspicious sort of person, at once began to distrust
+ his own servants. Wallenstein, his commander-in-chief, was murdered at his
+ instigation. When the Catholic Bourbons, who ruled France and hated their
+ Habsburg rivals, heard of this, they joined the Protestant Swedes. The
+ armies of Louis XIII invaded the eastern part of Germany, and Turenne and
+ Conde added their fame to that of Baner and Weimar, the Swedish generals,
+ by murdering, pillaging and burning Habsburg property. This brought great
+ fame and riches to the Swedes and caused the Danes to become envious. The
+ Protestant Danes thereupon declared war upon the Protestant Swedes who
+ were the allies of the Catholic French, whose political leader, the
+ Cardinal de Richelieu, had just deprived the Huguenots (or French
+ Protestants) of those rights of public worship which the Edict of Nantes
+ of the year 1598 had guaranteed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war, after the habit of such encounters, did not decide anything, when
+ it came to an end with the treaty of Westphalia in 1648. The Catholic
+ powers remained Catholic and the Protestant powers stayed faithful to the
+ doctrines of Luther and Calvin and Zwingli. The Swiss and Dutch
+ Protestants were recognised as independent republics. France kept the
+ cities of Metz and Toul and Verdun and a part of the Alsace. The Holy
+ Roman Empire continued to exist as a sort of scare-crow state, without
+ men, without money, without hope and without courage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only good the Thirty Years War accomplished was a negative one. It
+ discouraged both Catholics and Protestants from ever trying it again.
+ Henceforth they left each other in peace. This however did not mean that
+ religious feeling and theological hatred had been removed from this earth.
+ On the contrary. The quarrels between Catholic and Protestant came to an
+ end, but the disputes between the different Protestant sects continued as
+ bitterly as ever before. In Holland a difference of opinion as to the true
+ nature of predestination (a very obscure point of theology, but
+ exceedingly important the eyes of your great-grandfather) caused a quarrel
+ which ended with the decapitation of John of Oldenbarneveldt, the Dutch
+ statesman, who had been responsible for the success of the Republic during
+ the first twenty years of its independence, and who was the great
+ organising genius of her Indian trading company. In England, the feud led
+ to civil war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before I tell you of this outbreak which led to the first execution by
+ process-of-law of a European king, I ought to say something about the
+ previous history of England. In this book I am trying to give you only
+ those events of the past which can throw a light upon the conditions of
+ the present world. If I do not mention certain countries, the cause is not
+ to be found in any secret dislike on my part. I wish that I could tell you
+ what happened to Norway and Switzerland and Serbia and China. But these
+ lands exercised no great influence upon the development of Europe in the
+ sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. I therefore pass them by with a
+ polite and very respectful bow. England however is in a different
+ position. What the people of that small island have done during the last
+ five hundred years has shaped the course of history in every corner of the
+ world. Without a proper knowledge of the background of English history,
+ you cannot understand what you read in the newspapers. And it is therefore
+ necessary that you know how England happened to develop a parliamentary
+ form of government while the rest of the European continent was still
+ ruled by absolute monarchs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE ENGLISH REVOLUTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN THE "DIVINE RIGHT" OF KINGS AND THE LESS DIVINE
+ BUT MORE REASONABLE "RIGHT OF PARLIAMENT" ENDED DISASTROUSLY FOR KING
+ CHARLES II
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ CAESAR, the earliest explorer of north-western Europe, had crossed the
+ Channel in the year 55 B.C. and had conquered England. During four
+ centuries the country then remained a Roman province. But when the
+ Barbarians began to threaten Rome, the garrisons were called back from the
+ frontier that they might defend the home country and Britannia was left
+ without a government and without protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as this became known among the hungry Saxon tribes of northern
+ Germany, they sailed across the North Sea and made themselves at home in
+ the prosperous island. They founded a number of independent Anglo-Saxon
+ kingdoms (so called after the original Angles or English and the Saxon
+ invaders) but these small states were for ever quarrelling with each other
+ and no King was strong enough to establish himself as the head of a united
+ country. For more than five hundred years, Mercia and Northumbria and
+ Wessex and Sussex and Kent and East Anglia, or whatever their names, were
+ exposed to attacks from various Scandinavian pirates. Finally in the
+ eleventh century, England, together with Norway and northern Germany
+ became part of the large Danish Empire of Canute the Great and the last
+ vestiges of independence disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Danes, in the course of time, were driven away but no sooner was
+ England free, than it was conquered for the fourth time. The new enemies
+ were the descendants of another tribe of Norsemen who early in the tenth
+ century had invaded France and had founded the Duchy of Normandy. William,
+ Duke of Normandy, who for a long time had looked across the water with an
+ envious eye, crossed the Channel in October of the year 1066. At the
+ battle of Hastings, on October the fourteenth of that year, he destroyed
+ the weak forces of Harold of Wessex, the last of the Anglo-Saxon Kings and
+ established himself as King of England. But neither William nor his
+ successors of the House of Anjou and Plantagenet regarded England as their
+ true home. To them the island was merely a part of their great inheritance
+ on the continent&mdash;a sort of colony inhabited by rather backward
+ people upon whom they forced their own language and civilisation.
+ Gradually however the "colony" of England gained upon the "Mother country"
+ of Normandy. At the same time the Kings of France were trying desperately
+ to get rid of the powerful Norman-English neighbours who were in truth no
+ more than disobedient servants of the French crown. After a century of war
+ fare the French people, under the leadership of a young girl by the name
+ of Joan of Arc, drove the "foreigners" from their soil. Joan herself,
+ taken a prisoner at the battle of Compiegne in the year 1430 and sold by
+ her Burgundian captors to the English soldiers, was burned as a witch. But
+ the English never gained foothold upon the continent and their Kings were
+ at last able to devote all their time to their British possessions. As the
+ feudal nobility of the island had been engaged in one of those strange
+ feuds which were as common in the middle ages as measles and small-pox,
+ and as the greater part of the old landed proprietors had been killed
+ during these so-called Wars of the Roses, it was quite easy for the Kings
+ to increase their royal power. And by the end of the fifteenth century,
+ England was a strongly centralised country, ruled by Henry VII of the
+ House of Tudor, whose famous Court of Justice, the "Star Chamber" of
+ terrible memory, suppressed all attempts on the part of the surviving
+ nobles to regain their old influence upon the government of the country
+ with the utmost severity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1509 Henry VII was succeeded by his son Henry VIII, and from
+ that moment on the history of England gained a new importance for the
+ country ceased to be a mediaeval island and became a modern state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Henry had no deep interest in religion. He gladly used a private
+ disagreement with the Pope about one of his many divorces to declare
+ himself independent of Rome and make the church of England the first of
+ those "nationalistic churches" in which the worldly ruler also acts as the
+ spiritual head of his subjects. This peaceful reformation of 1034 not only
+ gave the house of Tudor the support of the English clergy, who for a long
+ time had been exposed to the violent attacks of many Lutheran
+ propagandists, but it also increased the Royal power through the
+ confiscation of the former possessions of the monasteries. At the same
+ time it made Henry popular with the merchants and tradespeople, who as the
+ proud and prosperous inhabitants of an island which was separated from the
+ rest of Europe by a wide and deep channel, had a great dislike for
+ everything "foreign" and did not want an Italian bishop to rule their
+ honest British souls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In 1517 Henry died. He left the throne to his small son, aged ten. The
+ guardians of the child, favoring the modern Lutheran doctrines, did their
+ best to help the cause of Protestantism. But the boy died before he was
+ sixteen, and was succeeded by his sister Mary, the wife of Philip II of
+ Spain, who burned the bishops of the new "national church" and in other
+ ways followed the example of her royal Spanish husband
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately she died, in the year 1558, and was succeeded by Elizabeth,
+ the daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, the second of his six wives,
+ whom he had decapitated when she no longer pleased him. Elizabeth, who had
+ spent some time in prison, and who had been released only at the request
+ of the Holy Roman Emperor, was a most cordial enemy of everything Catholic
+ and Spanish. She shared her father's indifference in the matter of
+ religion but she inherited his ability as a very shrewd judge of
+ character, and spent the forty-five years of her reign in strengthening
+ the power of the dynasty and in increasing the revenue and possessions of
+ her merry islands. In this she was most ably assisted by a number of men
+ who gathered around her throne and made the Elizabethan age a period of
+ such importance that you ought to study it in detail in one of the special
+ books of which I shall tell you in the bibliography at the end of this
+ volume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elizabeth, however, did not feel entirely safe upon her throne. She had a
+ rival and a very dangerous one. Mary, of the house of Stuart, daughter of
+ a French duchess and a Scottish father, widow of king Francis II of France
+ and daughter-in-law of Catherine of Medici (who had organised the murders
+ of Saint Bartholomew's night), was the mother of a little boy who was
+ afterwards to become the first Stuart king of England. She was an ardent
+ Catholic and a willing friend to those who were the enemies of Elizabeth.
+ Her own lack of political ability and the violent methods which she
+ employed to punish her Calvinistic subjects, caused a revolution in
+ Scotland and forced Mary to take refuge on English territory. For eighteen
+ years she remained in England, plotting forever and a day against the
+ woman who had given her shelter and who was at last obliged to follow the
+ advice of her trusted councilors "to cutte off the Scottish Queen's
+ heade."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The head was duly "cutte off" in the year 1587 and caused a war with
+ Spain. But the combined navies of England and Holland defeated Philip's
+ Invincible Armada, as we have already seen, and the blow which had been
+ meant to destroy the power of the two great anti-Catholic leaders was
+ turned into a profitable business adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For now at last, after many years of hesitation, the English as well as
+ the Dutch thought it their good right to invade the Indies and America and
+ avenge the ills which their Protestant brethren had suffered at the hands
+ of the Spaniards. The English had been among the earliest successors of
+ Columbus. British ships, commanded by the Venetian pilot Giovanni Caboto
+ (or Cabot), had been the first to discover and explore the northern
+ American continent in 1496. Labrador and Newfoundland were of little
+ importance as a possible colony. But the banks of Newfoundland offered a
+ rich reward to the English fishing fleet. A year later, in 1497, the same
+ Cabot had explored the coast of Florida.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then had come the busy years of Henry VII and Henry VIII when there had
+ been no money for foreign explorations. But under Elizabeth, with the
+ country at peace and Mary Stuart in prison, the sailors could leave their
+ harbour without fear for the fate of those whom they left behind. While
+ Elizabeth was still a child, Willoughby had ventured to sail past the
+ North Cape and one of his captains, Richard Chancellor, pushing further
+ eastward in his quest of a possible road to the Indies, had reached
+ Archangel, Russia, where he had established diplomatic and commercial
+ relations with the mysterious rulers of this distant Muscovite Empire.
+ During the first years of Elizabeth's rule this voyage had been followed
+ up by many others. Merchant adventurers, working for the benefit of a
+ "joint stock Company" had laid the foundations of trading companies which
+ in later centuries were to become colonies. Half pirate, half diplomat,
+ willing to stake everything on a single lucky voyage, smugglers of
+ everything that could be loaded into the hold of a vessel, dealers in men
+ and merchandise with equal indifference to everything except their profit,
+ the sailors of Elizabeth had carried the English flag and the fame of
+ their Virgin Queen to the four corners of the Seven Seas. Meanwhile
+ William Shakespeare kept her Majesty amused at home, and the best brains
+ and the best wit of England co-operated with the queen in her attempt to
+ change the feudal inheritance of Henry VIII into a modern national state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1603 the old lady died at the age of seventy. Her cousin, the
+ great-grandson of her own grandfather Henry VII and son of Mary Stuart,
+ her rival and enemy, succeeded her as James I. By the Grace of God, he
+ found himself the ruler of a country which had escaped the fate of its
+ continental rivals. While the European Protestants and Catholics were
+ killing each other in a hopeless attempt to break the power of their
+ adversaries and establish the exclusive rule of their own particular
+ creed, England was at peace and "reformed" at leisure without going to the
+ extremes of either Luther or Loyola. It gave the island kingdom an
+ enormous advantage in the coming struggle for colonial possessions. It
+ assured England a leadership in international affairs which that country
+ has maintained until the present day. Not even the disastrous adventure
+ with the Stuarts was able to stop this normal development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Stuarts, who succeeded the Tudors, were "foreigners" in England. They
+ do not seem to have appreciated or understood this fact. The native house
+ of Tudor could steal a horse, but the "foreign" Stuarts were not allowed
+ to look at the bridle without causing great popular disapproval. Old Queen
+ Bess had ruled her domains very much as she pleased. In general however,
+ she had always followed a policy which meant money in the pocket of the
+ honest (and otherwise) British merchants. Hence the Queen had been always
+ assured of the wholehearted support of her grateful people. And small
+ liberties taken with some of the rights and prerogatives of Parliament
+ were gladly overlooked for the ulterior benefits which were derived from
+ her Majesty's strong and successful foreign policies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outwardly King James continued the same policy. But he lacked that
+ personal enthusiasm which had been so very typical of his great
+ predecessor. Foreign commerce continued to be encouraged. The Catholics
+ were not granted any liberties. But when Spain smiled pleasantly upon
+ England in an effort to establish peaceful relations, James was seen to
+ smile back. The majority of the English people did not like this, but
+ James was their King and they kept quiet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon there were other causes of friction. King James and his son, Charles
+ I, who succeeded him in the year 1625 both firmly believed in the
+ principle of their "divine right" to administer their realm as they
+ thought fit without consulting the wishes of their subjects. The idea was
+ not new. The Popes, who in more than one way had been the successors of
+ the Roman Emperors (or rather of the Roman Imperial ideal of a single and
+ undivided state covering the entire known world), had always regarded
+ themselves and had been publicly recognised as the "Vice-Regents of Christ
+ upon Earth." No one questioned the right of God to rule the world as He
+ saw fit. As a natural result, few ventured to doubt the right of the
+ divine "Vice-Regent" to do the same thing and to demand the obedience of
+ the masses because he was the direct representative of the Absolute Ruler
+ of the Universe and responsible only to Almighty God.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Lutheran Reformation proved successful, those rights which
+ formerly had been invested in the Papacy were taken over by the many
+ European sovereigns who became Protestants. As head of their own national
+ or dynastic churches they insisted upon being "Christ's Vice-Regents"
+ within the limit of their own territory. The people did not question the
+ right of their rulers to take such a step. They accepted it, just as we in
+ our own day accept the idea of a representative system which to us seems
+ the only reasonable and just form of government. It is unfair therefore to
+ state that either Lutheranism or Calvinism caused the particular feeling
+ of irritation which greeted King-James's oft and loudly repeated assertion
+ of his "Divine Right." There must have been other grounds for the genuine
+ English disbelief in the Divine Right of Kings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first positive denial of the "Divine Right" of sovereigns had been
+ heard in the Netherlands when the Estates General abjured their lawful
+ sovereign King Philip II of Spain, in the year 1581. "The King," so they
+ said, "has broken his contract and the King therefore is dismissed like
+ any other unfaithful servant." Since then, this particular idea of a
+ king's responsibilities towards his subjects had spread among many of the
+ nations who inhabited the shores of the North Sea. They were in a very
+ favourable position. They were rich. The poor people in the heart of
+ central Europe, at the mercy of their Ruler's body-guard, could not afford
+ to discuss a problem which would at once land them in the deepest dungeon
+ of the nearest castle. But the merchants of Holland and England who
+ possessed the capital necessary for the maintenance of great armies and
+ navies, who knew how to handle the almighty weapon called "credit," had no
+ such fear. They were willing to pit the "Divine Right" of their own good
+ money against the "Divine Right" of any Habsburg or Bourbon or Stuart.
+ They knew that their guilders and shillings could beat the clumsy feudal
+ armies which were the only weapons of the King. They dared to act, where
+ others were condemned to suffer in silence or run the risk of the
+ scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the Stuarts began to annoy the people of England with their claim
+ that they had a right to do what they pleased and never mind the
+ responsibility, the English middle classes used the House of Commons as
+ their first line of defence against this abuse of the Royal Power. The
+ Crown refused to give in and the King sent Parliament about its own
+ business. Eleven long years, Charles I ruled alone. He levied taxes which
+ most people regarded as illegal and he managed his British kingdom as if
+ it had been his own country estate. He had capable assistants and we must
+ say that he had the courage of his convictions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately, instead of assuring himself of the support of his faithful
+ Scottish subjects, Charles became involved in a quarrel with the Scotch
+ Presbyterians. Much against his will, but forced by his need for ready
+ cash, Charles was at last obliged to call Parliament together once more.
+ It met in April of 1640 and showed an ugly temper. It was dissolved a few
+ weeks later. A new Parliament convened in November. This one was even less
+ pliable than the first one. The members understood that the question of
+ "Government by Divine Right" or "Government by Parliament" must be fought
+ out for good and all. They attacked the King in his chief councillors and
+ executed half a dozen of them. They announced that they would not allow
+ themselves to be dissolved without their own approval. Finally on December
+ 1, 1641, they presented to the King a "Grand Remonstrance" which gave a
+ detailed account of the many grievances of the people against their Ruler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Charles, hoping to derive some support for his own policy in the country
+ districts, left London in January of 1642. Each side organised an army and
+ prepared for open warfare between the absolute power of the crown and the
+ absolute power of Parliament. During this struggle, the most powerful
+ religious element of England, called the Puritans, (they were Anglicans
+ who had tried to purify their doctrines to the most absolute limits), came
+ quickly to the front. The regiments of "Godly men," commanded by Oliver
+ Cromwell, with their iron discipline and their profound confidence in the
+ holiness of their aims, soon became the model for the entire army of the
+ opposition. Twice Charles was defeated. After the battle of Naseby, in
+ 1645, he fled to Scotland. The Scotch sold him to the English.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There followed a period of intrigue and an uprising of the Scotch
+ Presbyterians against the English Puritan. In August of the year 1648
+ after the three-days' battle of Preston Pans, Cromwell made an end to this
+ second civil war, and took Edinburgh. Meanwhile his soldiers, tired of
+ further talk and wasted hours of religious debate, had decided to act on
+ their own initiative. They removed from Parliament all those who did not
+ agree with their own Puritan views. Thereupon the "Rump," which was what
+ was left of the old Parliament, accused the King of high treason. The
+ House of Lords refused to sit as a tribunal. A special tribunal was
+ appointed and it condemned the King to death. On the 30th of January of
+ the year 1649, King Charles walked quietly out of a window of White Hall
+ onto the scaffold. That day, the Sovereign People, acting through their
+ chosen representatives, for the first time executed a ruler who had failed
+ to understand his own position in the modern state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The period which followed the death of Charles is usually called after
+ Oliver Cromwell. At first the unofficial Dictator of England, he was
+ officially made Lord Protector in the year 1653. He ruled five years. He
+ used this period to continue the policies of Elizabeth. Spain once more
+ became the arch enemy of England and war upon the Spaniard was made a
+ national and sacred issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commerce of England and the interests of the traders were placed
+ before everything else, and the Protestant creed of the strictest nature
+ was rigourously maintained. In maintaining England's position abroad,
+ Cromwell was successful. As a social reformer, however, he failed very
+ badly. The world is made up of a number of people and they rarely think
+ alike. In the long run, this seems a very wise provision. A government of
+ and by and for one single part of the entire community cannot possibly
+ survive. The Puritans had been a great force for good when they tried to
+ correct the abuse of the royal power. As the absolute Rulers of England
+ they became intolerable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Cromwell died in 1658, it was an easy matter for the Stuarts to
+ return to their old kingdom. Indeed, they were welcomed as "deliverers" by
+ the people who had found the yoke of the meek Puritans quite as hard to
+ bear as that of autocratic King Charles. Provided the Stuarts were willing
+ to forget about the Divine Right of their late and lamented father and
+ were willing to recognise the superiority of Parliament, the people
+ promised that they would be loyal and faithful subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two generations tried to make a success of this new arrangement. But the
+ Stuarts apparently had not learned their lesson and were unable to drop
+ their bad habits. Charles II, who came back in the year 1660, was an
+ amiable but worthless person. His indolence and his constitutional
+ insistence upon following the easiest course, together with his
+ conspicuous success as a liar, prevented an open outbreak between himself
+ and his people. By the act of Uniformity in 1662 he broke the power of the
+ Puritan clergy by banishing all dissenting clergymen from their parishes.
+ By the so-called Conventicle Act of 1664 he tried to prevent the
+ Dissenters from attending religious meetings by a threat of deportation to
+ the West Indies. This looked too much like the good old days of Divine
+ Right. People began to show the old and well-known signs of impatience,
+ and Parliament suddenly experienced difficulty in providing the King with
+ funds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since he could not get money from an unwilling Parliament, Charles
+ borrowed it secretly from his neighbour and cousin King Louis of France.
+ He betrayed his Protestant allies in return for 200,000 pounds per year,
+ and laughed at the poor simpletons of Parliament.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Economic independence suddenly gave the King great faith in his own
+ strength. He had spent many years of exile among his Catholic relations
+ and he had a secret liking for their religion. Perhaps he could bring
+ England back to Rome! He passed a Declaration of Indulgence which
+ suspended the old laws against the Catholics and Dissenters. This happened
+ just when Charles' younger brother James was said to have become a
+ Catholic. All this looked suspicious to the man in the street People began
+ to fear some terrible Popish plot. A new spirit of unrest entered the
+ land. Most of the people wanted to prevent another outbreak of civil war.
+ To them Royal Oppression and a Catholic King&mdash;yea, even Divine Right,&mdash;were
+ preferable to a new struggle between members of the same race. Others
+ however were less lenient. They were the much-feared Dissenters, who
+ invariably had the courage of their convictions. They were led by several
+ great noblemen who did not want to see a return of the old days of
+ absolute royal power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For almost ten years, these two great parties, the Whigs (the middle class
+ element, called by this derisive name be-cause in the year 1640 a lot of
+ Scottish Whiggamores or horse-drovers headed by the Presbyterian clergy,
+ had marched to Edinburgh to oppose the King) and the Tories (an epithet
+ originally used against the Royalist Irish adherents but now applied to
+ the supporters of the King) opposed each other, but neither wished to
+ bring about a crisis. They allowed Charles to die peacefully in his bed
+ and permitted the Catholic James II to succeed his brother in 1685. But
+ when James, after threatening the country with the terrible foreign
+ invention of a "standing army" (which was to be commanded by Catholic
+ Frenchmen), issued a second Declaration of Indulgence in 1688, and ordered
+ it to be read in all Anglican churches, he went just a trifle beyond that
+ line of sensible demarcation which can only be transgressed by the most
+ popular of rulers under very exceptional circumstances. Seven bishops
+ refused to comply with the Royal Command. They were accused of "seditious
+ libel." They were brought before a court. The jury which pronounced the
+ verdict of "not guilty" reaped a rich harvest of popular approval.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this unfortunate moment, James (who in a second marriage had taken to
+ wife Maria of the Catholic house of Modena-Este) became the father of a
+ son. This meant that the throne was to go to a Catholic boy rather than to
+ his older sisters, Mary and Anne, who were Protestants. The man in the
+ street again grew suspicious. Maria of Modena was too old to have
+ children! It was all part of a plot! A strange baby had been brought into
+ the palace by some Jesuit priest that England might have a Catholic
+ monarch. And so on. It looked as if another civil war would break out.
+ Then seven well-known men, both Whigs and Tories, wrote a letter asking
+ the husband of James's oldest daughter Mary, William III the Stadtholder
+ or head of the Dutch Republic, to come to England and deliver the country
+ from its lawful but entirely undesirable sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the fifth of November of the year 1688, William landed at Torbay. As he
+ did not wish to make a martyr out of his father-in-law, he helped him to
+ escape safely to France. On the 22nd of January of 1689 he summoned
+ Parliament. On the 13th of February of the same year he and his wife Mary
+ were proclaimed joint sovereigns of England and the country was saved for
+ the Protestant cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Parliament, having undertaken to be something more than a mere advisory
+ body to the King, made the best of its opportunities. The old Petition of
+ Rights of the year 1628 was fished out of a forgotten nook of the
+ archives. A second and more drastic Bill of Rights demanded that the
+ sovereign of England should belong to the Anglican church. Furthermore it
+ stated that the king had no right to suspend the laws or permit certain
+ privileged citizens to disobey certain laws. It stipulated that "without
+ consent of Parliament no taxes could be levied and no army could be
+ maintained." Thus in the year 1689 did England acquire an amount of
+ liberty unknown in any other country of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is not only on account of this great liberal measure that the rule
+ of William in England is still remembered. During his lifetime, government
+ by a "responsible" ministry first developed. No king of course can rule
+ alone. He needs a few trusted advisors. The Tudors had their Great Council
+ which was composed of Nobles and Clergy. This body grew too large. It was
+ restricted to the small "Privy Council." In the course of time it became
+ the custom of these councillors to meet the king in a cabinet in the
+ palace. Hence they were called the "Cabinet Council." After a short while
+ they were known as the "Cabinet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William, like most English sovereigns before him, had chosen his advisors
+ from among all parties. But with the increased strength of Parliament, he
+ had found it impossible to direct the politics of the country with the
+ help of the Tories while the Whigs had a majority in the house of Commons.
+ Therefore the Tories had been dismissed and the Cabinet Council had been
+ composed entirely of Whigs. A few years later when the Whigs lost their
+ power in the House of Commons, the king, for the sake of convenience, was
+ obliged to look for his support among the leading Tories. Until his death
+ in 1702, William was too busy fighting Louis of France to bother much
+ about the government of England. Practically all important affairs had
+ been left to his Cabinet Council. When William's sister-in-law, Anne,
+ succeeded him in 1702 this condition of affairs continued. When she died
+ in 1714 (and unfortunately not a single one of her seventeen children
+ survived her) the throne went to George I of the House of Hanover, the son
+ of Sophie, grand-daughter of James I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This somewhat rustic monarch, who never learned a word of English, was
+ entirely lost in the complicated mazes of England's political
+ arrangements. He left everything to his Cabinet Council and kept away from
+ their meetings, which bored him as he did not understand a single
+ sentence. In this way the Cabinet got into the habit of ruling England and
+ Scotland (whose Parliament had been joined to that of England in 1707)
+ without bothering the King, who was apt to spend a great deal of his time
+ on the continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the reign of George I and George II, a succession of great Whigs
+ (of whom one, Sir Robert Walpole, held office for twenty-one years) formed
+ the Cabinet Council of the King. Their leader was finally recognised as
+ the official leader not only of the actual Cabinet but also of the
+ majority party in power in Parliament. The attempts of George III to take
+ matters into his own hands and not to leave the actual business of
+ government to his Cabinet were so disastrous that they were never
+ repeated. And from the earliest years of the eighteenth century on,
+ England enjoyed representative government, with a responsible ministry
+ which conducted the affairs of the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To be quite true, this government did not represent all classes of
+ society. Less than one man in a dozen had the right to vote. But it was
+ the foundation for the modern representative form of government. In a
+ quiet and orderly fashion it took the power away from the King and placed
+ it in the hands of an ever increasing number of popular representatives.
+ It did not bring the millenium to England, but it saved that country from
+ most of the revolutionary outbreaks which proved so disastrous to the
+ European continent in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE BALANCE OF POWER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ IN FRANCE ON THE OTHER HAND THE "DIVINE RIGHT OF KINGS" CONTINUED WITH
+ GREATER POMP AND SPLENDOUR THAN EVER BEFORE AND THE AMBITION OF THE RULER
+ WAS ONLY TEMPERED BY THE NEWLY INVENTED LAW OF THE "BALANCE OF POWER"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a contrast to the previous chapter, let me tell you what happened in
+ France during the years when the English people were fighting for their
+ liberty. The happy combination of the right man in the right country at
+ the right moment is very rare in History. Louis XIV was a realisation of
+ this ideal, as far as France was concerned, but the rest of Europe would
+ have been happier without him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country over which the young king was called to rule was the most
+ populous and the most brilliant nation of that day. Louis came to the
+ throne when Mazarin and Richelieu, the two great Cardinals, had just
+ hammered the ancient French Kingdom into the most strongly centralised
+ state of the seventeenth century. He was himself a man of extraordinary
+ ability. We, the people of the twentieth century, are still surrounded by
+ the memories of the glorious age of the Sun King. Our social life is based
+ upon the perfection of manners and the elegance of expression attained at
+ the court of Louis. In international and diplomatic relations, French is
+ still the official language of diplomacy and international gatherings
+ because two centuries ago it reached a polished elegance and a purity of
+ expression which no other tongue had as yet been able to equal. The
+ theatre of King Louis still teaches us lessons which we are only too slow
+ in learning. During his reign the French Academy (an invention of
+ Richelieu) came to occupy a position in the world of letters which other
+ countries have flattered by their imitation. We might continue this list
+ for many pages. It is no matter of mere chance that our modern
+ bill-of-fare is printed in French. The very difficult art of decent
+ cooking, one of the highest expressions of civilisation, was first
+ practiced for the benefit of the great Monarch. The age of Louis XIV was a
+ time of splendour and grace which can still teach us a lot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately this brilliant picture has another side which was far less
+ encouraging. Glory abroad too often means misery at home, and France was
+ no exception to this rule Louis XIV succeeded his father in the year 1643.
+ He died in the year 1715. That means that the government of France was in
+ the hands of one single man for seventy-two years, almost two whole
+ generations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be well to get a firm grasp of this idea, "one single man." Louis
+ was the first of a long list of monarchs who in many countries established
+ that particular form of highly efficient autocracy which we call
+ "enlightened despotism." He did not like kings who merely played at being
+ rulers and turned official affairs into a pleasant picnic. The Kings of
+ that enlightened age worked harder than any of their subjects. They got up
+ earlier and went to bed later than anybody else, and felt their "divine
+ responsibility" quite as strongly as their "divine right" which allowed
+ them to rule without consulting their subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, the king could not attend to everything in person. He was
+ obliged to surround himself with a few helpers and councillors. One or two
+ generals, some experts upon foreign politics, a few clever financiers and
+ economists would do for this purpose. But these dignitaries could act only
+ through their Sovereign. They had no individual existence. To the mass of
+ the people, the Sovereign actually represented in his own sacred person
+ the government of their country. The glory of the common fatherland became
+ the glory of a single dynasty. It meant the exact opposite of our own
+ American ideal. France was ruled of and by and for the House of Bourbon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The disadvantages of such a system are clear. The King grew to be
+ everything. Everybody else grew to be nothing at all. The old and useful
+ nobility was gradually forced to give up its former shares in the
+ government of the provinces. A little Royal bureaucrat, his fingers
+ splashed with ink, sitting behind the greenish windows of a government
+ building in faraway Paris, now performed the task which a hundred years
+ before had been the duty of the feudal Lord. The feudal Lord, deprived of
+ all work, moved to Paris to amuse himself as best he could at the court.
+ Soon his estates began to suffer from that very dangerous economic
+ sickness, known as "Absentee Landlordism." Within a single generation, the
+ industrious and useful feudal administrators had become the well-mannered
+ but quite useless loafers of the court of Versailles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis was ten years old when the peace of Westphalia was concluded and the
+ House of Habsburg, as a result of the Thirty Years War, lost its
+ predominant position in Europe. It was inevitable that a man with his
+ ambition should use so favourable a moment to gain for his own dynasty the
+ honours which had formerly been held by the Habsburgs. In the year 1660
+ Louis had married Maria Theresa, daughter of the King of Spain. Soon
+ afterward, his father-in-law, Philip IV, one of the half-witted Spanish
+ Habsburgs, died. At once Louis claimed the Spanish Netherlands (Belgium)
+ as part of his wife's dowry. Such an acquisition would have been
+ disastrous to the peace of Europe, and would have threatened the safety of
+ the Protestant states. Under the leadership of Jan de Witt,
+ Raadpensionaris or Foreign Minister of the United Seven Netherlands, the
+ first great international alliance, the Triple Alliance of Sweden, England
+ and Holland, of the year 1661, was concluded. It did not last long. With
+ money and fair promises Louis bought up both King Charles and the Swedish
+ Estates. Holland was betrayed by her allies and was left to her own fate.
+ In the year 1672 the French invaded the low countries. They marched to the
+ heart of the country. For a second time the dikes were opened and the
+ Royal Sun of France set amidst the mud of the Dutch marshes. The peace of
+ Nimwegen which was concluded in 1678 settled nothing but merely
+ anticipated another war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second war of aggression from 1689 to 1697, ending with the Peace of
+ Ryswick, also failed to give Louis that position in the affairs of Europe
+ to which he aspired. His old enemy, Jan de Witt, had been murdered by the
+ Dutch rabble, but his successor, William III (whom you met in the last
+ chapter), had checkmated all efforts of Louis to make France the ruler of
+ Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great war for the Spanish succession, begun in the year 1701,
+ immediately after the death of Charles II, the last of the Spanish
+ Habsburgs, and ended in 1713 by the Peace of Utrecht, remained equally
+ undecided, but it had ruined the treasury of Louis. On land the French
+ king had been victorious, but the navies of England and Holland had
+ spoiled all hope for an ultimate French victory; besides the long struggle
+ had given birth to a new and fundamental principle of international
+ politics, which thereafter made it impossible for one single nation to
+ rule the whole of Europe or the whole of the world for any length of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was the so-called "balance of power." It was not a written law but
+ for three centuries it has been obeyed as closely as are the laws of
+ nature. The people who originated the idea maintained that Europe, in its
+ nationalistic stage of development, could only survive when there should
+ be an absolute balance of the many conflicting interests of the entire
+ continent. No single power or single dynasty must ever be allowed to
+ dominate the others. During the Thirty Years War, the Habsburgs had been
+ the victims of the application of this law. They, however, had been
+ unconscious victims. The issues during that struggle were so clouded in a
+ haze of religious strife that we do not get a very clear view of the main
+ tendencies of that great conflict. But from that time on, we begin to see
+ how cold, economic considerations and calculations prevail in all matters
+ of international importance. We discover the development of a new type of
+ statesman, the statesman with the personal feelings of the slide-rule and
+ the cash-register. Jan de Witt was the first successful exponent of this
+ new school of politics. William III was the first great pupil. And Louis
+ XIV with all his fame and glory, was the first conscious victim. There
+ have been many others since.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RISE OF RUSSIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE STORY OF THE MYSTERIOUS MOSCOVITE EMPIRE WHICH SUDDENLY BURST UPON THE
+ GRAND POLITICAL STAGE OF EUROPE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the year 1492, as you know, Columbus discovered America. Early in the
+ year, a Tyrolese by the name of Schnups, travelling as the head of a
+ scientific expedition for the Archbishop of Tyrol, and provided with the
+ best letters of introduction and excellent credit tried to reach the
+ mythical town of Moscow. He did not succeed. When he reached the frontiers
+ of this vast Moscovite state which was vaguely supposed to exist in the
+ extreme Eastern part of Europe, he was firmly turned back. No foreigners
+ were wanted. And Schnups went to visit the heathen Turk in Constantinople,
+ in order that he might have something to report to his clerical master
+ when he came back from his explorations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sixty-one years later, Richard Chancellor, trying to discover the
+ North-eastern passage to the Indies, and blown by an ill wind into the
+ White Sea, reached the mouth of the Dwina and found the Moscovite village
+ of Kholmogory, a few hours from the spot where in 1584 the town of
+ Archangel was founded. This time the foreign visitors were requested to
+ come to Moscow and show themselves to the Grand Duke. They went and
+ returned to England with the first commercial treaty ever concluded
+ between Russia and the western world. Other nations soon followed and
+ something became known of this mysterious land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Geographically, Russia is a vast plain. The Ural mountains are low and
+ form no barrier against invaders. The rivers are broad but often shallow.
+ It was an ideal territory for nomads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the Roman Empire was founded, grew in power and disappeared again,
+ Slavic tribes, who had long since left their homes in Central Asia,
+ wandered aimlessly through the forests and plains of the region between
+ the Dniester and Dnieper rivers. The Greeks had sometimes met these Slavs
+ and a few travellers of the third and fourth centuries mention them.
+ Otherwise they were as little known as were the Nevada Indians in the year
+ 1800.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately for the peace of these primitive peoples, a very convenient
+ trade-route ran through their country. This was the main road from
+ northern Europe to Constantinople. It followed the coast of the Baltic
+ until the Neva was reached. Then it crossed Lake Ladoga and went southward
+ along the Volkhov river. Then through Lake Ilmen and up the small Lovat
+ river. Then there was a short portage until the Dnieper was reached. Then
+ down the Dnieper into the Black Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Norsemen knew of this road at a very early date. In the ninth century
+ they began to settle in northern Russia, just as other Norsemen were
+ laying the foundation for independent states in Germany and France. But in
+ the year 862, three Norsemen, brothers, crossed the Baltic and founded
+ three small dynasties. Of the three brothers, only one, Rurik, lived for a
+ number of years. He took possession of the territory of his brothers, and
+ twenty years after the arrival of this first Norseman, a Slavic state had
+ been established with Kiev as its capital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Kiev to the Black Sea is a short distance. Soon the existence of an
+ organised Slavic State became known in Constantinople. This meant a new
+ field for the zealous missionaries of the Christian faith. Byzantine monks
+ followed the Dnieper on their way northward and soon reached the heart of
+ Russia. They found the people worshipping strange gods who were supposed
+ to dwell in woods and rivers and in mountain caves. They taught them the
+ story of Jesus. There was no competition from the side of Roman
+ missionaries. These good men were too busy educating the heathen Teutons
+ to bother about the distant Slavs. Hence Russia received its religion and
+ its alphabet and its first ideas of art and architecture from the
+ Byzantine monks and as the Byzantine empire (a relic of the eastern Roman
+ empire) had become very oriental and had lost many of its European traits,
+ the Russians suffered in consequence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Politically speaking these new states of the great Russian plains did not
+ fare well. It was the Norse habit to divide every inheritance equally
+ among all the sons. No sooner had a small state been founded but it was
+ broken up among eight or nine heirs who in turn left their territory to an
+ ever increasing number of descendants. It was inevitable that these small
+ competing states should quarrel among themselves. Anarchy was the order of
+ the day. And when the red glow of the eastern horizon told the people of
+ the threatened invasion of a savage Asiatic tribe, the little states were
+ too weak and too divided to render any sort of defence against this
+ terrible enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was in the year 1224 that the first great Tartar invasion took place
+ and that the hordes of Jenghiz Khan, the conqueror of China, Bokhara,
+ Tashkent and Turkestan made their first appearance in the west. The Slavic
+ armies were beaten near the Kalka river and Russia was at the mercy of the
+ Mongolians. Just as suddenly as they had come they disappeared. Thirteen
+ years later, in 1237, however, they returned. In less than five years they
+ conquered every part of the vast Russian plains. Until the year 1380 when
+ Dmitry Donskoi, Grand Duke of Moscow, beat them on the plains of Kulikovo,
+ the Tartars were the masters of the Russian people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All in all, it took the Russians two centuries to deliver themselves from
+ this yoke. For a yoke it was and a most offensive and objectionable one.
+ It turned the Slavic peasants into miserable slaves. No Russian could hope
+ to survive un-less he was willing to creep before a dirty little yellow
+ man who sat in a tent somewhere in the heart of the steppes of southern
+ Russia and spat at him. It deprived the mass of the people of all feeling
+ of honour and independence. It made hunger and misery and maltreatment and
+ personal abuse the normal state of human existence. Until at last the
+ average Russian, were he peasant or nobleman, went about his business like
+ a neglected dog who has been beaten so often that his spirit has been
+ broken and he dare not wag his tail without permission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no escape. The horsemen of the Tartar Khan were fast and
+ merciless. The endless prairie did not give a man a chance to cross into
+ the safe territory of his neighbour. He must keep quiet and bear what his
+ yellow master decided to inflict upon him or run the risk of death. Of
+ course, Europe might have interfered. But Europe was engaged upon business
+ of its own, fighting the quarrels between the Pope and the emperor or
+ suppressing this or that or the other heresy. And so Europe left the Slav
+ to his fate, and forced him to work out his own salvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The final saviour of Russia was one of the many small states, founded by
+ the early Norse rulers. It was situated in the heart of the Russian plain.
+ Its capital, Moscow, was upon a steep hill on the banks of the Moskwa
+ river. This little principality, by dint of pleasing the Tartar (when it
+ was necessary to please), and opposing him (when it was safe to do so),
+ had, during the middle of the fourteenth century made itself the leader of
+ a new national life. It must be remembered that the Tartars were wholly
+ deficient in constructive political ability. They could only destroy.
+ Their chief aim in conquering new territories was to obtain revenue. To
+ get this revenue in the form of taxes, it was necessary to allow certain
+ remnants of the old political organization to continue. Hence there were
+ many little towns, surviving by the grace of the Great Khan, that they
+ might act as tax-gatherers and rob their neighbours for the benefit of the
+ Tartar treasury.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The state of Moscow, growing fat at the expense of the surrounding
+ territory, finally became strong enough to risk open rebellion against its
+ masters, the Tartars. It was successful and its fame as the leader in the
+ cause of Russian independence made Moscow the natural centre for all those
+ who still believed in a better future for the Slavic race. In the year
+ 1458, Constantinople was taken by the Turks. Ten years later, under the
+ rule of Ivan III, Moscow informed the western world that the Slavic state
+ laid claim to the worldly and spiritual inheritance of the lost Byzantine
+ Empire, and such traditions of the Roman empire as had survived in
+ Constantinople. A generation afterwards, under Ivan the Terrible, the
+ grand dukes of Moscow were strong enough to adopt the title of Caesar, or
+ Tsar, and to demand recognition by the western powers of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1598, with Feodor the First, the old Muscovite dynasty,
+ descendants of the original Norseman Rurik, came to an end. For the next
+ seven years, a Tartar half-breed, by the name of Boris Godunow, reigned as
+ Tsar. It was during this period that the future destiny of the large
+ masses of the Russian people was decided. This Empire was rich in land but
+ very poor in money. There was no trade and there were no factories. Its
+ few cities were dirty villages. It was composed of a strong central
+ government and a vast number of illiterate peasants. This government, a
+ mixture of Slavic, Norse, Byzantine and Tartar influences, recognised
+ nothing beyond the interest of the state. To defend this state, it needed
+ an army. To gather the taxes, which were necessary to pay the soldiers, it
+ needed civil servants. To pay these many officials it needed land. In the
+ vast wilderness on the east and west there was a sufficient supply of this
+ commodity. But land without a few labourers to till the fields and tend
+ the cattle, has no value. Therefore the old nomadic peasants were robbed
+ of one privilege after the other, until finally, during the first year of
+ the sixteenth century, they were formally made a part of the soil upon
+ which they lived. The Russian peasants ceased to be free men. They became
+ serfs or slaves and they remained serfs until the year 1861, when their
+ fate had become so terrible that they were beginning to die out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the seventeenth century, this new state with its growing territory
+ which was spreading quickly into Siberia, had become a force with which
+ the rest of Europe was obliged to reckon. In 1618, after the death of
+ Boris Godunow, the Russian nobles had elected one of their own number to
+ be Tsar. He was Michael, the son of Feodor, of the Moscow family of
+ Romanow who lived in a little house just outside the Kremlin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1672 his great-grandson, Peter, the son of another Feodor, was
+ born. When the child was ten years old, his step-sister Sophia took
+ possession of the Russian throne. The little boy was allowed to spend his
+ days in the suburbs of the national capital, where the foreigners lived.
+ Surrounded by Scotch barkeepers, Dutch traders, Swiss apothecaries,
+ Italian barbers, French dancing teachers and German school-masters, the
+ young prince obtained a first but rather extraordinary impression of that
+ far-away and mysterious Europe where things were done differently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was seventeen years old, he suddenly pushed Sister Sophia from the
+ throne. Peter himself became the ruler of Russia. He was not contented
+ with being the Tsar of a semi-barbarous and half-Asiatic people. He must
+ be the sovereign head of a civilised nation. To change Russia overnight
+ from a Byzantine-Tartar state into a European empire was no small
+ undertaking. It needed strong hands and a capable head. Peter possessed
+ both. In the year 1698, the great operation of grafting Modern Europe upon
+ Ancient Russia was performed. The patient did not die. But he never got
+ over the shock, as the events of the last five years have shown very
+ plainly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ RUSSIA vs. SWEDEN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ RUSSIA AND SWEDEN FIGHT MANY WARS TO DECIDE WHO SHALL BE THE LEADING POWER
+ OF NORTH-EASTERN EUROPE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the year 1698, Tsar Peter set forth upon his first voyage to western
+ Europe. He travelled by way of Berlin and went to Holland and to England.
+ As a child he had almost been drowned sailing a homemade boat in the duck
+ pond of his father's country home. This passion for water remained with
+ him to the end of his life. In a practical way it showed itself in his
+ wish to give his land-locked domains access to the open sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the unpopular and harsh young ruler was away from home, the friends
+ of the old Russian ways in Moscow set to work to undo all his reforms. A
+ sudden rebellion among his life-guards, the Streltsi regiment, forced
+ Peter to hasten home by the fast mail. He appointed himself
+ executioner-in-chief and the Streltsi were hanged and quartered and killed
+ to the last man. Sister Sophia, who had been the head of the rebellion,
+ was locked up in a cloister and the rule of Peter be-gan in earnest. This
+ scene was repeated in the year 1716 when Peter had gone on his second
+ western trip. That time the reactionaries followed the leadership of
+ Peter's half-witted son, Alexis. Again the Tsar returned in great haste.
+ Alexis was beaten to death in his prison cell and the friends of the old
+ fashioned Byzantine ways marched thousands of dreary miles to their final
+ destination in the Siberian lead mines. After that, no further outbreaks
+ of popular discontent took place. Until the time of his death, Peter could
+ reform in peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy to give you a list of his reforms in chronological order.
+ The Tsar worked with furious haste. He followed no system. He issued his
+ decrees with such rapidity that it is difficult to keep count. Peter
+ seemed to feel that everything that had ever happened before was entirely
+ wrong. The whole of Russia therefore must be changed within the shortest
+ possible time. When he died he left behind a well-trained army of 200,000
+ men and a navy of fifty ships. The old system of government had been
+ abolished over night. The Duma, or convention of Nobles, had been
+ dismissed and in its stead, the Tsar had surrounded himself with an
+ advisory board of state officials, called the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russia was divided into eight large "governments" or provinces. Roads were
+ constructed. Towns were built. Industries were created wherever it pleased
+ the Tsar, without any regard for the presence of raw material. Canals were
+ dug and mines were opened in the mountains of the east. In this land of
+ illiterates, schools were founded and establishments of higher learning,
+ together with Universities and hospitals and professional schools. Dutch
+ naval engineers and tradesmen and artisans from all over the world were
+ encouraged to move to Russia. Printing shops were established, but all
+ books must be first read by the imperial censors. The duties of each class
+ of society were carefully written down in a new law and the entire system
+ of civil and criminal laws was gathered into a series of printed volumes.
+ The old Russian costumes were abolished by Imperial decree, and policemen,
+ armed with scissors, watching all the country roads, changed the
+ long-haired Russian mou-jiks suddenly into a pleasing imitation of
+ smooth-shaven west. Europeans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In religious matters, the Tsar tolerated no division of power. There must
+ be no chance of a rivalry between an Emperor and a Pope as had happened in
+ Europe. In the year 1721, Peter made himself head of the Russian Church.
+ The Patriarchate of Moscow was abolished and the Holy Synod made its
+ appearance as the highest source of authority in all matters of the
+ Established Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since, however, these many reforms could not be success-ful while the old
+ Russian elements had a rallying point in the town of Moscow, Peter decided
+ to move his government to a new capital. Amidst the unhealthy marshes of
+ the Baltic Sea the Tsar built this new city. He began to reclaim the land
+ in the year 1703. Forty thousand peasants worked for years to lay the
+ foundations for this Imperial city. The Swedes attacked Peter and tried to
+ destroy his town and illness and misery killed tens of thousands of the
+ peasants. But the work was continued, winter and summer, and the
+ ready-made town soon began to grow. In the year 1712, it was officially
+ de-clared to be the "Imperial Residence." A dozen years later it had
+ 75,000 inhabitants. Twice a year the whole city was flooded by the Neva.
+ But the terrific will-power of the Tsar created dykes and canals and the
+ floods ceased to do harm. When Peter died in 1725 he was the owner of the
+ largest city in northern Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, this sudden growth of so dangerous a rival had been a source of
+ great worry to all the neighbours. From his side, Peter had watched with
+ interest the many adventures of his Baltic rival, the kingdom of Sweden.
+ In the year 1654, Christina, the only daughter of Gustavus Adolphus, the
+ hero of the Thirty Years War, had renounced the throne and had gone to
+ Rome to end her days as a devout Catholic. A Protestant nephew of Gustavus
+ Adolphus had succeeded the last Queen of the House of Vasa. Under Charles
+ X and Charles XI, the new dynasty had brought Sweden to its highest point
+ of development. But in 1697, Charles XI died suddenly and was succeeded by
+ a boy of fifteen, Charles XII.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was the moment for which many of the northern states had waited.
+ During the great religious wars of the seventeenth century, Sweden had
+ grown at the expense of her neighbours. The time had come, so the owners
+ thought, to balance the account. At once war broke out between Russia,
+ Poland, Denmark and Saxony on the one side, and Sweden on the other. The
+ raw and untrained armies of Peter were disastrously beaten by Charles in
+ the famous battle of Narva in November of the year 1700. Then Charles, one
+ of the most interesting military geniuses of that century, turned against
+ his other enemies and for nine years he hacked and burned his way through
+ the villages and cities of Poland, Saxony, Denmark and the Baltic
+ provinces, while Peter drilled and trained his soldiers in distant Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a result, in the year 1709, in the battle of Poltawa, the Moscovites
+ destroyed the exhausted armies of Sweden. Charles continued to be a highly
+ picturesque figure, a wonderful hero of romance, but in his vain attempt
+ to have his revenge, he ruined his own country. In the year 1718, he was
+ accidentally killed or assassinated (we do not know which) and when peace
+ was made in 1721, in the town of Nystadt, Sweden had lost all of her
+ former Baltic possessions except Finland. The new Russian state, created
+ by Peter, had become the leading power of northern Europe. But already a
+ new rival was on the way. The Prussian state was taking shape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE RISE OF PRUSSIA
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE EXTRAORDINARY RISE OF A LITTLE STATE IN A DREARY PART OF NORTHERN
+ GERMANY, CALLED PRUSSIA
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE history of Prussia is the history of a frontier district. In the ninth
+ century, Charlemagne had transferred the old centre of civilisation from
+ the Mediterranean to the wild regions of northwestern Europe. His Frankish
+ soldiers had pushed the frontier of Europe further and further towards the
+ east. They had conquered many lands from the heathenish Slavs and
+ Lithuanians who were living in the plain between the Baltic Sea and the
+ Carpathian Mountains, and the Franks administered those outlying districts
+ just as the United States used to administer her territories before they
+ achieved the dignity of statehood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The frontier state of Brandenburg had been originally founded by
+ Charlemagne to defend his eastern possessions against raids of the wild
+ Saxon tribes. The Wends, a Slavic tribe which inhabited that region, were
+ subjugated during the tenth century and their market-place, by the name of
+ Brennabor, became the centre of and gave its name to the new province of
+ Brandenburg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, a
+ succession of noble families exercised the functions of imperial governor
+ in this frontier state. Finally in the fifteenth century, the House of
+ Hohenzollern made its appear-ance, and as Electors of Brandenburg,
+ commenced to change a sandy and forlorn frontier territory into one of the
+ most efficient empires of the modern world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These Hohenzollerns, who have just been removed from the historical stage
+ by the combined forces of Europe and America, came originally from
+ southern Germany. They were of very humble origin. In the twelfth century
+ a certain Frederick of Hohenzollern had made a lucky marriage and had been
+ appointed keeper of the castle of Nuremberg. His descendants had used
+ every chance and every opportunity to improve their power and after
+ several centuries of watchful grabbing, they had been appointed to the
+ dignity of Elector, the name given to those sovereign princes who were
+ supposed to elect the Emperors of the old German Empire. During the
+ Reformation, they had taken the side of the Protestants and the early
+ seventeenth century found them among the most powerful of the north German
+ princes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the Thirty Years War, both Protestants and Catholics had plundered
+ Brandenburg and Prussia with equal zeal. But under Frederick William, the
+ Great Elector, the damage was quickly repaired and by a wise and careful
+ use of all the economic and intellectual forces of the country, a state
+ was founded in which there was practically no waste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Modern Prussia, a state in which the individual and his wishes and
+ aspirations have been entirely absorbed by the interests of the community
+ as a whole this Prussia dates back to the father of Frederick the Great.
+ Frederick William I was a hard working, parsimonious Prussian sergeant,
+ with a great love for bar-room stories and strong Dutch tobacco, an
+ intense dislike of all frills and feathers, (especially if they were of
+ French origin,) and possessed of but one idea. That idea was Duty. Severe
+ with himself, he tolerated no weakness in his subjects, whether they be
+ generals or common soldiers. The relation between himself and his son
+ Frederick was never cordial, to say the least. The boorish manners of the
+ father offended the finer spirit of the son. The son's love for French
+ manners, literature, philosophy and music was rejected by the father as a
+ manifestation of sissy-ness. There followed a terrible outbreak between
+ these two strange temperaments. Frederick tried to escape to England. He
+ was caught and court-martialed and forced to witness the decapitation of
+ his best friend who had tried to help him. Thereupon as part of his
+ punishment, the young prince was sent to a little fortress somewhere in
+ the provinces to be taught the details of his future business of being a
+ king. It proved a blessing in disguise. When Frederick came to the throne
+ in 1740, he knew how his country was managed from the birth certificate of
+ a pauper's son to the minutest detail of a complicated annual Budget.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As an author, especially in his book called the "Anti-Macchiavelli,"
+ Frederick had expressed his contempt for the political creed of the
+ ancient Florentine historian, who had advised his princely pupils to lie
+ and cheat whenever it was necessary to do so for the benefit of their
+ country. The ideal ruler in Frederick's volume was the first servant of
+ his people, the enlightened despot after the example of Louis XIV. In
+ practice, however, Frederick, while working for his people twenty hours a
+ day, tolerated no one to be near him as a counsellor. His ministers were
+ superior clerks. Prussia was his private possession, to be treated
+ according to his own wishes. And nothing was allowed to interfere with the
+ interest of the state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1740 the Emperor Charles VI, of Austria, died. He had tried to
+ make the position of his only daughter, Maria Theresa, secure through a
+ solemn treaty, written black on white, upon a large piece of parchment.
+ But no sooner had the old emperor been deposited in the ancestral crypt of
+ the Habsburg family, than the armies of Frederick were marching towards
+ the Austrian frontier to occupy that part of Silesia for which (together
+ with almost everything else in central Europe) Prussia clamored, on
+ account of some ancient and very doubtful rights of claim. In a number of
+ wars, Frederick conquered all of Silesia, and although he was often very
+ near defeat, he maintained himself in his newly acquired territories
+ against all Austrian counter-attacks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Europe took due notice of this sudden appearance of a very powerful new
+ state. In the eighteenth century, the Germans were a people who had been
+ ruined by the great religious wars and who were not held in high esteem by
+ any one. Frederick, by an effort as sudden and quite as terrific as that
+ of Peter of Russia, changed this attitude of contempt into one of fear.
+ The internal affairs of Prussia were arranged so skillfully that the
+ subjects had less reason for complaint than elsewhere. The treasury showed
+ an annual surplus instead of a deficit. Torture was abolished. The
+ judiciary system was improved. Good roads and good schools and good
+ universities, together with a scrupulously honest administration, made the
+ people feel that whatever services were demanded of them, they (to speak
+ the vernacular) got their money's worth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After having been for several centuries the battle field of the French and
+ the Austrians and the Swedes and the Danes and the Poles, Germany,
+ encouraged by the example of Prussia, began to regain self-confidence. And
+ this was the work of the little old man, with his hook-nose and his old
+ uniforms covered with snuff, who said very funny but very unpleasant
+ things about his neighbours, and who played the scandalous game of
+ eighteenth century diplomacy without any regard for the truth, provided he
+ could gain something by his lies. This in spite of his book,
+ "Anti-Macchiavelli." In the year 1786 the end came. His friends were all
+ gone. Children he had never had. He died alone, tended by a single servant
+ and his faithful dogs, whom he loved better than human beings because, as
+ he said, they were never ungrateful and remained true to their friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE MERCANTILE SYSTEM
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ HOW THE NEWLY FOUNDED NATIONAL OR DYNASTIC STATES OF EUROPE TRIED TO MAKE
+ THEMSELVES RICH AND WHAT WAS MEANT BY THE MERCANTILE SYSTEM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ WE have seen how, during the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries, the
+ states of our modern world began to take shape. Their origins were
+ different in almost every case. Some had been the result of the deliberate
+ effort of a single king. Others had happened by chance. Still others had
+ been the result of favourable natural geographic boundaries. But once they
+ had been founded, they had all of them tried to strengthen their internal
+ administration and to exert the greatest possible influence upon foreign
+ affairs. All this of course had cost a great deal of money. The mediaeval
+ state with its lack of centralised power did not depend upon a rich
+ treasury. The king got his revenues from the crown domains and his civil
+ service paid for itself. The modern centralised state was a more
+ complicated affair. The old knights disappeared and hired government
+ officials or bureaucrats took their place. Army, navy, and internal
+ administration demanded millions. The question then became where was this
+ money to be found?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gold and silver had been a rare commodity in the middle ages. The average
+ man, as I have told you, never saw a gold piece as long as he lived. Only
+ the inhabitants of the large cities were familiar with silver coin. The
+ discovery of America and the exploitation of the Peruvian mines changed
+ all this. The centre of trade was transferred from the Mediterranean to
+ the Atlantic seaboard. The old "commercial cities" of Italy lost their
+ financial importance. New "commercial nations" took their place and gold
+ and silver were no longer a curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Through Spain and Portugal and Holland and England, precious metals began
+ to find their way to Europe The sixteenth century had its own writers on
+ the subject of political economy and they evolved a theory of national
+ wealth which seemed to them entirely sound and of the greatest possible
+ benefit to their respective countries. They reasoned that both gold and
+ silver were actual wealth. Therefore they believed that the country with
+ the largest supply of actual cash in the vaults of its treasury and its
+ banks was at the same time the richest country. And since money meant
+ armies, it followed that the richest country was also the most powerful
+ and could rule the rest of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We call this system the "mercantile system," and it was accepted with the
+ same unquestioning faith with which the early Christians believed in
+ Miracles and many of the present-day American business men believe in the
+ Tariff. In practice, the Mercantile system worked out as follows: To get
+ the largest surplus of precious metals a country must have a favourable
+ balance of export trade. If you can export more to your neighbour than he
+ exports to your own country, he will owe you money and will be obliged to
+ send you some of his gold. Hence you gain and he loses. As a result of
+ this creed, the economic program of almost every seventeenth century state
+ was as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 1. Try to get possession of as many precious metals as you can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 2. Encourage foreign trade in preference to domestic trade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 3. Encourage those industries which change raw materials into exportable
+ finished products.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 4. Encourage a large population, for you will need workmen for your
+ factories and an agricultural community does not raise enough workmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 5. Let the State watch this process and interfere whenever it is necessary
+ to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of regarding International Trade as something akin to a force of
+ nature which would always obey certain natural laws regardless of man's
+ interference, the people of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries tried
+ to regulate their commerce by the help of official decrees and royal laws
+ and financial help on the part of the government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the sixteenth century Charles V adopted this Mercantile System (which
+ was then something entirely new) and introduced it into his many
+ possessions. Elizabeth of England flattered him by her imitation. The
+ Bourbons, especially King Louis XIV, were fanatical adherents of this
+ doctrine and Colbert, his great minister of finance, became the prophet of
+ Mercantilism to whom all Europe looked for guidance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The entire foreign policy of Cromwell was a practical application of the
+ Mercantile System. It was invariably directed against the rich rival
+ Republic of Holland. For the Dutch shippers, as the common-carriers of the
+ merchandise of Europe, had certain leanings towards free-trade and
+ therefore had to be destroyed at all cost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be easily understood how such a system must affect the colonies. A
+ colony under the Mercantile System became merely a reservoir of gold and
+ silver and spices, which was to be tapped for the benefit of the home
+ country. The Asiatic, American and African supply of precious metals and
+ the raw materials of these tropical countries became a monopoly of the
+ state which happened to own that particular colony. No outsider was ever
+ allowed within the precincts and no native was permitted to trade with a
+ merchant whose ship flew a foreign flag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Undoubtedly the Mercantile System encouraged the development of young
+ industries in certain countries where there never had been any
+ manufacturing before. It built roads and dug canals and made for better
+ means of transportation. It demanded greater skill among the workmen and
+ gave the merchant a better social position, while it weakened the power of
+ the landed aristocracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, it caused very great misery. It made the natives in the
+ colonies the victims of a most shameless exploitation. It exposed the
+ citizens of the home country to an even more terrible fate. It helped in a
+ great measure to turn every land into an armed camp and divided the world
+ into little bits of territory, each working for its own direct benefit,
+ while striving at all times to destroy the power of its neighbours and get
+ hold of their treasures. It laid so much stress upon the importance of
+ owning wealth that "being rich" came to be regarded as the sole virtue of
+ the average citizen. Economic systems come and go like the fashions in
+ surgery and in the clothes of women, and during the nineteenth century the
+ Mercantile System was discarded in favor of a system of free and open
+ competition. At least, so I have been told.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AT THE END OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY EUROPE HEARD STRANGE REPORTS OF
+ SOMETHING WHICH HAD HAPPENED IN THE WILDERNESS; OF THE NORTH AMERICAN
+ CONTINENT. THE DESCENDANTS OF THE MEN WHO HAD PUNISHED KING CHARLES FOR
+ HIS INSISTENCE UPON HIS "DIVINE RIGHTS" ADDED A NEW CHAPTER TO THE OLD
+ STORY OF THE STRUGGLE FOR SELF-GOVERNMENT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ FOR the sake of convenience, we ought to go back a few centuries and
+ repeat the early history of the great struggle for colonial possessions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as a number of European nations had been created upon the new
+ basis of national or dynastic interests, that is to say, during and
+ immediately after the Thirty Years War, their rulers, backed up by the
+ capital of their merchants and the ships of their trading companies,
+ continued the fight for more territory in Asia, Africa and America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Spaniards and the Portuguese had been exploring the Indian Sea and the
+ Pacific Ocean for more than a century ere Holland and England appeared
+ upon the stage. This proved an advantage to the latter. The first rough
+ work had already been done. What is more, the earliest navigators had so
+ often made themselves unpopular with the Asiatic and American and African
+ natives that both the English and the Dutch were welcomed as friends and
+ deliverers. We cannot claim any superior virtues for either of these two
+ races. But they were merchants before everything else. They never allowed
+ religious considerations to interfere with their practical common sense.
+ During their first relations with weaker races, all European nations have
+ behaved with shocking brutality. The English and the Dutch, however, knew
+ better where to draw the dine. Provided they got their spices and their
+ gold and silver and their taxes, they were willing to let the native live
+ as it best pleased him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not very difficult for them therefore to establish themselves in
+ the richest parts of the world. But as soon as this had been accomplished,
+ they began to fight each other for still further possessions. Strangely
+ enough, the colonial wars were never settled in the colonies themselves.
+ They were decided three thousand miles away by the navies of the
+ contending countries. It is one of the most interesting principles of
+ ancient and modern warfare (one of the few reliable laws of history) that
+ "the nation which commands the sea is also the nation which commands the
+ land." So far this law has never failed to work, but the modern airplane
+ may have changed it. In the eighteenth century, however, there were no
+ flying machines and it was the British navy which gained for England her
+ vast American and Indian and African colonies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The series of naval wars between England and Holland in the seventeenth
+ century does not interest us here. It ended as all such encounters between
+ hopelessly ill-matched powers will end. But the warfare between England
+ and France (her other rival) is of greater importance to us, for while the
+ superior British fleet in the end defeated the French navy, a great deal
+ of the preliminary fighting was done on our own American continent. In
+ this vast country, both France and England claimed everything which had
+ been discovered and a lot more which the eye of no white man had ever
+ seen. In 1497 Cabot had landed in the northern part of America and
+ twenty-seven years later, Giovanni Verrazano had visited these coasts.
+ Cabot had flown the English flag. Verrazano had sailed under the French
+ flag. Hence both England and France proclaimed themselves the owners of
+ the entire continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the seventeenth century, some ten small English colonies had been
+ founded between Maine and the Carolinas. They were usually a haven of
+ refuge for some particular sect of English dissenters, such as the
+ Puritans, who in the year 1620 went to New England, or the Quakers, who
+ settled in Pennsylvania in 1681. They were small frontier communities,
+ nestling close to the shores of the ocean, where people had gathered to
+ make a new home and begin life among happier surroundings, far away from
+ royal supervision and interference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French colonies, on the other hand, always remained a possession of
+ the crown. No Huguenots or Protestants were allowed in these colonies for
+ fear that they might contaminate the Indians with their dangerous
+ Protestant doctrines and would perhaps interfere with the missionary work
+ of the Jesuit fathers. The English colonies, therefore, had been founded
+ upon a much healthier basis than their French neighbours and rivals. They
+ were an expression of the commercial energy of the English middle classes,
+ while the French settlements were inhabited by people who had crossed the
+ ocean as servants of the king and who expected to return to Paris at the
+ first possible chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Politically, however, the position of the English colonies was far from
+ satisfactory. The French had discovered the mouth of the Saint Lawrence in
+ the sixteenth century. From the region of the Great Lakes they had worked
+ their way southward, had descended the Mississippi and had built several
+ fortifications along the Gulf of Mexico. After a century of exploration, a
+ line of sixty French forts cut off the English settlements along the
+ Atlantic seaboard from the interior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English land grants, made to the different colonial companies had
+ given them "all land from sea to sea." This sounded well on paper, but in
+ practice, British territory ended where the line of French fortifications
+ began. To break through this barrier was possible but it took both men and
+ money and caused a series of horrible border wars in which both sides
+ murdered their white neighbours, with the help of the Indian tribes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as the Stuarts had ruled England there had been no danger of war
+ with France. The Stuarts needed the Bourbons in their attempt to establish
+ an autocratic form of government and to break the power of Parliament. But
+ in 1689 the last of the Stuarts had disappeared from British soil and
+ Dutch William, the great enemy of Louis XIV succeeded him. From that time
+ on, until the Treaty of Paris of 1763, France and England fought for the
+ possession of India and North America.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During these wars, as I have said before, the English navies invariably
+ beat the French. Cut off from her colonies, France lost most of her
+ possessions, and when peace was declared, the entire North American
+ continent had fallen into British hands and the great work of exploration
+ of Cartier, Champlain, La Salle, Marquette and a score of others was lost
+ to France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only a very small part of this vast domain was inhabited. From
+ Massachusetts in the north, where the Pilgrims (a sect of Puritans who
+ were very intolerant and who therefore had found no happiness either in
+ Anglican England or Calvinist Holland) had landed in the year 1620, to the
+ Carolinas and Virginia (the tobacco-raising provinces which had been
+ founded entirely for the sake of profit), stretched a thin line of
+ sparsely populated territory. But the men who lived in this new land of
+ fresh air and high skies were very different from their brethren of the
+ mother country. In the wilderness they had learned independence and
+ self-reliance. They were the sons of hardy and energetic ancestors. Lazy
+ and timourous people did not cross the ocean in those days. The American
+ colonists hated the restraint and the lack of breathing space which had
+ made their lives in the old country so very unhappy. They meant to be
+ their own masters. This the ruling classes of England did not seem to
+ understand. The government annoyed the colonists and the colonists, who
+ hated to be bothered in this way, began to annoy the British government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bad feeling caused more bad feeling. It is not necessary to repeat here in
+ detail what actually happened and what might have been avoided if the
+ British king had been more intelligent than George III or less given to
+ drowsiness and indifference than his minister, Lord North. The British
+ colonists, when they understood that peaceful arguments would not settle
+ the difficulties, took to arms. From being loyal subjects, they turned
+ rebels, who exposed themselves to the punishment of death when they were
+ captured by the German soldiers, whom George hired to do his fighting
+ after the pleasant custom of that day, when Teutonic princes sold whole
+ regiments to the highest bidder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The war between England and her American colonies lasted seven years.
+ During most of that time, the final success of the rebels seemed very
+ doubtful. A great number of the people, especially in the cities, had
+ remained loyal to their king. They were in favour of a compromise, and
+ would have been willing to sue for peace. But the great figure of
+ Washington stood guard over the cause of the colonists.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ably assisted by a handful of brave men, he used his steadfast but badly
+ equipped armies to weaken the forces of the king. Time and again when
+ defeat seemed unavoidable, his strategy turned the tide of battle. Often
+ his men were ill-fed. During the winter they lacked shoes and coats and
+ were forced to live in unhealthy dug-outs. But their trust in their great
+ leader was absolute and they stuck it out until the final hour of victory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But more interesting than the campaigns of Washington or the diplomatic
+ triumphs of Benjamin Franklin who was in Europe getting money from the
+ French government and the Amsterdam bankers, was an event which occurred
+ early in the revolution. The representatives of the different colonies had
+ gathered in Philadelphia to discuss matters of common importance. It was
+ the first year of the Revolution. Most of the big towns of the sea coast
+ were still in the hands of the British. Reinforcements from England were
+ arriving by the ship load. Only men who were deeply convinced of the
+ righteousness of their cause would have found the courage to take the
+ momentous decision of the months of June and July of the year 1776.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In June, Richard Henry Lee of Virginia proposed a motion to the
+ Continental Congress that "these united colonies are, and of right ought
+ to be, free and independent states, that they are absolved from all
+ allegiance to the British crown, and that all political connection between
+ them and the state of Great Britain is and ought to be, totally
+ dissolved."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The motion was seconded by John Adams of Massachusetts. It was carried on
+ July the second and on July fourth, it was followed by an official
+ Declaration of Independence, which was the work of Thomas Jefferson, a
+ serious and exceedingly capable student of both politics and government
+ and destined to be one of the most famous of out American presidents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When news of this event reached Europe, and was followed by the final
+ victory of the colonists and the adoption of the famous Constitution of
+ the year 1787 (the first of all written constitutions) it caused great
+ interest. The dynastic system of the highly centralised states which had
+ been developed after the great religious wars of the seventeenth century
+ had reached the height of its power. Everywhere the palace of the king had
+ grown to enormous proportions, while the cities of the royal realm were
+ being surrounded by rapidly growing acres of slums. The inhabitants of
+ those slums were showing signs of restlessness. They were quite helpless.
+ But the higher classes, the nobles and the professional men, they too were
+ beginning to have certain doubts about the economic and political
+ conditions under which they lived. The success of the American colonists
+ showed them that many things were possible which had been held impossible
+ only a short time before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ According to the poet, the shot which opened the battle of Lexington was
+ "heard around the world." That was a bit of an exaggeration. The Chinese
+ and the Japanese and the Russians (not to speak of the Australians, who
+ had just been re-discovered by Captain Cook, whom they killed for his
+ trouble,) never heard of it at all. But it carried across the Atlantic
+ Ocean. It landed in the powder house of European discontent and in France
+ it caused an explosion which rocked the entire continent from Petrograd to
+ Madrid and buried the representatives of the old statecraft and the old
+ diplomacy under several tons of democratic bricks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE GREAT FRENCH REVOLUTION PROCLAIMS THE PRINCIPLES OF LIBERTY,
+ FRATERNITY AND EQUALITY UNTO ALL THE PEOPLE OF THE EARTH
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ BEFORE we talk about a revolution it is just as well that we explain just
+ what this word means. In the terms of a great Russian writer (and Russians
+ ought to know what they are talking about in this field) a revolution is
+ "a swift overthrow, in a few years, of institutions which have taken
+ centuries to root in the soil, and seem so fixed and immovable that even
+ the most ardent reformers hardly dare to attack them in their writings. It
+ is the fall, the crumbling away in a brief period, of all that up to that
+ time has composed the essence of social, religious, political and economic
+ life in a nation."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such a revolution took place in France in the eighteenth century when the
+ old civilisation of the country had grown stale. The king in the days of
+ Louis XIV had become EVERYTHING and was the state. The Nobility, formerly
+ the civil servant of the federal state, found itself without any duties
+ and became a social ornament of the royal court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This French state of the eighteenth century, however, cost incredible sums
+ of money. This money had to be produced in the form of taxes.
+ Unfortunately the kings of France had not been strong enough to force the
+ nobility and the clergy to pay their share of these taxes. Hence the taxes
+ were paid entirely by the agricultural population. But the peasants living
+ in dreary hovels, no longer in intimate contact with their former
+ landlords, but victims of cruel and incompetent land agents, were going
+ from bad to worse. Why should they work and exert themselves? Increased
+ returns upon their land merely meant more taxes and nothing for themselves
+ and therefore they neglected their fields as much as they dared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hence we have a king who wanders in empty splendour through the vast halls
+ of his palaces, habitually followed by hungry office seekers, all of whom
+ live upon the revenue obtained from peasants who are no better than the
+ beasts of the fields. It is not a pleasant picture, but it is not
+ exaggerated. There was, however, another side to the so-called "Ancien
+ Regime" which we must keep in mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A wealthy middle class, closely connected with the nobility (by the usual
+ process of the rich banker's daughter marrying the poor baron's son) and a
+ court composed of all the most entertaining people of France, had brought
+ the polite art of graceful living to its highest development. As the best
+ brains of the country were not allowed to occupy themselves with questions
+ of political economics, they spent their idle hours upon the discussion of
+ abstract ideas.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As fashions in modes of thought and personal behaviour are quite as likely
+ to run to extremes as fashion in dress, it was natural that the most
+ artificial society of that day should take a tremendous interest in what
+ they considered "the simple life." The king and the queen, the absolute
+ and unquestioned proprietors of this country galled France, together with
+ all its colonies and dependencies, went to live in funny little country
+ houses all dressed up as milk-maids and stable-boys and played at being
+ shepherds in a happy vale of ancient Hellas. Around them, their courtiers
+ danced attendance, their court-musicians composed lovely minuets, their
+ court barbers devised more and more elaborate and costly headgear, until
+ from sheer boredom and lack of real jobs, this whole artificial world of
+ Versailles (the great show place which Louis XIV had built far away from
+ his noisy and restless city) talked of nothing but those subjects which
+ were furthest removed from their own lives, just as a man who is starving
+ will talk of nothing except food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Voltaire, the courageous old philosopher, playwright, historian and
+ novelist, and the great enemy of all religious and political tyranny,
+ began to throw his bombs of criticism at everything connected with the
+ Established Order of Things, the whole French world applauded him and his
+ theatrical pieces played to standing room only. When Jean Jacques Rousseau
+ waxed sentimental about primitive man and gave his contemporaries
+ delightful descriptions of the happiness of the original inhabitants of
+ this planet, (about whom he knew as little as he did about the children,
+ upon whose education he was the recognised authority,) all France read his
+ "Social Contract" and this society in which the king and the state were
+ one, wept bitter tears when they heard Rousseau's appeal for a return to
+ the blessed days when the real sovereignty had lain in the hands of the
+ people and when the king had been merely the servant of his people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Montesquieu published his "Persian Letters" in which two
+ distinguished Persian travellers turn the whole existing society of France
+ topsy-turvy and poke fun at everything from the king down to the lowest of
+ his six hundred pastry cooks, the book immediately went through four
+ editions and assured the writer thousands of readers for his famous
+ discussion of the "Spirit of the Laws" in which the noble Baron compared
+ the excellent English system with the backward system of France and
+ advocated instead of an absolute monarchy the establishment of a state in
+ which the Executive, the Legislative and the Judicial powers should be in
+ separate hands and should work independently of each other. When Lebreton,
+ the Parisian book-seller, announced that Messieurs Diderot, d'Alembert,
+ Turgot and a score of other distinguished writers were going to publish an
+ Encyclopaedia which was to contain "all the new ideas and the new science
+ and the new knowledge," the response from the side of the public was most
+ satisfactory, and when after twenty-two years the last of the twenty-eight
+ volumes had been finished, the somewhat belated interference of the police
+ could not repress the enthusiasm with which French society received this
+ most important but very dangerous contribution to the discussions of the
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, let me give you a little warning. When you read a novel about the
+ French revolution or see a play or a movie, you will easily get the
+ impression that the Revolution was the work of the rabble from the Paris
+ slums. It was nothing of the kind. The mob appears often upon the
+ revolutionary stage, but invariably at the instigation and under the
+ leadership of those middle-class professional men who used the hungry
+ multitude as an efficient ally in their warfare upon the king and his
+ court. But the fundamental ideas which caused the revolution were invented
+ by a few brilliant minds, and they were at first introduced into the
+ charming drawing-rooms of the "Ancien Regime" to provide amiable diversion
+ for the much-bored ladies and gentlemen of his Majesty's court. These
+ pleasant but careless people played with the dangerous fireworks of social
+ criticism until the sparks fell through the cracks of the floor, which was
+ old and rotten just like the rest of the building. Those sparks
+ unfortunately landed in the basement where age-old rubbish lay in great
+ confusion. Then there was a cry of fire. But the owner of the house who
+ was interested in everything except the management of his property, did
+ not know how to put the small blaze out. The flame spread rapidly and the
+ entire edifice was consumed by the conflagration, which we call the Great
+ French Revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the sake of convenience, we can divide the French Revolution into two
+ parts. From 1789 to 1791 there was a more or less orderly attempt to
+ introduce a constitutional monarchy. This failed, partly through lack of
+ good faith and stupidity on the part of the monarch himself, partly
+ through circumstances over which nobody had any control.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From 1792 to 1799 there was a Republic and a first effort to establish a
+ democratic form of government. But the actual outbreak of violence had
+ been preceded by many years of unrest and many sincere but ineffectual
+ attempts at reform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When France had a debt of 4000 million francs and the treasury was always
+ empty and there was not a single thing upon which new taxes could be
+ levied, even good King Louis (who was an expert locksmith and a great
+ hunter but a very poor statesman) felt vaguely that something ought to be
+ done. Therefore he called for Turgot, to be his Minister of Finance. Anne
+ Robert Jacques Turgot, Baron de l'Aulne, a man in the early sixties, a
+ splendid representative of the fast disappearing class of landed gentry,
+ had been a successful governor of a province and was an amateur political
+ economist of great ability. He did his best. Unfortunately, he could not
+ perform miracles. As it was impossible to squeeze more taxes out of the
+ ragged peasants, it was necessary to get the necessary funds from the
+ nobility and clergy who had never paid a centime. This made Turgot the
+ best hated man at the court of Versailles. Furthermore he was obliged to
+ face the enmity of Marie Antoinette, the queen, who was against everybody
+ who dared to mention the word "economy" within her hearing. Soon Turgot
+ was called an "unpractical visionary" and a "theoretical-professor" and
+ then of course his position became untenable. In the year 1776 he was
+ forced to resign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the "professor" there came a man of Practical Business Sense. He was
+ an industrious Swiss by the name of Necker who had made himself rich as a
+ grain speculator and the partner in an international banking house. His
+ ambitious wife had pushed him into the government service that she might
+ establish a position for her daughter who afterwards as the wife of the
+ Swedish minister in Paris, Baron de Stael, became a famous literary figure
+ of the early nineteenth century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Necker set to work with a fine display of zeal just as Turgot had done. In
+ 1781 he published a careful review of the French finances. The king
+ understood nothing of this "Compte Rendu." He had just sent troops to
+ America to help the colonists against their common enemies, the English.
+ This expedition proved to be unexpectedly expensive and Necker was asked
+ to find the necessary funds. When instead of producing revenue, he
+ published more figures and made statistics and began to use the dreary
+ warning about "necessary economies" his days were numbered. In the year
+ 1781 he was dismissed as an incompetent servant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the Professor and the Practical Business Man came the delightful
+ type of financier who will guarantee everybody 100 per cent. per month on
+ their money if only they will trust his own infallible system.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was Charles Alexandre de Calonne, a pushing official, who had made his
+ career both by his industry and his complete lack of honesty and scruples.
+ He found the country heavily indebted, but he was a clever man, willing to
+ oblige everybody, and he invented a quick remedy. He paid the old debts by
+ contracting new ones. This method is not new. The result since time
+ immemorial has been disastrous. In less than three years more than
+ 800,000,000 francs had been added to the French debt by this charming
+ Minister of Finance who never worried and smilingly signed his name to
+ every demand that was made by His Majesty and by his lovely Queen, who had
+ learned the habit of spending during the days of her youth in Vienna.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last even the Parliament of Paris (a high court of justice and not a
+ legislative body) although by no means lacking in loyalty to their
+ sovereign, decided that something must be done. Calonne wanted to borrow
+ another 80,000,000 francs. It had been a bad year for the crops and the
+ misery and hunger in the country districts were terrible. Unless something
+ sensible were done, France would go bankrupt. The King as always was
+ unaware of the seriousness of the situation. Would it not be a good idea
+ to consult the representatives of the people? Since 1614 no Estates
+ General had been called together. In view of the threatening panic there
+ was a demand that the Estates be convened. Louis XVI however, who never
+ could take a decision, refused to go as far as that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To pacify the popular clamour he called together a meeting of the Notables
+ in the year 1787. This merely meant a gathering of the best families who
+ discussed what could and should be done, without touching their feudal and
+ clerical privilege of tax-exemption. It is unreasonable to expect that a
+ certain class of society shall commit political and economic suicide for
+ the benefit of another group of fellow-citizens. The 127 Notables
+ obstinately refused to surrender a single one of their ancient rights. The
+ crowd in the street, being now exceedingly hungry, demanded that Necker,
+ in whom they had confidence, be reappointed. The Notables said "No." The
+ crowd in the street began to smash windows and do other unseemly things.
+ The Notables fled. Calonne was dismissed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A new colourless Minister of Finance, the Cardinal Lomenie de Brienne, was
+ appointed and Louis, driven by the violent threats of his starving
+ subjects, agreed to call together the old Estates General as "soon as
+ practicable." This vague promise of course satisfied no one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No such severe winter had been experienced for almost a century. The crops
+ had been either destroyed by floods or had been frozen to death in the
+ fields. All the olive trees of the Provence had been killed. Private
+ charity tried to do some-thing but could accomplish little for eighteen
+ million starving people. Everywhere bread riots occurred. A generation
+ before these would have been put down by the army. But the work of the new
+ philosophical school had begun to bear fruit. People began to understand
+ that a shotgun is no effective remedy for a hungry stomach and even the
+ soldiers (who came from among the people) were no longer to be depended
+ upon. It was absolutely necessary that the king should do something
+ definite to regain the popular goodwill, but again he hesitated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here and there in the provinces, little independent Republics were
+ established by followers of the new school. The cry of "no taxation
+ without representation" (the slogan of the American rebels a quarter of a
+ century before) was heard among the faithful middle classes. France was
+ threatened with general anarchy. To appease the people and to increase the
+ royal popularity, the government unexpectedly suspended the former very
+ strict form of censorship of books. At once a flood of ink descended upon
+ France. Everybody, high or low, criticised and was criticised. More than
+ 2000 pamphlets were published. Lomenie de Brienne was swept away by a
+ storm of abuse. Necker was hastily called back to placate, as best he
+ could, the nation-wide unrest. Immediately the stock market went up thirty
+ per cent. And by common consent, people suspended judgment for a little
+ while longer. In May of 1789 the Estates General were to assemble and then
+ the wisdom of the entire nation would speedily solve the difficult problem
+ of recreating the kingdom of France into a healthy and happy state.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This prevailing idea, that the combined wisdom of the people would be able
+ to solve all difficulties, proved disastrous. It lamed all personal effort
+ during many important months. Instead of keeping the government in his own
+ hands at this critical moment, Necker allowed everything to drift. Hence
+ there was a new outbreak of the acrimonious debate upon the best ways to
+ reform the old kingdom. Everywhere the power of the police weakened. The
+ people of the Paris suburbs, under the leadership of professional
+ agitators, gradually began to discover their strength, and commenced to
+ play the role which was to be theirs all through the years of the great
+ unrest, when they acted as the brute force which was used by the actual
+ leaders of the Revolution to secure those things which could not be
+ obtained in a legitimate fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As a sop to the peasants and the middle class, Necker de-cided that they
+ should be allowed a double representation in the Estates General. Upon
+ this subject, the Abbe Sieyes then wrote a famous pamphlet, "To what does
+ the Third Estate Amount?" in which he came to the conclusion that the
+ Third Estate (a name given to the middle class) ought to amount to
+ everything, that it had not amounted to anything in the past, and that it
+ now desired to amount to something. He expressed the sentiment of the
+ great majority of the people who had the best interests of the country at
+ heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally the elections took place under the worst conditions imaginable.
+ When they were over, 308 clergymen, 285 noblemen and 621 representatives
+ of the Third Estate packed their trunks to go to Versailles. The Third
+ Estate was obliged to carry additional luggage. This consisted of
+ voluminous reports called "cahiers" in which the many complaints and
+ grievances of their constituents had been written down. The stage was set
+ for the great final act that was to save France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Estates General came together on May 5th, 1789. The king was in a bad
+ humour. The Clergy and the Nobility let it be known that they were
+ unwilling to give up a single one of their privileges. The king ordered
+ the three groups of representatives to meet in different rooms and discuss
+ their grievances separately. The Third Estate refused to obey the royal
+ command. They took a solemn oath to that effect in a squash court (hastily
+ put in order for the purpose of this illegal meeting) on the 20th of June,
+ 1789. They insisted that all three Estates, Nobility, Clergy and Third
+ Estate, should meet together and so informed His Majesty. The king gave
+ in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the "National Assembly," the Estates General began to discuss the state
+ of the French kingdom. The King got angry. Then again he hesitated. He
+ said that he would never surrender his absolute power. Then he went
+ hunting, forgot all about the cares of the state and when he returned from
+ the chase he gave in. For it was the royal habit to do the right thing at
+ the wrong time in the wrong way. When the people clamoured for A, the king
+ scolded them and gave them nothing. Then, when the Palace was surrounded
+ by a howling multitude of poor people, the king surrendered and gave his
+ subjects what they had asked for. By this time, however, the people wanted
+ A plus B. The comedy was repeated. When the king signed his name to the
+ Royal Decree which granted his beloved subjects A and B they were
+ threatening to kill the entire royal family unless they received A plus B
+ plus C. And so on, through the whole alphabet and up to the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unfortunately the king was always just one letter behind. He never
+ understood this. Even when he laid his head under the guillotine, he felt
+ that he was a much-abused man who had received a most unwarrantable
+ treatment at the hands of people whom he had loved to the best of his
+ limited ability.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Historical "ifs," as I have often warned you, are never of any value. It
+ is very easy for us to say that the monarchy might have been saved "if"
+ Louis had been a man of greater energy and less kindness of heart. But the
+ king was not alone. Even "if" he had possessed the ruthless strength of
+ Napoleon, his career during these difficult days might have been easily
+ ruined by his wife who was the daughter of Maria Theresa of Austria and
+ who possessed all the characteristic virtues and vices of a young girl who
+ had been brought up at the most autocratic and mediaeval court of that
+ age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She decided that some action must be taken and planned a
+ counter-revolution. Necker was suddenly dismissed and loyal troops were
+ called to Paris. The people, when they heard of this, stormed the fortress
+ of the Bastille prison, and on the fourteenth of July of the year 1789,
+ they destroyed this familiar but much-hated symbol of Autocratic Power
+ which had long since ceased to be a political prison and was now used as
+ the city lock-up for pickpockets and second-story men. Many of the nobles
+ took the hint and left the country. But the king as usual did nothing. He
+ had been hunting on the day of the fall of the Bastille and he had shot
+ several deer and felt very much pleased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The National Assembly now set to work and on the 4th of August, with the
+ noise of the Parisian multitude in their ears, they abolished all
+ privileges. This was followed on the 27th of August by the "Declaration of
+ the Rights of Man," the famous preamble to the first French constitution.
+ So far so good, but the court had apparently not yet learned its lesson.
+ There was a wide-spread suspicion that the king was again trying to
+ interfere with these reforms and as a result, on the 5th of October, there
+ was a second riot in Paris. It spread to Versailles and the people were
+ not pacified until they had brought the king back to his palace in Paris.
+ They did not trust him in Versailles. They liked to have him where they
+ could watch him and control his correspondence with his relatives in
+ Vienna and Madrid and the other courts of Europe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the Assembly meanwhile, Mirabeau, a nobleman who had become leader of
+ the Third Estate, was beginning to put order into chaos. But before he
+ could save the position of the king he died, on the 2nd of April of the
+ year 1791. The king, who now began to fear for his own life, tried to
+ escape on the 21st of June. He was recognised from his picture on a coin,
+ was stopped near the village of Varennes by members of the National Guard,
+ and was brought back to Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In September of 1791, the first constitution of France was accepted, and
+ the members of the National Assembly went home. On the first of October of
+ 1791, the legislative assembly came together to continue the work of the
+ National Assembly. In this new gathering of popular representatives there
+ were many extremely revolutionary elements. The boldest among these were
+ known as the Jacobins, after the old Jacobin cloister in which they held
+ their political meetings. These young men (most of them belonging to the
+ professional classes) made very violent speeches and when the newspapers
+ carried these orations to Berlin and Vienna, the King of Prussia and the
+ Emperor decided that they must do something to save their good brother and
+ sister. They were very busy just then dividing the kingdom of Poland,
+ where rival political factions had caused such a state of disorder that
+ the country was at the mercy of anybody who wanted to take a couple of
+ provinces. But they managed to send an army to invade France and deliver
+ the king.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a terrible panic of fear swept throughout the land of France. All the
+ pent-up hatred of years of hunger and suffering came to a horrible climax.
+ The mob of Paris stormed the palace of the Tuilleries. The faithful Swiss
+ bodyguards tried to defend their master, but Louis, unable to make up his
+ mind, gave order to "cease firing" just when the crowd was retiring. The
+ people, drunk with blood and noise and cheap wine, murdered the Swiss to
+ the last man, then invaded the palace, and went after Louis who had
+ escaped into the meeting hall of the Assembly, where he was immediately
+ suspended of his office, and from where he was taken as a prisoner to the
+ old castle of the Temple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the armies of Austria and Prussia continued their advance and the
+ panic changed into hysteria and turned men and women into wild beasts. In
+ the first week of September of the year 1792, the crowd broke into the
+ jails and murdered all the prisoners. The government did not interfere.
+ The Jacobins, headed by Danton, knew that this crisis meant either the
+ success or the failure of the revolution, and that only the most brutal
+ audacity could save them. The Legislative Assembly was closed and on the
+ 21st of September of the year 1792, a new National Convention came
+ together. It was a body composed almost entirely of extreme
+ revolutionists. The king was formally accused of high treason and was
+ brought before the Convention. He was found guilty and by a vote of 361 to
+ 360 (the extra vote being that of his cousin the Duke of Orleans) he was
+ condemned to death. On the 21st of January of the year 1793, he quietly
+ and with much dignity suffered himself to be taken to the scaffold. He had
+ never understood what all the shooting and the fuss had been about. And he
+ had been too proud to ask questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Jacobins turned against the more moderate element in the
+ convention, the Girondists, called after their southern district, the
+ Gironde. A special revolutionary tribunal was instituted and twenty-one of
+ the leading Girondists were condemned to death. The others committed
+ suicide. They were capable and honest men but too philosophical and too
+ moderate to survive during these frightful years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In October of the year 1793 the Constitution was suspended by the Jacobins
+ "until peace should have been declared." All power was placed in the hands
+ of a small committee of Public Safety, with Danton and Robespierre as its
+ leaders. The Christian religion and the old chronology were abolished. The
+ "Age of Reason" (of which Thomas Paine had written so eloquently during
+ the American Revolution) had come and with it the "Terror" which for more
+ than a year killed good and bad and indifferent people at the rate of
+ seventy or eighty a day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The autocratic rule of the King had been destroyed. It was succeeded by
+ the tyranny of a few people who had such a passionate love for democratic
+ virtue that they felt compelled to kill all those who disagreed with them.
+ France was turned into a slaughter house. Everybody suspected everybody
+ else. No one felt safe. Out of sheer fear, a few members of the old
+ Convention, who knew that they were the next candidates for the scaffold,
+ finally turned against Robespierre, who had already decapitated most of
+ his former colleagues. Robespierre, "the only true and pure Democrat,"
+ tried to kill himself but failed His shattered jaw was hastily bandaged
+ and he was dragged to the guillotine. On the 27th of July, of the year
+ 1794 (the 9th Thermidor of the year II, according to the strange
+ chronology of the revolution), the reign of Terror came to an end, and all
+ Paris danced with joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dangerous position of France, however, made it necessary that the
+ government remain in the hands of a few strong men, until the many enemies
+ of the revolution should have been driven from the soil of the French
+ fatherland. While the half-clad and half-starved revolutionary armies
+ fought their desperate battles of the Rhine and Italy and Belgium and
+ Egypt, and defeated every one of the enemies of the Great Revolution, five
+ Directors were appointed, and they ruled France for four years. Then the
+ power was vested in the hands of a successful general by the name of
+ Napoleon Bonaparte, who became "First Consul" of France in the year 1799.
+ And during the next fifteen years, the old European continent became the
+ laboratory of a number of political experiments, the like of which the
+ world had never seen before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NAPOLEON
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ NAPOLEON
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ NAPOLEON was born in the year 1769, the third son of Carlo Maria
+ Buonaparte, an honest notary public of the city of Ajaccio in the island
+ of Corsica, and his good wife, Letizia Ramolino. He therefore was not a
+ Frenchman, but an Italian whose native island (an old Greek, Carthaginian
+ and Roman colony in the Mediterranean Sea) had for years been struggling
+ to regain its independence, first of all from the Genoese, and after the
+ middle of the eighteenth century from the French, who had kindly offered
+ to help the Corsicans in their struggle for freedom and had then occupied
+ the island for their own benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the first twenty years of his life, young Napoleon was a
+ professional Corsican patriot&mdash;a Corsican Sinn Feiner, who hoped to
+ deliver his beloved country from the yoke of the bitterly hated French
+ enemy. But the French revolution had unexpectedly recognised the claims of
+ the Corsicans and gradually Napoleon, who had received a good training at
+ the military school of Brienne, drifted into the service of his adopted
+ country. Although he never learned to spell French correctly or to speak
+ it without a broad Italian accent, he became a Frenchman. In due time he
+ came to stand as the highest expression of all French virtues. At present
+ he is regarded as the symbol of the Gallic genius.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon was what is called a fast worker. His career does not cover more
+ than twenty years. In that short span of time he fought more wars and
+ gained more victories and marched more miles and conquered more square
+ kilometers and killed more people and brought about more reforms and
+ generally upset Europe to a greater extent than anybody (including
+ Alexander the Great and Jenghis Khan) had ever managed to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was a little fellow and during the first years of his life his health
+ was not very good. He never impressed anybody by his good looks and he
+ remained to the end of his days very clumsy whenever he was obliged to
+ appear at a social function. He did not enjoy a single advantage of
+ breeding or birth or riches. For the greater part of his youth he was
+ desperately poor and often he had to go without a meal or was obliged to
+ make a few extra pennies in curious ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave little promise as a literary genius. When he competed for a prize
+ offered by the Academy of Lyons, his essay was found to be next to the
+ last and he was number 15 out of 16 candidates. But he overcame all these
+ difficulties through his absolute and unshakable belief in his own
+ destiny, and in his own glorious future. Ambition was the main-spring of
+ his life. The thought of self, the worship of that capital letter "N" with
+ which he signed all his letters, and which recurred forever in the
+ ornaments of his hastily constructed palaces, the absolute will to make
+ the name Napoleon the most important thing in the world next to the name
+ of God, these desires carried Napoleon to a pinnacle of fame which no
+ other man has ever reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he was a half-pay lieutenant, young Bonaparte was very fond of the
+ "Lives of Famous Men" which Plutarch, the Roman historian, had written.
+ But he never tried to live up to the high standard of character set by
+ these heroes of the older days. Napoleon seems to have been devoid of all
+ those considerate and thoughtful sentiments which make men different from
+ the animals. It will be very difficult to decide with any degree of
+ accuracy whether he ever loved anyone besides himself. He kept a civil
+ tongue to his mother, but Letizia had the air and manners of a great lady
+ and after the fashion of Italian mothers, she knew how to rule her brood
+ of children and command their respect. For a few years he was fond of
+ Josephine, his pretty Creole wife, who was the daughter of a French
+ officer of Martinique and the widow of the Vicomte de Beauharnais, who had
+ been executed by Robespierre when he lost a battle against the Prussians.
+ But the Emperor divorced her when she failed to give him a son and heir
+ and married the daughter of the Austrian Emperor, because it seemed good
+ policy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the siege of Toulon, where he gained great fame as commander of a
+ battery, Napoleon studied Macchiavelli with industrious care. He followed
+ the advice of the Florentine statesman and never kept his word when it was
+ to his advantage to break it. The word "gratitude" did not occur in his
+ personal dictionary. Neither, to be quite fair, did he expect it from
+ others. He was totally indifferent to human suffering. He executed
+ prisoners of war (in Egypt in 1798) who had been promised their lives, and
+ he quietly allowed his wounded in Syria to be chloroformed when he found
+ it impossible to transport them to his ships. He ordered the Duke of
+ Enghien to be condemned to death by a prejudiced court-martial and to be
+ shot contrary to all law on the sole ground that the "Bourbons needed a
+ warning." He decreed that those German officers who were made prisoner
+ while fighting for their country's independence should be shot against the
+ nearest wall, and when Andreas Hofer, the Tyrolese hero, fell into his
+ hands after a most heroic resistance, he was executed like a common
+ traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In short, when we study the character of the Emperor, we begin to
+ understand those anxious British mothers who used to drive their children
+ to bed with the threat that "Bonaparte, who ate little boys and girls for
+ breakfast, would come and get them if they were not very good." And yet,
+ having said these many unpleasant things about this strange tyrant, who
+ looked after every other department of his army with the utmost care, but
+ neglected the medical service, and who ruined his uniforms with Eau de
+ Cologne because he could not stand the smell of his poor sweating
+ soldiers; having said all these unpleasant things and being fully prepared
+ to add many more, I must confess to a certain lurking feeling of doubt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here I am sitting at a comfortable table loaded heavily with books, with
+ one eye on my typewriter and the other on Licorice the cat, who has a
+ great fondness for carbon paper, and I am telling you that the Emperor
+ Napoleon was a most contemptible person. But should I happen to look out
+ of the window, down upon Seventh Avenue, and should the endless procession
+ of trucks and carts come to a sudden halt, and should I hear the sound of
+ the heavy drums and see the little man on his white horse in his old and
+ much-worn green uniform, then I don't know, but I am afraid that I would
+ leave my books and the kitten and my home and everything else to follow
+ him wherever he cared to lead. My own grandfather did this and Heaven
+ knows he was not born to be a hero. Millions of other people's
+ grandfathers did it. They received no reward, but they expected none. They
+ cheerfully gave legs and arms and lives to serve this foreigner, who took
+ them a thousand miles away from their homes and marched them into a
+ barrage of Russian or English or Spanish or Italian or Austrian cannon and
+ stared quietly into space while they were rolling in the agony of death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you ask me for an explanation, I must answer that I have none. I can
+ only guess at one of the reasons. Napoleon was the greatest of actors and
+ the whole European continent was his stage. At all times and under all
+ circumstances he knew the precise attitude that would impress the
+ spectators most and he understood what words would make the deepest
+ impression. Whether he spoke in the Egyptian desert, before the backdrop
+ of the Sphinx and the pyramids, or addressed his shivering men on the
+ dew-soaked plains of Italy, made no difference. At all times he was master
+ of the situation. Even at the end, an exile on a little rock in the middle
+ of the Atlantic, a sick man at the mercy of a dull and intolerable British
+ governor, he held the centre of the stage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the defeat of Waterloo, no one outside of a few trusted friends ever
+ saw the great Emperor. The people of Europe knew that he was living on the
+ island of St. Helena&mdash;they knew that a British garrison guarded him
+ day and night&mdash;they knew that the British fleet guarded the garrison
+ which guarded the Emperor on his farm at Longwood. But he was never out of
+ the mind of either friend or enemy. When illness and despair had at last
+ taken him away, his silent eyes continued to haunt the world. Even to-day
+ he is as much of a force in the life of France as a hundred years ago when
+ people fainted at the mere sight of this sallow-faced man who stabled his
+ horses in the holiest temples of the Russian Kremlin, and who treated the
+ Pope and the mighty ones of this earth as if they were his lackeys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To give you a mere outline of his life would demand couple of volumes. To
+ tell you of his great political reform of the French state, of his new
+ codes of laws which were adopted in most European countries, of his
+ activities in every field of public activity, would take thousands of
+ pages. But I can explain in a few words why he was so successful during
+ the first part of his career and why he failed during the last ten years.
+ From the year 1789 until the year 1804, Napoleon was the great leader of
+ the French revolution. He was not merely fighting for the glory of his own
+ name. He defeated Austria and Italy and England and Russia because he,
+ himself, and his soldiers were the apostles of the new creed of "Liberty,
+ Fraternity and Equality" and were the enemies of the courts while they
+ were the friends of the people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the year 1804, Napoleon made himself Hereditary Emperor of the
+ French and sent for Pope Pius VII to come and crown him, even as Leo III,
+ in the year 800 had crowned that other great King of the Franks,
+ Charlemagne, whose example was constantly before Napoleon's eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once upon the throne, the old revolutionary chieftain became an
+ unsuccessful imitation of a Habsburg monarch. He forgot his spiritual
+ Mother, the Political Club of the Jacobins. He ceased to be the defender
+ of the oppressed. He became the chief of all the oppressors and kept his
+ shooting squads ready to execute those who dared to oppose his imperial
+ will. No one had shed a tear when in the year 1806 the sad remains of the
+ Holy Roman Empire were carted to the historical dustbin and when the last
+ relic of ancient Roman glory was destroyed by the grandson of an Italian
+ peasant. But when the Napoleonic armies had invaded Spain, had forced the
+ Spaniards to recognise a king whom they detested, had massacred the poor
+ Madrilenes who remained faithful to their old rulers, then public opinion
+ turned against the former hero of Marengo and Austerlitz and a hundred
+ other revolutionary battles. Then and only then, when Napoleon was no
+ longer the hero of the revolution but the personification of all the bad
+ traits of the Old Regime, was it possible for England to give direction to
+ the fast-spreading sentiment of hatred which was turning all honest men
+ into enemies of the French Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The English people from the very beginning had felt deeply disgusted when
+ their newspapers told them the gruesome details of the Terror. They had
+ staged their own great revolution (during the reign of Charles I) a
+ century before. It had been a very simple affair compared to the upheaval
+ of Paris. In the eyes of the average Englishman a Jacobin was a monster to
+ be shot at sight and Napoleon was the Chief Devil. The British fleet had
+ blockaded France ever since the year 1798. It had spoiled Napoleon's plan
+ to invade India by way of Egypt and had forced him to beat an ignominious
+ retreat, after his victories along the banks of the Nile. And finally, in
+ the year 1805, England got the chance it had waited for so long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Near Cape Trafalgar on the southwestern coast of Spain, Nelson annihilated
+ the Napoleonic fleet, beyond a possible chance of recovery. From that
+ moment on, the Emperor was landlocked. Even so, he would have been able to
+ maintain himself as the recognised ruler of the continent had he
+ understood the signs of the times and accepted the honourable peace which
+ the powers offered him. But Napoleon had been blinded by the blaze of his
+ own glory. He would recognise no equals. He could tolerate no rivals. And
+ his hatred turned against Russia, the mysterious land of the endless
+ plains with its inexhaustible supply of cannon-fodder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As long as Russia was ruled by Paul I, the half-witted son of Catherine
+ the Great, Napoleon had known how to deal with the situation. But Paul
+ grew more and more irresponsible until his exasperated subjects were
+ obliged to murder him (lest they all be sent to the Siberian lead-mines)
+ and the son of Paul, the Emperor Alexander, did not share his father's
+ affection for the usurper whom he regarded as the enemy of mankind, the
+ eternal disturber of the peace. He was a pious man who believed that he
+ had been chosen by God to deliver the world from the Corsican curse. He
+ joined Prussia and England and Austria and he was defeated. He tried five
+ times and five times he failed. In the year 1812 he once more taunted
+ Napoleon until the French Emperor, in a blind rage, vowed that he would
+ dictate peace in Moscow. Then, from far and wide, from Spain and Germany
+ and Holland and Italy and Portugal, unwilling regiments were driven
+ northward, that the wounded pride of the great Emperor might be duly
+ avenged. The rest of the story is common knowledge. After a march of two
+ months, Napoleon reached the Russian capital and established his
+ headquarters in the holy Kremlin. On the night of September 15 of the year
+ 1812, Moscow caught fire. The town burned four days. When the evening of
+ the fifth day came, Napoleon gave the order for the retreat. Two weeks
+ later it began to snow. The army trudged through mud and sleet until
+ November the 26th when the river Berezina was reached. Then the Russian
+ attacks began in all seriousness. The Cossacks swarmed around the "Grande
+ Armee" which was no longer an army but a mob. In the middle of December
+ the first of the survivors began to be seen in the German cities of the
+ East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there were many rumours of an impending revolt. "The time has come,"
+ the people of Europe said, "to free ourselves from this insufferable
+ yoke." And they began to look for old shotguns which had escaped the eye
+ of the ever-present French spies. But ere they knew what had happened,
+ Napoleon was back with a new army. He had left his defeated soldiers and
+ in his little sleigh had rushed ahead to Paris, making a final appeal for
+ more troops that he might defend the sacred soil of France against foreign
+ invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Children of sixteen and seventeen followed him when he moved eastward to
+ meet the allied powers. On October 16, 18, and 19 of the year 1813, the
+ terrible battle of Leipzig took place where for three days boys in green
+ and boys in blue fought each other until the Elbe ran red with blood. On
+ the afternoon of the 17th of October, the massed reserves of Russian
+ infantry broke through the French lines and Napoleon fled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back to Paris he went. He abdicated in favour of his small son, but the
+ allied powers insisted that Louis XVIII, the brother of the late king
+ Louis XVI, should occupy the French throne, and surrounded by Cossacks and
+ Uhlans, the dull-eyed Bourbon prince made his triumphal entry into Paris.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Napoleon he was made the sovereign ruler of the little island of
+ Elba in the Mediterranean where he organised his stable boys into a
+ miniature army and fought battles on a chess board.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no sooner had he left France than the people began to realise what
+ they had lost. The last twenty years, however costly, had been a period of
+ great glory. Paris had been the capital of the world. The fat Bourbon king
+ who had learned nothing and had forgotten nothing during the days of his
+ exile disgusted everybody by his indolence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the first of March of the year 1815, when the representatives of the
+ allies were ready to begin the work of unscrambling the map of Europe,
+ Napoleon suddenly landed near Cannes. In less than a week the French army
+ had deserted the Bourbons and had rushed southward to offer their swords
+ and bayonets to the "little Corporal." Napoleon marched straight to Paris
+ where he arrived on the twentieth of March. This time he was more
+ cautious. He offered peace, but the allies insisted upon war. The whole of
+ Europe arose against the "perfidious Corsican." Rapidly the Emperor
+ marched northward that he might crush his enemies before they should be
+ able to unite their forces. But Napoleon was no longer his old self. He
+ felt sick. He got tired easily. He slept when he ought to have been up
+ directing the attack of his advance-guard. Besides, he missed many of his
+ faithful old generals. They were dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in June his armies entered Belgium. On the 16th of that month he
+ defeated the Prussians under Blucher. But a subordinate commander failed
+ to destroy the retreating army as he had been ordered to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days later, Napoleon met Wellington near Waterloo. It was the 18th of
+ June, a Sunday. At two o'clock of the afternoon, the battle seemed won for
+ the French. At three a speck of dust appeared upon the eastern horizon.
+ Napoleon believed that this meant the approach of his own cavalry who
+ would now turn the English defeat into a rout. At four o'clock he knew
+ better. Cursing and swearing, old Blucher drove his deathly tired troops
+ into the heart of the fray. The shock broke the ranks of the guards.
+ Napoleon had no further reserves. He told his men to save themselves as
+ best they could, and he fled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a second time, he abdicated in favor of his son. Just one hundred days
+ after his escape from Elba, he was making for the coast. He intended to go
+ to America. In the year 1803, for a mere song, he had sold the French
+ colony of Louisiana (which was in great danger of being captured by the
+ English) to the young American Republic. "The Americans," so he said,
+ "will be grateful and will give me a little bit of land and a house where
+ I may spend the last days of my life in peace and quiet." But the English
+ fleet was watching all French harbours. Caught between the armies of the
+ Allies and the ships of the British, Napoleon had no choice. The Prussians
+ intended to shoot him. The English might be more generous. At Rochefort he
+ waited in the hope that something might turn up. One month after Waterloo,
+ he received orders from the new French government to leave French soil
+ inside of twenty-four hours. Always the tragedian, he wrote a letter to
+ the Prince Regent of England (George IV, the king, was in an insane
+ asylum) informing His Royal Highness of his intention to "throw himself
+ upon the mercy of his enemies and like Themistocles, to look for a welcome
+ at the fireside of his foes..."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the 15th of July he went on board the "Bellerophon," and surrendered
+ his sword to Admiral Hotham. At Plymouth he was transferred to the
+ "Northumberland" which carried him to St. Helena. There he spent the last
+ seven years of his life. He tried to write his memoirs, he quarrelled with
+ his keepers and he dreamed of past times. Curiously enough he returned (at
+ least in his imagination) to his original point of departure. He
+ remembered the days when he had fought the battles of the Revolution. He
+ tried to convince himself that he had always been the true friend of those
+ great principles of "Liberty, Fraternity and Equality" which the ragged
+ soldiers of the convention had carried to the ends of the earth. He liked
+ to dwell upon his career as Commander-in-Chief and Consul. He rarely spoke
+ of the Empire. Sometimes he thought of his son, the Duke of Reichstadt,
+ the little eagle, who lived in Vienna, where he was treated as a "poor
+ relation" by his young Habsburg cousins, whose fathers had trembled at the
+ very mention of the name of Him. When the end came, he was leading his
+ troops to victory. He ordered Ney to attack with the guards. Then he died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if you want an explanation of this strange career, if you really wish
+ to know how one man could possibly rule so many people for so many years
+ by the sheer force of his will, do not read the books that have been
+ written about him. Their authors either hated the Emperor or loved him.
+ You will learn many facts, but it is more important to "feel history" than
+ to know it. Don't read, but wait until you have a chance to hear a good
+ artist sing the song called "The Two Grenadiers." The words were written
+ by Heine, the great German poet who lived through the Napoleonic era. The
+ music was composed by Schumann, a German who saw the Emperor, the enemy of
+ his country, whenever he came to visit his imperial father-in-law. The
+ song therefore is the work of two men who had every reason to hate the
+ tyrant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Go and hear it. Then you will understand what a thousand volumes could not
+ possibly tell you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE HOLY ALLIANCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AS SOON AS NAPOLEON HAD BEEN SENT TO ST. HELENA THE RULERS WHO SO OFTEN
+ HAD BEEN DEFEATED BY THE HATED "CORSICAN" MET AT VIENNA AND TRIED TO UNDO
+ THE MANY CHANGES THAT HAD BEEN BROUGHT ABOUT BY THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Imperial Highnesses, the Royal Highnesses, their Graces the Dukes, the
+ Ministers Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary, together with the plain
+ Excellencies and their army of secretaries, servants and hangers-on, whose
+ labours had been so rudely interrupted by the sudden return of the
+ terrible Corsican (now sweltering under the hot sun of St. Helena) went
+ back to their jobs. The victory was duly celebrated with dinners, garden
+ parties and balls at which the new and very shocking "waltz" was danced to
+ the great scandal of the ladies and gentlemen who remembered the minuet of
+ the old Regime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For almost a generation they had lived in retirement. At last the danger
+ was over. They were very eloquent upon the subject of the terrible
+ hardships which they had suffered. And they expected to be recompensed for
+ every penny they had lost at the hands of the unspeakable Jacobins who had
+ dared to kill their anointed king, who had abolished wigs and who had
+ discarded the short trousers of the court of Versailles for the ragged
+ pantaloons of the Parisian slums.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may think it absurd that I should mention such a detail. But, if you
+ please, the Congress of Vienna was one long succession of such absurdities
+ and for many months the question of "short trousers vs. long trousers"
+ interested the delegates more than the future settlement of the Saxon or
+ Spanish problems. His Majesty the King of Prussia went so far as to order
+ a pair of short ones, that he might give public evidence of his contempt
+ for everything revolutionary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another German potentate, not to be outdone in this noble hatred for the
+ revolution, decreed that all taxes which his subjects had paid to the
+ French usurper should be paid a second time to the legitimate ruler who
+ had loved his people from afar while they were at the mercy of the
+ Corsican ogre. And so on. From one blunder to another, until one gasps and
+ exclaims "but why in the name of High Heaven did not the people object?"
+ Why not indeed? Because the people were utterly exhausted, were desperate,
+ did not care what happened or how or where or by whom they were ruled,
+ provided there was peace. They were sick and tired of war and revolution
+ and reform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the eighties of the previous century they had all danced around the
+ tree of liberty. Princes had embraced their cooks and Duchesses had danced
+ the Carmagnole with their lackeys in the honest belief that the Millennium
+ of Equality and Fraternity had at last dawned upon this wicked world.
+ Instead of the Millennium they had been visited by the Revolutionary
+ commissary who had lodged a dozen dirty soldiers in their parlor and had
+ stolen the family plate when he returned to Paris to report to his
+ government upon the enthusiasm with which the "liberated country" had
+ received the Constitution, which the French people had presented to their
+ good neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they had heard how the last outbreak of revolutionary disorder in
+ Paris had been suppressed by a young officer, called Bonaparte, or
+ Buonaparte, who had turned his guns upon the mob, they gave a sigh of
+ relief. A little less liberty, fraternity and equality seemed a very
+ desirable thing. But ere long, the young officer called Buonaparte or
+ Bonaparte became one of the three consuls of the French Republic, then
+ sole consul and finally Emperor. As he was much more efficient than any
+ ruler that had ever been seen before, his hand pressed heavily upon his
+ poor subjects. He showed them no mercy. He impressed their sons into his
+ armies, he married their daughters to his generals and he took their
+ pictures and their statues to enrich his own museums. He turned the whole
+ of Europe into an armed camp and killed almost an entire generation of
+ men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now he was gone, and the people (except a few professional military men)
+ had but one wish. They wanted to be let alone. For awhile they had been
+ allowed to rule themselves, to vote for mayors and aldermen and judges.
+ The system had been a terrible failure. The new rulers had been
+ inexperienced and extravagant. From sheer despair the people turned to the
+ representative men of the old Regime. "You rule us," they said, "as you
+ used to do. Tell us what we owe you for taxes and leave us alone. We are
+ busy repairing the damage of the age of liberty."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men who stage-managed the famous congress certainly did their best to
+ satisfy this longing for rest and quiet. The Holy Alliance, the main
+ result of the Congress, made the policeman the most important dignitary of
+ the State and held out the most terrible punishment to those who dared
+ criticise a single official act.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Europe had peace, but it was the peace of the cemetery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three most important men at Vienna were the Emperor Alexander of
+ Russia, Metternich, who represented the interests of the Austrian house of
+ Habsburg, and Talleyrand, the erstwhile bishop of Autun, who had managed
+ to live through the different changes in the French government by the
+ sheer force of his cunning and his intelligence and who now travelled to
+ the Austrian capital to save for his country whatever could be saved from
+ the Napoleonic ruin. Like the gay young man of the limerick, who never
+ knew when he was slighted, this unbidden guest came to the party and ate
+ just as heartily as if he had been really invited. Indeed, before long, he
+ was sitting at the head of the table entertaining everybody with his
+ amusing stories and gaining the company's good will by the charm of his
+ manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before he had been in Vienna twenty-four hours he knew that the allies
+ were divided into two hostile camps. On the one side were Russia, who
+ wanted to take Poland, and Prussia, who wanted to annex Saxony; and on the
+ other side were Austria and England, who were trying to prevent this grab
+ because it was against their own interest that either Prussia or Russia
+ should be able to dominate Europe. Talleyrand played the two sides against
+ each other with great skill and it was due to his efforts that the French
+ people were not made to suffer for the ten years of oppression which
+ Europe had endured at the hands of the Imperial officials. He argued that
+ the French people had been given no choice in the matter. Napoleon had
+ forced them to act at his bidding. But Napoleon was gone and Louis XVIII
+ was on the throne. "Give him a chance," Talleyrand pleaded. And the
+ Allies, glad to see a legitimate king upon the throne of a revolutionary
+ country, obligingly yielded and the Bourbons were given their chance, of
+ which they made such use that they were driven out after fifteen years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second man of the triumvirate of Vienna was Metternich, the Austrian
+ prime minister, the leader of the foreign policy of the house of Habsburg.
+ Wenzel Lothar, Prince of Metternich-Winneburg, was exactly what the name
+ suggests. He was a Grand Seigneur, a very handsome gentleman with very
+ fine manners, immensely rich, and very able, but the product of a society
+ which lived a thousand miles away from the sweating multitudes who worked
+ and slaved in the cities and on the farms. As a young man, Metternich had
+ been studying at the University of Strassburg when the French Revolution
+ broke out. Strassburg, the city which gave birth to the Marseillaise, had
+ been a centre of Jacobin activities. Metternich remembered that his
+ pleasant social life had been sadly interrupted, that a lot of incompetent
+ citizens had suddenly been called forth to perform tasks for which they
+ were not fit, that the mob had celebrated the dawn of the new liberty by
+ the murder of perfectly innocent persons. He had failed to see the honest
+ enthusiasm of the masses, the ray of hope in the eyes of women and
+ children who carried bread and water to the ragged troops of the
+ Convention, marching through the city on their way to the front and a
+ glorious death for the French Fatherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whole thing had filled the young Austrian with disgust. It was
+ uncivilised. If there were any fighting to be done it must be done by
+ dashing young men in lovely uniforms, charging across the green fields on
+ well-groomed horses. But to turn an entire country into an evil-smelling
+ armed camp where tramps were overnight promoted to be generals, that was
+ both wicked and senseless. "See what came of all your fine ideas," he
+ would say to the French diplomats whom he met at a quiet little dinner
+ given by one of the innumerable Austrian grand-dukes. "You wanted liberty,
+ equality and fraternity and you got Napoleon. How much better it would
+ have been if you had been contented with the existing order of things."
+ And he would explain his system of "stability." He would advocate a return
+ to the normalcy of the good old days before the war, when everybody was
+ happy and nobody talked nonsense about "everybody being as good as
+ everybody else." In this attitude he was entirely sincere and as he was an
+ able man of great strength of will and a tremendous power of persuasion,
+ he was one of the most dangerous enemies of the Revolutionary ideas. He
+ did not die until the year 1859, and he therefore lived long enough to see
+ the complete failure of all his policies when they were swept aside by the
+ revolution of the year 1848. He then found himself the most hated man of
+ Europe and more than once ran the risk of being lynched by angry crowds of
+ outraged citizens. But until the very last, he remained steadfast in his
+ belief that he had done the right thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had always been convinced that people preferred peace to liberty and he
+ had tried to give them what was best for them. And in all fairness, it
+ ought to be said that his efforts to establish universal peace were fairly
+ successful. The great powers did not fly at each other's throat for almost
+ forty years, indeed not until the Crimean war between Russia and England,
+ France and Italy and Turkey, in the year 1854. That means a record for the
+ European continent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The third hero of this waltzing congress was the Emperor Alexander. He had
+ been brought up at the court of his grand-mother, the famous Catherine the
+ Great. Between the lessons of this shrewd old woman, who taught him to
+ regard the glory of Russia as the most important thing in life, and those
+ of his private tutor, a Swiss admirer of Voltaire and Rousseau, who filled
+ his mind with a general love of humanity, the boy grew up to be a strange
+ mixture of a selfish tyrant and a sentimental revolutionist. He had
+ suffered great indignities during the life of his crazy father, Paul I. He
+ had been obliged to wit-ness the wholesale slaughter of the Napoleonic
+ battle-fields. Then the tide had turned. His armies had won the day for
+ the Allies. Russia had become the saviour of Europe and the Tsar of this
+ mighty people was acclaimed as a half-god who would cure the world of its
+ many ills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Alexander was not very clever. He did not know men and women as
+ Talleyrand and Metternich knew them. He did not understand the strange
+ game of diplomacy. He was vain (who would not be under the circumstances?)
+ and loved to hear the applause of the multitude and soon he had become the
+ main "attraction" of the Congress while Metternich and Talleyrand and
+ Castlereagh (the very able British representative) sat around a table and
+ drank a bottle of Tokay and decided what was actually going to be done.
+ They needed Russia and therefore they were very polite to Alexander, but
+ the less he had personally to do with the actual work of the Congress, the
+ better they were pleased. They even encouraged his plans for a Holy
+ Alliance that he might be fully occupied while they were engaged upon the
+ work at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alexander was a sociable person who liked to go to parties and meet
+ people. Upon such occasions he was happy and gay but there was a very
+ different element in his character. He tried to forget something which he
+ could not forget. On the night of the 23rd of March of the year 1801 he
+ had been sitting in a room of the St. Michael Palace in Petersburg,
+ waiting for the news of his father's abdication. But Paul had refused to
+ sign the document which the drunken officers had placed before him on the
+ table, and in their rage they had put a scarf around his neck and had
+ strangled him to death. Then they had gone downstairs to tell Alexander
+ that he was Emperor of all the Russian lands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The memory of this terrible night stayed with the Tsar who was a very
+ sensitive person. He had been educated in the school of the great French
+ philosophers who did not believe in God but in Human Reason. But Reason
+ alone could not satisfy the Emperor in his predicament. He began to hear
+ voices and see things. He tried to find a way by which he could square
+ himself with his conscience. He became very pious and began to take an
+ interest in mysticism, that strange love of the mysterious and the unknown
+ which is as old as the temples of Thebes and Babylon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tremendous emotion of the great revolutionary era had influenced the
+ character of the people of that day in a strange way. Men and women who
+ had lived through twenty years of anxiety and fear were no longer quite
+ normal. They jumped whenever the door-bell rang. It might mean the news of
+ the "death on the field of honour" of an only son. The phrases about
+ "brotherly love" and "liberty" of the Revolution were hollow words in the
+ ears of sorely stricken peasants. They clung to anything that might give
+ them a new hold on the terrible problems of life. In their grief and
+ misery they were easily imposed upon by a large number of imposters who
+ posed as prophets and preached a strange new doctrine which they dug out
+ of the more obscure passages of the Book of Revelations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1814, Alexander, who had already consulted a large number of
+ wonder-doctors, heard of a new seeress who was foretelling the coming doom
+ of the world and was exhorting people to repent ere it be too late. The
+ Baroness von Krudener, the lady in question, was a Russian woman of
+ uncertain age and similar reputation who had been the wife of a Russian
+ diplomat in the days of the Emperor Paul. She had squandered her husband's
+ money and had disgraced him by her strange love affairs. She had lived a
+ very dissolute life until her nerves had given way and for a while she was
+ not in her right mind. Then she had been converted by the sight of the
+ sudden death of a friend. Thereafter she despised all gaiety. She
+ confessed her former sins to her shoemaker, a pious Moravian brother, a
+ follower of the old reformer John Huss, who had been burned for his
+ heresies by the Council of Constance in the year 1415.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next ten years the Baroness spent in Germany making a specialty of the
+ "conversion" of kings and princes. To convince Alexander, the Saviour of
+ Europe, of the error of his ways was the greatest ambition of her life.
+ And as Alexander, in his misery, was willing to listen to anybody who
+ brought him a ray of hope, the interview was easily arranged. On the
+ evening of the fourth of June of the year 1815, she was admitted to the
+ tent of the Emperor. She found him reading his Bible. We do not know what
+ she said to Alexander, but when she left him three hours later, he was
+ bathed in tears, and vowed that "at last his soul had found peace." From
+ that day on the Baroness was his faithful companion and his spiritual
+ adviser. She followed him to Paris and then to Vienna and the time which
+ Alexander did not spend dancing he spent at the Krudener prayer-meetings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may ask why I tell you this story in such great detail? Are not the
+ social changes of the nineteenth century of greater importance than the
+ career of an ill-balanced woman who had better be forgotten? Of course
+ they are, but there exist any number of books which will tell you of these
+ other things with great accuracy and in great detail. I want you to learn
+ something more from this history than a mere succession of facts. I want
+ you to approach all historical events in a frame of mind that will take
+ nothing for granted. Don't be satisfied with the mere statement that "such
+ and such a thing happened then and there." Try to discover the hidden
+ motives behind every action and then you will understand the world around
+ you much better and you will have a greater chance to help others, which
+ (when all is said and done) is the only truly satisfactory way of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not want you to think of the Holy Alliance as a piece of paper which
+ was signed in the year 1815 and lies dead and forgotten somewhere in the
+ archives of state. It may be forgotten but it is by no means dead. The
+ Holy Alliance was directly responsible for the promulgation of the Monroe
+ Doctrine, and the Monroe Doctrine of America for the Americans has a very
+ distinct bearing upon your own life. That is the reason why I want you to
+ know exactly how this document happened to come into existence and what
+ the real motives were underlying this outward manifestation of piety and
+ Christian devotion to duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Holy Alliance was the joint labour of an unfortunate man who had
+ suffered a terrible mental shock and who was trying to pacify his
+ much-disturbed soul, and of an ambitious woman who after a wasted life had
+ lost her beauty and her attraction and who satisfied her vanity and her
+ desire for notoriety by assuming the role of self-appointed Messiah of a
+ new and strange creed. I am not giving away any secrets when I tell you
+ these details. Such sober minded people as Castlereagh, Metternich and
+ Talleyrand fully understood the limited abilities of the sentimental
+ Baroness. It would have been easy for Metternich to send her back to her
+ German estates. A few lines to the almighty commander of the imperial
+ police and the thing was done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But France and England and Austria depended upon the good-will of Russia.
+ They could not afford to offend Alexander. And they tolerated the silly
+ old Baroness because they had to. And while they regarded the Holy
+ Alliance as utter rubbish and not worth the paper upon which it was
+ written, they listened patiently to the Tsar when he read them the first
+ rough draft of this attempt to create the Brotherhood of Men upon a basis
+ of the Holy Scriptures. For this is what the Holy Alliance tried to do,
+ and the signers of the document solemnly declared that they would "in the
+ administration of their respective states and in their political relations
+ with every other government take for their sole guide the precepts of that
+ Holy Religion, namely the precepts of Justice, Christian Charity and
+ Peace, which far from being applicable only to private concerns must have
+ an immediate influence on the councils of princes, and must guide all
+ their steps as being the only means of consolidating human institutions
+ and remedying their imperfections." They then proceeded to promise each
+ other that they would remain united "by the bonds of a true and
+ indissoluble fraternity, and considering each other as fellow-countrymen,
+ they would on all occasions and in all places lend each other aid and
+ assistance." And more words to the same effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Eventually the Holy Alliance was signed by the Emperor of Austria, who did
+ not understand a word of it. It was signed by the Bourbons who needed the
+ friendship of Napoleon's old enemies. It was signed by the King of
+ Prussia, who hoped to gain Alexander for his plans for a "greater
+ Prussia," and by all the little nations of Europe who were at the mercy of
+ Russia. England never signed, because Castlereagh thought the whole thing
+ buncombe. The Pope did not sign because he resented this interference in
+ his business by a Greek-Orthodox and a Protestant. And the Sultan did not
+ sign because he never heard of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general mass of the European people, however, soon were forced to take
+ notice. Behind the hollow phrases of the Holy Alliance stood the armies of
+ the Quintuple Alliance which Metternich had created among the great
+ powers. These armies meant business. They let it be known that the peace
+ of Europe must not be disturbed by the so-called liberals who were in
+ reality nothing but disguised Jacobins, and hoped for a return of the
+ revolutionary days. The enthusiasm for the great wars of liberation of the
+ years 1812, 1818, 1814 and 1815 had begun to wear off. It had been
+ followed by a sincere belief in the coming of a happier day. The soldiers
+ who had borne the brunt of the battle wanted peace and they said so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they did not want the sort of peace which the Holy Alliance and the
+ Council of the European powers had now bestowed upon them. They cried that
+ they had been betrayed. But they were careful lest they be heard by a
+ secret-police spy. The reaction was victorious. It was a reaction caused
+ by men who sincerely believed that their methods were necessary for the
+ good of humanity. But it was just as hard to bear as if their intentions
+ had been less kind. And it caused a great deal of unnecessary suffering
+ and greatly retarded the orderly progress of political development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE GREAT REACTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THEY TRIED TO ASSURE THE WORLD AN ERA OF UNDISTURBED PEACE BY SUPPRESSING
+ ALL NEW IDEAS. THEY MADE THE POLICE-SPY THE HIGHEST FUNCTIONARY IN THE
+ STATE AND SOON THE PRISONS OF ALL COUNTRIES WERE FILLED WITH THOSE WHO
+ CLAIMED THAT PEOPLE HAVE THE RIGHT TO GOVERN THEMSELVES AS THEY SEE FIT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To undo the damage done by the great Napoleonic flood was almost
+ impossible. Age-old fences had been washed away. The palaces of two score
+ dynasties had been damaged to such an extent that they had to be condemned
+ as uninhabitable. Other royal residences had been greatly enlarged at the
+ expense of less fortunate neighbours. Strange odds and ends of
+ revolutionary doctrine had been left behind by the receding waters and
+ could not be dislodged without danger to the entire community. But the
+ political engineers of the Congress did the best they could and this is
+ what they accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ France had disturbed the peace of the world for so many years that people
+ had come to fear that country almost instinctively. The Bourbons, through
+ the mouth of Talleyrand, had promised to be good, but the Hundred Days had
+ taught Europe what to expect should Napoleon manage to escape for a second
+ time. The Dutch Republic, therefore, was changed into a Kingdom, and
+ Belgium (which had not joined the Dutch struggle for independence in the
+ sixteenth century and since then had been part of the Habsburg domains,
+ firs t under Spanish rule and thereafter under Austrian rule) was made
+ part of this new kingdom of the Netherlands. Nobody wanted this union
+ either in the Protestant North or in the Catholic South, but no questions
+ were asked. It seemed good for the peace of Europe and that was the main
+ consideration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Poland had hoped for great things because a Pole, Prince Adam Czartoryski,
+ was one of the most intimate friends of Tsar Alexander and had been his
+ constant advisor during the war and at the Congress of Vienna. But Poland
+ was made a semi-independent part of Russia with Alexander as her king.
+ This solution pleased no one and caused much bitter feeling and three
+ revolutions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Denmark, which had remained a faithful ally of Napoleon until the end, was
+ severely punished. Seven years before, an English fleet had sailed down
+ the Kattegat and without a declaration of war or any warning had bombarded
+ Copenhagen and had taken away the Danish fleet, lest it be of value to
+ Napoleon. The Congress of Vienna went one step further. It took Norway
+ (which since the union of Calmar of the year 1397 had been united with
+ Denmark) away from Denmark and gave it to Charles XIV of Sweden as a
+ reward for his betrayal of Napoleon, who had set him up in the king
+ business. This Swedish king, curiously enough, was a former French general
+ by the name of Bernadotte, who had come to Sweden as one of
+ Napolean's{sic} adjutants, and had been invited to the throne of that good
+ country when the last of the rulers of the house of Hollstein-Gottorp had
+ died without leaving either son or daughter. From 1815 until 1844 he ruled
+ his adopted country (the language of which he never learned) width great
+ ability. He was a clever man and enjoyed the respect of both his Swedish
+ and his Norwegian subjects, but he did not succeed in joining two
+ countries which nature and history had put asunder. The dual Scandinavian
+ state was never a success and in 1905, Norway, in a most peaceful and
+ orderly manner, set up as an independent kingdom and the Swedes bade her
+ "good speed" and very wisely let her go her own way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Italians, who since the days of the Renaissance had been at the mercy
+ of a long series of invaders, also had put great hopes in General
+ Bonaparte. The Emperor Napoleon, however, had grievously disappointed
+ them. Instead of the United Italy which the people wanted, they had been
+ divided into a number of little principalities, duchies, republics and the
+ Papal State, which (next to Naples) was the worst governed and most
+ miserable region of the entire peninsula. The Congress of Vienna abolished
+ a few of the Napoleonic republics and in their place resurrected several
+ old principalities which were given to deserving members, both male and
+ female, of the Habsburg family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor Spaniards, who had started the great nationalistic revolt against
+ Napoleon, and who had sacrificed the best blood of the country for their
+ king, were punished severely when the Congress allowed His Majesty to
+ return to his domains. This vicious creature, known as Ferdinand VII, had
+ spent the last four years of his life as a prisoner of Napoleon. He had
+ improved his days by knitting garments for the statues of his favourite
+ patron saints. He celebrated his return by re-introducing the Inquisition
+ and the torture-chamber, both of which had been abolished by the
+ Revolution. He was a disgusting person, despised as much by his subjects
+ as by his four wives, but the Holy Alliance maintained him upon his
+ legitimate throne and all efforts of the decent Spaniards to get rid of
+ this curse and make Spain a constitutional kingdom ended in bloodshed and
+ executions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Portugal had been without a king since the year 1807 when the royal family
+ had fled to the colonies in Brazil. The country had been used as a base of
+ supply for the armies of Wellington during the Peninsula war, which lasted
+ from 1808 until 1814. After 1815 Portugal continued to be a sort of
+ British province until the house of Braganza returned to the throne,
+ leaving one of its members behind in Rio de Janeiro as Emperor of Brazil,
+ the only American Empire which lasted for more than a few years, and which
+ came to an end in 1889 when the country became a republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the east, nothing was done to improve the terrible conditions of both
+ the Slavs and the Greeks who were still subjects of the Sultan. In the
+ year 1804 Black George, a Servian swineherd, (the founder of the
+ Karageorgevich dynasty) had started a revolt against the Turks, but he had
+ been defeated by his enemies and had been murdered by one of his supposed
+ friends, the rival Servian leader, called Milosh Obrenovich, (who became
+ the founder of the Obrenovich dynasty) and the Turks had continued to be
+ the undisputed masters of the Balkans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Greeks, who since the loss of their independence, two thousand years
+ before, had been subjects of the Macedonians, the Romans, the Venetians
+ and the Turks, had hoped that their countryman, Capo d'Istria, a native of
+ Corfu and together with Czartoryski, the most intimate personal friends of
+ Alexander, would do something for them. But the Congress of Vienna was not
+ interested in Greeks, but was very much interested in keeping all
+ "legitimate" monarchs, Christian, Moslem and otherwise, upon their
+ respective thrones. Therefore nothing was done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last, but perhaps the greatest blunder of the Congress was the
+ treatment of Germany. The Reformation and the Thirty Years War had not
+ only destroyed the prosperity of the country, but had turned it into a
+ hopeless political rubbish heap, consisting of a couple of kingdoms, a few
+ grand-duchies, a large number of duchies and hundreds of margravates,
+ principalities, baronies, electorates, free cities and free villages,
+ ruled by the strangest assortment of potentates that was ever seen off the
+ comic opera stage. Frederick the Great had changed this when he created a
+ strong Prussia, but this state had not survived him by many years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon had blue-penciled the demand for independence of most of these
+ little countries, and only fifty-two out of a total of more than three
+ hundred had survived the year 1806. During the years of the great struggle
+ for independence, many a young soldier had dreamed of a new Fatherland
+ that should be strong and united. But there can be no union without a
+ strong leadership, and who was to be this leader?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were five kingdoms in the German speaking lands. The rulers of two
+ of these, Austria and Prussia, were kings by the Grace of God. The rulers
+ of three others, Bavaria, Saxony and Wurtemberg, were kings by the Grace
+ of Napoleon, and as they had been the faithful henchmen of the Emperor,
+ their patriotic credit with the other Germans was therefore not very good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Congress had established a new German Confederation, a league of
+ thirty-eight sovereign states, under the chairmanship of the King of
+ Austria, who was now known as the Emperor of Austria. It was the sort of
+ make-shift arrangement which satisfied no one. It is true that a German
+ Diet, which met in the old coronation city of Frankfort, had been created
+ to discuss matters of "common policy and importance." But in this Diet,
+ thirty-eight delegates represented thirty-eight different interests and as
+ no decision could be taken without a unanimous vote (a parliamentary rule
+ which had in previous centuries ruined the mighty kingdom of Poland), the
+ famous German Confederation became very soon the laughing stock of Europe
+ and the politics of the old Empire began to resemble those of our Central
+ American neighbours in the forties and the fifties of the last century.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was terribly humiliating to the people who had sacrificed everything
+ for a national ideal. But the Congress was not interested in the private
+ feelings of "subjects," and the debate was closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Did anybody object? Most assuredly. As soon as the first feeling of hatred
+ against Napoleon had quieted down&mdash;as soon as the enthusiasm of the
+ great war had subsided&mdash;as soon as the people came to a full
+ realisation of the crime that had been committed in the name of "peace and
+ stability" they began to murmur. They even made threats of open revolt.
+ But what could they do? They were powerless. They were at the mercy of the
+ most pitiless and efficient police system the world had ever seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The members of the Congress of Vienna honestly and sincerely believed that
+ "the Revolutionary Principle had led to the criminal usurpation of the
+ throne by the former emperor Napoleon." They felt that they were called
+ upon to eradicate the adherents of the so-called "French ideas" just as
+ Philip II had only followed the voice of his conscience when he burned
+ Protestants or hanged Moors. In the beginning of the sixteenth century a
+ man who did not believe in the divine right of the Pope to rule his
+ subjects as he saw fit was a "heretic" and it was the duty of all loyal
+ citizens to kill him. In the beginning of the nineteenth century, on the
+ continent of Europe, a man who did not believe in the divine right of his
+ king to rule him as he or his Prime Minister saw fit, was a "heretic," and
+ it was the duty of all loyal citizens to denounce him to the nearest
+ policeman and see that he got punished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the rulers of the year 1815 had learned efficiency in the school of
+ Napoleon and they performed their task much better than it had been done
+ in the year 1517. The period between the year 1815 and the year 1860 was
+ the great era of the political spy. Spies were everywhere. They lived in
+ palaces and they were to be found in the lowest gin-shops. They peeped
+ through the key-holes of the ministerial cabinet and they listened to the
+ conversations of the people who were taking the air on the benches of the
+ Municipal Park. They guarded the frontier so that no one might leave
+ without a duly viseed passport and they inspected all packages, that no
+ books with dangerous "French ideas" should enter the realm of their Royal
+ masters. They sat among the students in the lecture hall and woe to the
+ Professor who uttered a word against the existing order of things. They
+ followed the little boys and girls on their way to church lest they play
+ hookey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In many of these tasks they were assisted by the clergy. The church had
+ suffered greatly during the days of the revolution. The church property
+ had been confiscated. Several priests had been killed and the generation
+ that had learned its cathechism from Voltaire and Rousseau and the other
+ French philosophers had danced around the Altar of Reason when the
+ Committee of Public Safety had abolished the worship of God in October of
+ the year 1793. The priests had followed the "emigres" into their long
+ exile. Now they returned in the wake of the allied armies and they set to
+ work with a vengeance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the Jesuits came back in 1814 and resumed their former labours of
+ educating the young. Their order had been a little too successful in its
+ fight against the enemies of the church. It had established "provinces" in
+ every part of the world, to teach the natives the blessings of
+ Christianity, but soon it had developed into a regular trading company
+ which was for ever interfering with the civil authorities. During the
+ reign of the Marquis de Pombal, the great reforming minister of Portugal,
+ they had been driven out of the Portuguese lands and in the year 1773 at
+ the request of most of the Catholic powers of Europe, the order had been
+ suppressed by Pope Clement XIV. Now they were back on the job, and
+ preached the principles of "obedience" and "love for the legitimate
+ dynasty" to children whose parents had hired shopwindows that they might
+ laugh at Marie Antoinette driving to the scaffold which was to end her
+ misery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the Protestant countries like Prussia, things were not a whit
+ better. The great patriotic leaders of the year 1812, the poets and the
+ writers who had preached a holy war upon the usurper, were now branded as
+ dangerous "demagogues." Their houses were searched. Their letters were
+ read. They were obliged to report to the police at regular intervals and
+ give an account of themselves. The Prussian drill master was let loose in
+ all his fury upon the younger generation. When a party of students
+ celebrated the tercentenary of the Reformation with noisy but harmless
+ festivities on the old Wartburg, the Prussian bureaucrats had visions of
+ an imminent revolution. When a theological student, more honest than
+ intelligent, killed a Russian government spy who was operating in Germany,
+ the universities were placed under police-supervision and professors were
+ jailed or dismissed without any form of trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Russia, of course, was even more absurd in these anti-revolutionary
+ activities. Alexander had recovered from his attack of piety. He was
+ gradually drifting toward melancholia. He well knew his own limited
+ abilities and understood how at Vienna he had been the victim both of
+ Metternich and the Krudener woman. More and more he turned his back upon
+ the west and became a truly Russian ruler whose interests lay in
+ Constantinople, the old holy city that had been the first teacher of the
+ Slavs. The older he grew, the harder he worked and the less he was able to
+ accomplish. And while he sat in his study, his ministers turned the whole
+ of Russia into a land of military barracks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not a pretty picture. Perhaps I might have shortened this
+ description of the Great Reaction. But it is just as well that you should
+ have a thorough knowledge of this era. It was not the first time that an
+ attempt had been made to set the clock of history back. The result was the
+ usual one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0058" id="link2H_4_0058">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE LOVE OF NATIONAL INDEPENDENCE, HOWEVER WAS TOO STRONG TO BE DESTROYED
+ IN THIS WAY. THE SOUTH AMERICANS WERE THE FIRST TO REBEL AGAINST THE
+ REACTIONARY MEASURES OF THE CONGRESS OF VIENNA, GREECE AND BELGIUM AND
+ SPAIN AND A LARGE NUMBER OF OTHER COUNTRIES OF THE EUROPEAN CONTINENT
+ FOLLOWED SUIT AND THE NINETEENTH CENTURY WAS FILLED WITH THE RUMOUR OF
+ MANY WARS OF INDEPENDENCE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IT will serve no good purpose to say "if only the Congress of Vienna had
+ done such and such a thing instead of taking such and such a course, the
+ history of Europe in the nineteenth century would have been different."
+ The Congress of Vienna was a gathering of men who had just passed through
+ a great revolution and through twenty years of terrible and almost
+ continuous warfare. They came together for the purpose of giving Europe
+ that "peace and stability" which they thought that the people needed and
+ wanted. They were what we call reactionaries. They sincerely believed in
+ the inability of the mass of the people to rule themselves. They
+ re-arranged the map of Europe in such a way as seemed to promise the
+ greatest possibility of a lasting success. They failed, but not through
+ any premeditated wickedness on their part. They were, for the greater
+ part, men of the old school who remembered the happier days of their quiet
+ youth and ardently wished a return of that blessed period. They failed to
+ recognise the strong hold which many of the revolutionary principles had
+ gained upon the people of the European continent. That was a misfortune
+ but hardly a sin. But one of the things which the French Revolution had
+ taught not only Europe but America as well, was the right of people to
+ their own "nationality."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon, who respected nothing and nobody, was utterly ruthless in his
+ dealing with national and patriotic aspirations. But the early
+ revolutionary generals had proclaimed the new doctrine that "nationality
+ was not a matter of political frontiers or round skulls and broad noses,
+ but a matter of the heart and soul." While they were teaching the French
+ children the greatness of the French nation, they encouraged Spaniards and
+ Hollanders and Italians to do the same thing. Soon these people, who all
+ shared Rousseau's belief in the superior virtues of Original Man, began to
+ dig into their past and found, buried beneath the ruins of the feudal
+ system, the bones of the mighty races of which they supposed themselves
+ the feeble descendants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first half of the nineteenth century was the era of the great
+ historical discoveries. Everywhere historians were busy publishing
+ mediaeval charters and early mediaeval chronicles and in every country the
+ result was a new pride in the old fatherland. A great deal of this
+ sentiment was based upon the wrong interpretation of historical facts. But
+ in practical politics, it does not matter what is true, but everything
+ depends upon what the people believe to be true. And in most countries
+ both the kings and their subjects firmly believed in the glory and fame of
+ their ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Congress of Vienna was not inclined to be sentimental. Their
+ Excellencies divided the map of Europe according to the best interests of
+ half a dozen dynasties and put "national aspirations" upon the Index, or
+ list of forbidden books, together with all other dangerous "French
+ doctrines."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But history is no respecter of Congresses. For some reason or other (it
+ may be an historical law, which thus far has escaped the attention of the
+ scholars) "nations" seemed to be necessary for the orderly development of
+ human society and the attempt to stem this tide was quite as unsuccessful
+ as the Metternichian effort to prevent people from thinking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curiously enough the first trouble began in a very distant part of the
+ world, in South America. The Spanish colonies of that continent had been
+ enjoying a period of relative independence during the many years of the
+ great Napoleonic wars. They had even remained faithful to their king when
+ he was taken prisoner by the French Emperor and they had refused to
+ recognise Joseph Bonaparte, who had in the year 1808 been made King of
+ Spain by order of his brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the only part of America to get very much upset by the Revolution
+ was the island of Haiti, the Espagnola of Columbus' first trip. Here in
+ the year 1791 the French Convention, in a sudden outburst of love and
+ human brotherhood, had bestowed upon their black brethren all the
+ privileges hitherto enjoyed by their white masters. Just as suddenly they
+ had repented of this step, but the attempt to undo the original promise
+ led to many years of terrible warfare between General Leclerc, the
+ brother-in-law of Napoleon, and Toussaint l'Ouverture, the negro
+ chieftain. In the year 1801, Toussaint was asked to visit Leclerc and
+ discuss terms of peace. He received the solemn promise that he would not
+ be molested. He trusted his white adversaries, was put on board a ship and
+ shortly afterwards died in a French prison. But the negroes gained their
+ independence all the same and founded a Republic. Incidentally they were
+ of great help to the first great South American patriot in his efforts to
+ deliver his native country from the Spanish yoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Simon Bolivar, a native of Caracas in Venezuela, born in the year 1783,
+ had been educated in Spain, had visited Paris where he had seen the
+ Revolutionary government at work, had lived for a while in the United
+ States and had returned to his native land where the widespread discontent
+ against Spain, the mother country, was beginning to take a definite form.
+ In the year 1811, Venezuela declared its independence and Bolivar became
+ one of the revolutionary generals. Within two months, the rebels were
+ defeated and Bolivar fled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the next five years he was the leader of an apparently lost cause. He
+ sacrificed all his wealth and he would not have been able to begin his
+ final and successful expedition without the support of the President of
+ Haiti. Thereafter the revolt spread all over South America and soon it
+ appeared that Spain was not able to suppress the rebellion unaided. She
+ asked for the support of the Holy Alliance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This step greatly worried England. The British shippers had succeeded the
+ Dutch as the Common Carriers of the world and they expected to reap heavy
+ profits from a declaration of independence on the part of all South
+ America. They had hopes that the United States of America would interfere
+ but the Senate had no such plans and in the House, too, there were many
+ voices which declared that Spain ought to be given a free hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then, there was a change of ministers in England. The Whigs went out
+ and the Tories came in. George Canning became secretary of State. He
+ dropped a hint that England would gladly back up the American government
+ with all the might of her fleet, if said government would declare its
+ disapproval of the plans of the Holy Alliance in regard to the rebellious
+ colonies of the southern continent. President Monroe thereupon, on the 2nd
+ of December of the year 1823, addressed Congress and stated that: "America
+ would consider any attempt on the part of the allied powers to extend
+ their system to any portion of this western hemisphere as dangerous to our
+ peace and safety," and gave warning that "the American government would
+ consider such action on the part of the Holy Alliance as a manifestation
+ of an unfriendly disposition toward the United States." Four weeks later,
+ the text of the "Monroe Doctrine" was printed in the English newspapers
+ and the members of the Holy Alliance were forced to make their choice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Metternich hesitated. Personally he would have been willing to risk the
+ displeasure of the United States (which had allowed both its army and navy
+ to fall into neglect since the end of the Anglo-American war of the year
+ 1812.) But Canning's threatening attitude and trouble on the continent
+ forced him to be careful. The expedition never took place and South
+ America and Mexico gained their independence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the troubles on the continent of Europe, they were coming fast and
+ furious. The Holy Alliance had sent French troops to Spain to act as
+ guardians of the peace in the year 1820. Austrian troops had been used for
+ a similar purpose in Italy when the "Carbonari" (the secret society of the
+ Charcoal Burners) were making propaganda for a united Italy and had caused
+ a rebellion against the unspeakable Ferdinand of Naples.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bad news also came from Russia where the death of Alexander had been the
+ sign for a revolutionary outbreak in St. Petersburg, a short but bloody
+ upheaval, the so-called Dekaberist revolt (because it took place in
+ December,) which ended with the hanging of a large number of good patriots
+ who had been disgusted by the reaction of Alexander's last years and had
+ tried to give Russia a constitutional form of government.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But worse was to follow. Metternich had tried to assure himself of the
+ continued support of the European courts by a series of conferences at
+ Aix-la-Chapelle at Troppau at Laibach and finally at Verona. The delegates
+ from the different powers duly travelled to these agreeable watering
+ places where the Austrian prime minister used to spend his summers. They
+ always promised to do their best to suppress revolt but they were none too
+ certain of their success. The spirit of the people was beginning to be
+ ugly and especially in France the position of the king was by no means
+ satisfactory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The real trouble however began in the Balkans, the gateway to western
+ Europe through which the invaders of that continent had passed since the
+ beginning of time. The first outbreak was in Moldavia, the ancient Roman
+ province of Dacia which had been cut off from the Empire in the third
+ century. Since then, it had been a lost land, a sort of Atlantis, where
+ the people had continued to speak the old Roman tongue and still called
+ themselves Romans and their country Roumania. Here in the year 1821, a
+ young Greek, Prince Alexander Ypsilanti, began a revolt against the Turks.
+ He told his followers that they could count upon the support of Russia.
+ But Metternich's fast couriers were soon on their way to St Petersburg and
+ the Tsar, entirely persuaded by the Austrian arguments in favor of "peace
+ and stability," refused to help. Ypsilanti was forced to flee to Austria
+ where he spent the next seven years in prison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the same year, 1821, trouble began in Greece. Since 1815 a secret
+ society of Greek patriots had been preparing the way for a revolt.
+ Suddenly they hoisted the flag of independence in the Morea (the ancient
+ Peloponnesus) and drove the Turkish garrisons away. The Turks answered in
+ the usual fashion. They took the Greek Patriarch of Constantinople, who
+ was regarded as their Pope both by the Greeks and by many Russians, and
+ they hanged him on Easter Sunday of the year 1821, together with a number
+ of his bishops. The Greeks came back with a massacre of all the
+ Mohammedans in Tripolitsa, the capital of the Morea and the Turks
+ retaliated by an attack upon the island of Chios, where they murdered
+ 25,000 Christians and sold 45,000 others as slaves into Asia and Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Greeks appealed to the European courts, but Metternich told them
+ in so many words that they could "stew in their own grease," (I am not
+ trying to make a pun, but I am quoting His Serene Highness who informed
+ the Tsar that this "fire of revolt ought to burn itself out beyond the
+ pale of civilisation" and the frontiers were closed to those volunteers
+ who wished to go to the rescue of the patriotic Hellenes. Their cause
+ seemed lost. At the request of Turkey, an Egyptian army was landed in the
+ Morea and soon the Turkish flag was again flying from the Acropolis, the
+ ancient stronghold of Athens. The Egyptian army then pacified the country
+ "a la Turque," and Metternich followed the proceedings with quiet
+ interest, awaiting the day when this "attempt against the peace of Europe"
+ should be a thing of the past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more it was England which upset his plans. The greatest glory of
+ England does not lie in her vast colonial possessions, in her wealth or
+ her navy, but in the quiet heroism and independence of her average
+ citizen. The Englishman obeys the law because he knows that respect for
+ the rights of others marks the difference between a dog-kennel and
+ civilised society. But he does not recognize the right of others to
+ interfere with his freedom of thought. If his country does something which
+ he believes to be wrong, he gets up and says so and the government which
+ he attacks will respect him and will give him full protection against the
+ mob which to-day, as in the time of Socrates, often loves to destroy those
+ who surpass it in courage or intelligence. There never has been a good
+ cause, however unpopular or however distant, which has not counted a
+ number of Englishmen among its staunchest adherents. The mass of the
+ English people are not different from those in other lands. They stick to
+ the business at hand and have no time for unpractical "sporting ventures."
+ But they rather admire their eccentric neighbour who drops everything to
+ go and fight for some obscure people in Asia or Africa and when he has
+ been killed they give him a fine public funeral and hold him up to their
+ children as an example of valor and chivalry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even the police spies of the Holy Alliance were powerless against this
+ national characteristic. In the year 1824, Lord Byron, a rich young
+ Englishman who wrote the poetry over which all Europe wept, hoisted the
+ sails of his yacht and started south to help the Greeks. Three months
+ later the news spread through Europe that their hero lay dead in
+ Missolonghi, the last of the Greek strongholds. His lonely death caught
+ the imagination of the people. In all countries, societies were formed to
+ help the Greeks. Lafayette, the grand old man of the American revolution,
+ pleaded their cause in France. The king of Bavaria sent hundreds of his
+ officers. Money and supplies poured in upon the starving men of
+ Missolonghi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England, George Canning, who had defeated the plans of the Holy
+ Alliance in South America, was now prime minis-ter. He saw his chance to
+ checkmate Metternich for a second time. The English and Russian fleets
+ were already in the Mediterranean. They were sent by governments which
+ dared no longer suppress the popular enthusiasm for the cause of the Greek
+ patriots. The French navy appeared because France, since the end of the
+ Crusades, had assumed the role of the defender of the Christian faith in
+ Mohammedan lands. On October 20 of the year 1827, the ships of the three
+ nations attacked the Turkish fleet in the bay of Navarino and destroyed
+ it. Rarely has the news of a battle been received with such general
+ rejoicing. The people of western Europe and Russia who enjoyed no freedom
+ at home consoled themselves by fighting an imaginary war of liberty on
+ behalf of the oppressed Greeks. In the year 1829 they had their reward.
+ Greece became an independent nation and the policy of reaction and
+ stability suffered its second great defeat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be absurd were I to try, in this short volume, to give you a
+ detailed account of the struggle for national independence in all other
+ countries. There are a large number of excellent books devoted to such
+ subjects. I have described the struggle for the independence of Greece
+ because it was the first successful attack upon the bulwark of reaction
+ which the Congress of Vienna had erected to "maintain the stability of
+ Europe." That mighty fortress of suppression still held out and Metternich
+ continued to be in command. But the end was near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In France the Bourbons had established an almost unbearable rule of police
+ officials who were trying to undo the work of the French revolution, with
+ an absolute disregard of the regulations and laws of civilised warfare.
+ When Louis XVIII died in the year 1824, the people had enjoyed nine years
+ of "peace" which had proved even more unhappy than the ten years of war of
+ the Empire. Louis was succeeded by his brother, Charles X.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Louis had belonged to that famous Bourbon family which, although it never
+ learned anything, never forgot anything. The recollection of that morning
+ in the town of Hamm, when news had reached him of the decapitation of his
+ brother, remained a constant warning of what might happen to those kings
+ who did not read the signs of the times aright. Charles, on the other
+ hand, who had managed to run up private debts of fifty million francs
+ before he was twenty years of age, knew nothing, remembered nothing and
+ firmly intended to learn nothing. As soon as he had succeeded his brother,
+ he established a government "by priests, through priests and for priests,"
+ and while the Duke of Wellington, who made this remark, cannot be called a
+ violent liberal, Charles ruled in such a way that he disgusted even that
+ trusted friend of law and order. When he tried to suppress the newspapers
+ which dared to criticise his government, and dismissed the Parliament
+ because it supported the Press, his days were numbered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the night of the 27th of July of the year 1830, a revolution took place
+ in Paris. On the 30th of the same month, the king fled to the coast and
+ set sail for England. In this way the "famous farce of fifteen years" came
+ to an end and the Bourbons were at last removed from the throne of France.
+ They were too hopelessly incompetent. France then might have returned to a
+ Republican form of government, but such a step would not have been
+ tolerated by Metternich.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was dangerous enough. The spark of rebellion had leaped
+ beyond the French frontier and had set fire to another powder house filled
+ with national grievances. The new kingdom of the Netherlands had not been
+ a success. The Belgian and the Dutch people had nothing in common and
+ their king, William of Orange (the descendant of an uncle of William the
+ Silent), while a hard worker and a good business man, was too much lacking
+ in tact and pliability to keep the peace among his uncongenial subjects.
+ Besides, the horde of priests which had descended upon France, had at once
+ found its way into Belgium and whatever Protestant William tried to do was
+ howled down by large crowds of excited citizens as a fresh attempt upon
+ the "freedom of the Catholic church." On the 25th of August there was a
+ popular outbreak against the Dutch authorities in Brussels. Two months
+ later, the Belgians declared themselves independent and elected Leopold of
+ Coburg, the uncle of Queen Victoria of England, to the throne. That was an
+ excellent solution of the difficulty. The two countries, which never ought
+ to have been united, parted their ways and thereafter lived in peace and
+ harmony and behaved like decent neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ News in those days when there were only a few short railroads, travelled
+ slowly, but when the success of the French and the Belgian revolutionists
+ became known in Poland there was an immediate clash between the Poles and
+ their Russian rulers which led to a year of terrible warfare and ended
+ with a complete victory for the Russians who "established order along the
+ banks of the Vistula" in the well-known Russian fashion Nicholas the
+ first, who had succeeded his brother Alexander in 1825, firmly believed in
+ the Divine Right of his own family, and the thousands of Polish refugees
+ who had found shelter in western Europe bore witness to the fact that the
+ principles of the Holy Alliance were still more than a hollow phrase in
+ Holy Russia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Italy too there was a moment of unrest. Marie Louise Duchess of Parma
+ and wife of the former Emperor Napoleon, whom she had deserted after the
+ defeat of Waterloo, was driven away from her country, and in the Papal
+ state the exasperated people tried to establish an independent Republic.
+ But the armies of Austria marched to Rome and soon every thing was as of
+ old. Metternich continued to reside at the Ball Platz, the home of the
+ foreign minister of the Habsburg dynasty, the police spies returned to
+ their job, and peace reigned supreme. Eighteen more years were to pass
+ before a second and more successful attempt could be made to deliver
+ Europe from the terrible inheritance of the Vienna Congress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again it was France, the revolutionary weather-cock of Europe, which gave
+ the signal of revolt. Charles X had been succeeded by Louis Philippe, the
+ son of that famous Duke of Orleans who had turned Jacobin, had voted for
+ the death of his cousin the king, and had played a role during the early
+ days of the revolution under the name of "Philippe Egalite" or "Equality
+ Philip." Eventually he had been killed when Robespierre tried to purge the
+ nation of all "traitors," (by which name he indicated those people who did
+ not share his own views) and his son had been forced to run away from the
+ revolutionary army. Young Louis Philippe thereupon had wandered far and
+ wide. He had taught school in Switzerland and had spent a couple of years
+ exploring the unknown "far west" of America. After the fall of Napoleon he
+ had returned to Paris. He was much more intelligent than his Bourbon
+ cousins. He was a simple man who went about in the public parks with a red
+ cotton umbrella under his arm, followed by a brood of children like any
+ good housefather. But France had outgrown the king business and Louis did
+ not know this until the morning of the 24th of February, of the year 1848,
+ when a crowd stormed the Tuilleries and drove his Majesty away and
+ proclaimed the Republic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the news of this event reached Vienna, Metternich expressed the
+ casual opinion that this was only a repetition of the year 1793 and that
+ the Allies would once more be obliged to march upon Paris and make an end
+ to this very unseemly democratic row. But two weeks later his own Austrian
+ capital was in open revolt. Metternich escaped from the mob through the
+ back door of his palace, and the Emperor Ferdinand was forced to give his
+ subjects a constitution which embodied most of the revolutionary
+ principles which his Prime Minister had tried to suppress for the last
+ thirty-three years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time all Europe felt the shock. Hungary declared itself independent,
+ and commenced a war against the Habsburgs under the leadership of Louis
+ Kossuth. The unequal struggle lasted more than a year. It was finally
+ suppressed by the armies of Tsar Nicholas who marched across the
+ Carpathian mountains and made Hungary once more safe for autocracy. The
+ Habsburgs thereupon established extraordinary court-martials and hanged
+ the greater part of the Hungarian patriots whom they had not been able to
+ defeat in open battle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Italy, the island of Sicily declared itself independent from Naples
+ and drove its Bourbon king away. In the Papal states the prime minister,
+ Rossi, was murdered and the Pope was forced to flee. He returned the next
+ year at the head of a French army which remained in Rome to protect His
+ Holiness against his subjects until the year 1870. Then it was called back
+ to defend France against the Prussians, and Rome became the capital of
+ Italy. In the north, Milan and Venice rose against their Austrian masters.
+ They were supported by king Albert of Sardinia, but a strong Austrian army
+ under old Radetzky marched into the valley of the Po, defeated the
+ Sardinians near Custozza and Novara and forced Albert to abdicate in
+ favour of his son, Victor Emanuel, who a few years later was to be the
+ first king of a united Italy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Germany the unrest of the year 1848 took the form of a great national
+ demonstration in favour of political unity and a representative form of
+ government. In Bavaria, the king who had wasted his time and money upon an
+ Irish lady who posed as a Spanish dancer&mdash;(she was called Lola Montez
+ and lies buried in New York's Potter's Field)&mdash;was driven away by the
+ enraged students of the university. In Prussia, the king was forced to
+ stand with uncovered head before the coffins of those who had been killed
+ during the street fighting and to promise a constitutional form of
+ government. And in March of the year 1849, a German parliament, consisting
+ of 550 delegates from all parts of the country came together in Frankfort
+ and proposed that king Frederick William of Prussia should be the Emperor
+ of a United Germany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, however, the tide began to turn. Incompetent Ferdinand had abdicated
+ in favour of his nephew Francis Joseph. The well-drilled Austrian army had
+ remained faithful to their war-lord. The hangman was given plenty of work
+ and the Habsburgs, after the nature of that strangely cat-like family,
+ once more landed upon their feet and rapidly strengthened their position
+ as the masters of eastern and western Europe. They played the game of
+ politics very adroitly and used the jealousies of the other German states
+ to prevent the elevation of the Prussian king to the Imperial dignity.
+ Their long train-ing in the art of suffering defeat had taught them the
+ value of patience. They knew how to wait. They bided their time and while
+ the liberals, utterly untrained in practical politics, talked and talked
+ and talked and got intoxicated by their own fine speeches, the Austrians
+ quietly gathered their forces, dismissed the Parliament of Frankfort and
+ re-established the old and impossible German confederation which the
+ Congress of Vienna had wished upon an unsuspecting world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But among the men who had attended this strange Parliament of unpractical
+ enthusiasts, there was a Prussian country squire by the name of Bismarck,
+ who had made good use of his eyes and ears. He had a deep contempt for
+ oratory. He knew (what every man of action has always known) that nothing
+ is ever accomplished by talk. In his own way he was a sincere patriot. He
+ had been trained in the old school of diplomacy and he could outlie his
+ opponents just as he could outwalk them and outdrink them and outride
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bismarck felt convinced that the loose confederation of little states must
+ be changed into a strong united country if it would hold its own against
+ the other European powers. Brought up amidst feudal ideas of loyalty, he
+ decided that the house of Hohenzollern, of which he was the most faithful
+ servant, should rule the new state, rather than the incompetent Habsburgs.
+ For this purpose he must first get rid of the Austrian influence, and he
+ began to make the necessary preparations for this painful operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Italy in the meantime had solved her own problem, and had rid herself of
+ her hated Austrian master. The unity of Italy was the work of three men,
+ Cavour, Mazzini and Garibaldi. Of these three, Cavour, the civil-engineer
+ with the short-sighted eyes and the steel-rimmed glasses, played the part
+ of the careful political pilot. Mazzini, who had spent most of his days in
+ different European garrets, hiding from the Austrian police, was the
+ public agitator, while Garibaldi, with his band of red-shirted
+ rough-riders, appealed to the popular imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mazzini and Garibaldi were both believers in the Republican form of
+ government. Cavour, however, was a monarchist, and the others who
+ recognised his superior ability in such matters of practical statecraft,
+ accepted his decision and sacrificed their own ambitions for the greater
+ good of their beloved Fatherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cavour felt towards the House of Sardinia as Bismarck did towards the
+ Hohenzollern family. With infinite care and great shrewdness he set to
+ work to jockey the Sardinian King into a position from which His Majesty
+ would be able to assume the leadership of the entire Italian people. The
+ unsettled political conditions in the rest of Europe greatly helped him in
+ his plans and no country contributed more to the independence of Italy
+ than her old and trusted (and often distrusted) neighbour, France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that turbulent country, in November of the year 1852, the Republic had
+ come to a sudden but not unexpected end. Napoleon III the son of Louis
+ Bonaparte the former King of Holland, and the small nephew of a great
+ uncle, had re-established an Empire and had made himself Emperor "by the
+ Grace of God and the Will of the People."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This young man, who had been educated in Germany and who mixed his French
+ with harsh Teutonic gutturals (just as the first Napoleon had always
+ spoken the language of his adopted country with a strong Italian accent)
+ was trying very hard to use the Napoleonic tradition for his own benefit.
+ But he had many enemies and did not feel very certain of his hold upon his
+ ready-made throne. He had gained the friendship of Queen Victoria but this
+ had not been a difficult task, as the good Queen was not particularly
+ brilliant and was very susceptible to flattery. As for the other European
+ sovereigns, they treated the French Emperor with insulting haughtiness and
+ sat up nights devising new ways in which they could show their upstart
+ "Good Brother" how sincerely they despised him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Napoleon was obliged to find a way in which he could break this
+ opposition, either through love or through fear. He well knew the
+ fascination which the word "glory" still held for his subjects. Since he
+ was forced to gamble for his throne he decided to play the game of Empire
+ for high stakes. He used an attack of Russia upon Turkey as an excuse for
+ bringing about the Crimean war in which England and France combined
+ against the Tsar on behalf of the Sultan. It was a very costly and
+ exceedingly unprofitable enterprise. Neither France nor England nor Russia
+ reaped much glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Crimean war did one good thing. It gave Sardinia a chance to
+ volunteer on the winning side and when peace was declared it gave Cavour
+ the opportunity to lay claim to the gratitude of both England and France.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having made use of the international situation to get Sardinia recognised
+ as one of the more important powers of Europe, the clever Italian then
+ provoked a war between Sardinia and Austria in June of the year 1859. He
+ assured himself of the support of Napoleon in exchange for the provinces
+ of Savoy and the city of Nice, which was really an Italian town. The
+ Franco-Italian armies defeated the Austrians at Magenta and Solferino, and
+ the former Austrian provinces and duchies were united into a single
+ Italian kingdom. Florence became the capital of this new Italy until the
+ year 1870 when the French recalled their troops from Home to defend France
+ against the Germans. As soon as they were gone, the Italian troops entered
+ the eternal city and the House of Sardinia took up its residence in the
+ old Palace of the Quirinal which an ancient Pope had built on the ruins of
+ the baths of the Emperor Constantine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Pope, however, moved across the river Tiber and hid behind the walls
+ of the Vatican, which had been the home of many of his predecessors since
+ their return from the exile of Avignon in the year 1377. He protested
+ loudly against this high-handed theft of his domains and addressed letters
+ of appeal to those faithful Catholics who were inclined to sympathise with
+ him in his loss. Their number, however, was small, and it has been
+ steadily decreasing. For, once delivered from the cares of state, the Pope
+ was able to devote all his time to questions of a spiritual nature.
+ Standing high above the petty quarrels of the European politicians, the
+ Papacy assumed a new dignity which proved of great benefit to the church
+ and made it an international power for social and religious progress which
+ has shown a much more intelligent appreciation of modern economic problems
+ than most Protestant sects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way, the attempt of the Congress of Vienna to settle the Italian
+ question by making the peninsula an Austrian province was at last undone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The German problem however remained as yet unsolved. It proved the most
+ difficult of all. The failure of the revolution of the year 1848 had led
+ to the wholesale migration of the more energetic and liberal elements
+ among the German people. These young fellows had moved to the United
+ States of America, to Brazil, to the new colonies in Asia and America.
+ Their work was continued in Germany but by a different sort of men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the new Diet which met at Frankfort, after the collapse of the German
+ Parliament and the failure of the Liberals to establish a united country,
+ the Kingdom of Prussia was represented by that same Otto von Bismarck from
+ whom we parted a few pages ago. Bismarck by now had managed to gain the
+ complete confidence of the king of Prussia. That was all he asked for. The
+ opinion of the Prussian parliament or of the Prussian people interested
+ him not at all. With his own eyes he had seen the defeat of the Liberals.
+ He knew that he would not be able to get rid of Austria without a war and
+ he began by strengthening the Prussian army. The Landtag, exasperated at
+ his high-handed methods, refused to give him the necessary credits.
+ Bismarck did not even bother to discuss the matter. He went ahead and
+ increased his army with the help of funds which the Prussian house of
+ Peers and the king placed at his disposal. Then he looked for a national
+ cause which could be used for the purpose of creating a great wave of
+ patriotism among all the German people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the north of Germany there were the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein
+ which ever since the middle ages had been a source of trouble. Both
+ countries were inhabited by a certain number of Danes and a certain number
+ of Germans, but although they were governed by the King of Denmark, they
+ were not an integral part of the Danish State and this led to endless
+ difficulties. Heaven forbid that I should revive this forgotten question
+ which now seems settled by the acts of the recent Congress of Versailles.
+ But the Germans in Holstein were very loud in their abuse of the Danes and
+ the Danes in Schleswig made a great ado of their Danishness, and all
+ Europe was discussing the problem and German Mannerchors and Turnvereins
+ listened to sentimental speeches about the "lost brethren" and the
+ different chancelleries were trying to discover what it was all about,
+ when Prussia mobilised her armies to "save the lost provinces." As
+ Austria, the official head of the German Confederation, could not allow
+ Prussia to act alone in such an important matter, the Habsburg troops were
+ mobilised too and the combined armies of the two great powers crossed the
+ Danish frontiers and after a very brave resistance on the part of the
+ Danes, occupied the two duchies. The Danes appealed to Europe, but Europe
+ was otherwise engaged and the poor Danes were left to their fate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bismarck then prepared the scene for the second number upon his Imperial
+ programme. He used the division of the spoils to pick a quarrel with
+ Austria. The Habsburgs fell into the trap. The new Prussian army, the
+ creation of Bismarck and his faithful generals, invaded Bohemia and in
+ less than six weeks, the last of the Austrian troops had been destroyed at
+ Koniggratz and Sadowa and the road to Vienna lay open. But Bismarck did
+ not want to go too far. He knew that he would need a few friends in
+ Europe. He offered the defeated Habsburgs very decent terms of peace,
+ provided they would resign their chairmanship of the Confederation. He was
+ less merciful to many of the smaller German states who had taken the side
+ of the Austrians, and annexed them to Prussia. The greater part of the
+ northern states then formed a new organisation, the so-called North German
+ Confederacy, and victorious Prussia assumed the unofficial leadership of
+ the German people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Europe stood aghast at the rapidity with which the work of consolidation
+ had been done. England was quite indifferent but France showed signs of
+ disapproval. Napoleon's hold upon the French people was steadily
+ diminishing. The Crimean war had been costly and had accomplished nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A second adventure in the year 1863, when a French army had tried to force
+ an Austrian Grand-Duke by the name of Maximilian upon the Mexican people
+ as their Emperor, had come to a disastrous end as soon as the American
+ Civil War had been won by the North. For the Government at Washington had
+ forced the French to withdraw their troops and this had given the Mexicans
+ a chance to clear their country of the enemy and shoot the unwelcome
+ Emperor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was necessary to give the Napoleonic throne a new coat of glory-paint.
+ Within a few years the North German Confederation would be a serious rival
+ of France. Napoleon decided that a war with Germany would be a good thing
+ for his dynasty. He looked for an excuse and Spain, the poor victim of
+ endless revolutions, gave him one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then the Spanish throne happened to be vacant. It had been offered to
+ the Catholic branch of the house of Hohenzollern. The French government
+ had objected and the Hohenzollerns had politely refused to accept the
+ crown. But Napoleon, who was showing signs of illness, was very much under
+ the influence of his beautiful wife, Eugenie de Montijo, the daughter of a
+ Spanish gentleman and the grand-daughter of William Kirkpatrick, an
+ American consul at Malaga, where the grapes come from. Eugenie, although
+ shrewd enough, was as badly educated as most Spanish women of that day.
+ She was at the mercy of her spiritual advisers and these worthy gentlemen
+ felt no love for the Protestant King of Prussia. "Be bold," was the advice
+ of the Empress to her husband, but she omitted to add the second half of
+ that famous Persian proverb which admonishes the hero to "be bold but not
+ too bold." Napoleon, convinced of the strength of his army, addressed
+ himself to the king of Prussia and insisted that the king give him
+ assurances that "he would never permit another candidature of a
+ Hohenzollern prince to the Spanish crown." As the Hohenzollerns had just
+ declined the honour, the demand was superfluous, and Bismarck so informed
+ the French government. But Napoleon was not satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the year 1870 and King William was taking the waters at Ems. There
+ one day he was approached by the French minister who tried to re-open the
+ discussion. The king answered very pleasantly that it was a fine day and
+ that the Spanish question was now closed and that nothing more remained to
+ be said upon the subject. As a matter of routine, a report of this
+ interview was telegraphed to Bismarck, who handled all foreign affairs.
+ Bismarck edited the dispatch for the benefit of the Prussian and French
+ press. Many people have called him names for doing this. Bismarck however
+ could plead the excuse that the doctoring of official news, since time
+ immemorial, had been one of the privileges of all civilised governments.
+ When the "edited" telegram was printed, the good people in Berlin felt
+ that their old and venerable king with his nice white whiskers had been
+ insulted by an arrogant little Frenchman and the equally good people of
+ Paris flew into a rage because their perfectly courteous minister had been
+ shown the door by a Royal Prussian flunkey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they both went to war and in less than two months, Napoleon and the
+ greater part of his army were prisoners of the Germans. The Second Empire
+ had come to an end and the Third Republic was making ready to defend Paris
+ against the German invaders. Paris held out for five long months. Ten days
+ before the surrender of the city, in the nearby palace of Versailles,
+ built by that same King Louis XIV who had been such a dangerous enemy to
+ the Germans, the King of Prussia was publicly proclaimed German Emperor
+ and a loud booming of guns told the hungry Parisians that a new German
+ Empire had taken the place of the old harmless Confederation of Teutonic
+ states and stateless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this rough way, the German question was finally settled. By the end of
+ the year 1871, fifty-six years after the memorable gathering at Vienna,
+ the work of the Congress had been entirely undone. Metternich and
+ Alexander and Talleyrand had tried to give the people of Europe a lasting
+ peace. The methods they had employed had caused endless wars and
+ revolutions and the feeling of a common brotherhood of the eighteenth
+ century was followed by an era of exaggerated nationalism which has not
+ yet come to an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE AGE OF THE ENGINE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BUT WHILE THE PEOPLE OF EUROPE WERE FIGHTING FOR THEIR NATIONAL
+ INDEPENDENCE, THE WORLD IN WHICH THEY LIVED HAD BEEN ENTIRELY CHANGED BY A
+ SERIES OF INVENTIONS, WHICH HAD MADE THE CLUMSY OLD STEAM ENGINE OF THE
+ 18TH CENTURY THE MOST FAITHFUL AND EFFICIENT SLAVE OF MAN
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE greatest benefactor of the human race died more than half a million
+ years ago. He was a hairy creature with a low brow and sunken eyes, a
+ heavy jaw and strong tiger-like teeth. He would not have looked well in a
+ gathering of modern scientists, but they would have honoured him as their
+ master. For he had used a stone to break a nut and a stick to lift up a
+ heavy boulder. He was the inventor of the hammer and the lever, our first
+ tools, and he did more than any human being who came after him to give man
+ his enormous advantage over the other animals with whom he shares this
+ planet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ever since, man has tried to make his life easier by the use of a greater
+ number of tools. The first wheel (a round disc made out of an old tree)
+ created as much stir in the communities of 100,000 B.C. as the flying
+ machine did only a few years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Washington, the story is told of a director of the Patent Office who in
+ the early thirties of the last century suggested that the Patent Office be
+ abolished, because "everything that possibly could be invented had been
+ invented." A similar feeling must have spread through the prehistoric
+ world when the first sail was hoisted on a raft and the people were able
+ to move from place to place without rowing or punting or pulling from the
+ shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed one of the most interesting chapters of history is the effort of
+ man to let some one else or something else do his work for him, while he
+ enjoyed his leisure, sitting in the sun or painting pictures on rocks, or
+ training young wolves and little tigers to behave like peaceful domestic
+ animals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course in the very olden days; it was always possible to enslave a
+ weaker neighbour and force him to do the unpleasant tasks of life. One of
+ the reasons why the Greeks and Romans, who were quite as intelligent as we
+ are, failed to devise more interesting machinery, was to be found in the
+ wide-spread existence of slavery. Why should a great mathematician waste
+ his time upon wires and pulleys and cogs and fill the air with noise and
+ smoke when he could go to the marketplace and buy all the slaves he needed
+ at a very small expense?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And during the middle-ages, although slavery had been abolished and only a
+ mild form of serfdom survived, the guilds discouraged the idea of using
+ machinery because they thought this would throw a large number of their
+ brethren out of work. Besides, the Middle-Ages were not at all interested
+ in producing large quantities of goods. Their tailors and butchers and
+ carpenters worked for the immediate needs of the small community in which
+ they lived and had no desire to compete with their neighbours, or to
+ produce more than was strictly necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the Renaissance, when the prejudices of the Church against
+ scientific investigations could no longer be enforced as rigidly as
+ before, a large number of men began to devote their lives to mathematics
+ and astronomy and physics and chemistry. Two years before the beginning of
+ the Thirty Years War, John Napier, a Scotchman, had published his little
+ book which described the new invention of logarithms. During the war
+ it-self, Gottfried Leibnitz of Leipzig had perfected the system of
+ infinitesimal calculus. Eight years before the peace of Westphalia,
+ Newton, the great English natural philosopher, was born, and in that same
+ year Galileo, the Italian astronomer, died. Meanwhile the Thirty Years War
+ had destroyed the prosperity of central Europe and there was a sudden but
+ very general interest in "alchemy," the strange pseudo-science of the
+ middle-ages by which people hoped to turn base metals into gold. This
+ proved to be impossible but the alchemists in their laboratories stumbled
+ upon many new ideas and greatly helped the work of the chemists who were
+ their successors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The work of all these men provided the world with a solid scientific
+ foundation upon which it was possible to build even the most complicated
+ of engines, and a number of practical men made good use of it. The
+ Middle-Ages had used wood for the few bits of necessary machinery. But
+ wood wore out easily. Iron was a much better material but iron was scarce
+ except in England. In England therefore most of the smelting was done. To
+ smelt iron, huge fires were needed. In the beginning, these fires had been
+ made of wood, but gradually the forests had been used up. Then "stone
+ coal" (the petrified trees of prehistoric times) was used. But coal as you
+ know has to be dug out of the ground and it has to be transported to the
+ smelting ovens and the mines have to be kept dry from the ever invading
+ waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were two problems which had to be solved at once. For the time
+ being, horses could still be used to haul the coal-wagons, but the pumping
+ question demanded the application of special machinery. Several inventors
+ were busy trying to solve the difficulty. They all knew that steam would
+ have to be used in their new engine. The idea of the steam engine was very
+ old. Hero of Alexandria, who lived in the first century before Christ, has
+ described to us several bits of machinery which were driven by steam. The
+ people of the Renaissance had played with the notion of steam-driven war
+ chariots. The Marquis of Worcester, a contemporary of Newton, in his book
+ of inventions, tells of a steam engine. A little later, in the year 1698,
+ Thomas Savery of London applied for a patent for a pumping engine. At the
+ same time, a Hollander, Christian Huygens, was trying to perfect an engine
+ in which gun-powder was used to cause regular explosions in much the same
+ way as we use gasoline in our motors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All over Europe, people were busy with the idea. Denis Papin, a Frenchman,
+ friend and assistant of Huygens, was making experiments with steam engines
+ in several countries. He invented a little wagon that was driven by steam,
+ and a paddle-wheel boat. But when he tried to take a trip in his vessel,
+ it was confiscated by the authorities on a complaint of the boatmen's
+ union, who feared that such a craft would deprive them of their
+ livelihood. Papin finally died in London in great poverty, having wasted
+ all his money on his inventions. But at the time of his death, another
+ mechanical enthusiast, Thomas Newcomen, was working on the problem of a
+ new steam-pump. Fifty years later his engine was improved upon by James
+ Watt, a Glasgow instrument maker. In the year 1777, he gave the world the
+ first steam engine that proved of real practical value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But during the centuries of experiments with a "heat-engine," the
+ political world had greatly changed. The British people had succeeded the
+ Dutch as the common-carriers of the world's trade. They had opened up new
+ colonies. They took the raw materials which the colonies produced to
+ England, and there they turned them into finished products, and then they
+ exported the finished goods to the four corners of the world. During the
+ seventeenth century, the people of Georgia and the Carolinas had begun to
+ grow a new shrub which gave a strange sort of woolly substance, the
+ so-called "cotton wool." After this had been plucked, it was sent to
+ England and there the people of Lancastershire wove it into cloth. This
+ weaving was done by hand and in the homes of the workmen. Very soon a
+ number of improvements were made in the process of weaving. In the year
+ 1730, John Kay invented the "fly shuttle." In 1770, James Hargreaves got a
+ patent on his "spinning jenny." Eli Whitney, an American, invented the
+ cotton-gin, which separated the cotton from its seeds, a job which had
+ previously been done by hand at the rate of only a pound a day. Finally
+ Richard Arkwright and the Reverend Edmund Cartwright invented large
+ weaving machines, which were driven by water power. And then, in the
+ eighties of the eighteenth century, just when the Estates General of
+ France had begun those famous meetings which were to revolutionise the
+ political system of Europe, the engines of Watt were arranged in such a
+ way that they could drive the weaving machines of Arkwright, and this
+ created an economic and social revolution which has changed human
+ relationship in almost every part of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the stationary engine had proved a success, the inventors
+ turned their attention to the problem of propelling boats and carts with
+ the help of a mechanical contrivance. Watt himself designed plans for a
+ "steam locomotive," but ere he had perfected his ideas, in the year 1804,
+ a locomotive made by Richard Trevithick carried a load of twenty tons at
+ Pen-y-darran in the Wales mining district.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time an American jeweller and portrait-painter by the name of
+ Robert Fulton was in Paris, trying to convince Napoleon that with the use
+ of his submarine boat, the "Nautilus," and his "steam-boat," the French
+ might be able to destroy the naval supremacy of England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fulton's idea of a steamboat was not original. He had undoubtedly copied
+ it from John Fitch, a mechanical genius of Connecticut whose cleverly
+ constructed steamer had first navigated the Delaware river as early as the
+ year 1787. But Napoleon and his scientific advisers did not believe in the
+ practical possibility of a self-propelled boat, and although the
+ Scotch-built engine of the little craft puffed merrily on the Seine, the
+ great Emperor neglected to avail himself of this formidable weapon which
+ might have given him his revenge for Trafalgar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Fulton, he returned to the United States and, being a practical man
+ of business, he organised a successful steamboat company together with
+ Robert R. Livingston, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, who was
+ American Minister to France when Fulton was in Paris, trying to sell his
+ invention. The first steamer of this new company, the "Clermont," which
+ was given a monopoly of all the waters of New York State, equipped with an
+ engine built by Boulton and Watt of Birmingham in England, began a regular
+ service between New York and Albany in the year 1807.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for poor John Fitch, the man who long before any one else had used the
+ "steam-boat" for commercial purposes, he came to a sad death. Broken in
+ health and empty of purse, he had come to the end of his resources when
+ his fifth boat, which was propelled by means of a screw-propeller, had
+ been destroyed. His neighbours jeered at him as they were to laugh a
+ hundred years later when Professor Langley constructed his funny flying
+ machines. Fitch had hoped to give his country an easy access to the broad
+ rivers of the west and his countrymen preferred to travel in flat-boats or
+ go on foot. In the year 1798, in utter despair and misery, Fitch killed
+ himself by taking poison.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But twenty years later, the "Savannah," a steamer of 1850 tons and making
+ six knots an hour, (the Mauretania goes just four times as fast,) crossed
+ the ocean from Savannah to Liverpool in the record time of twenty-five
+ days. Then there was an end to the derision of the multitude and in their
+ enthusiasm the people gave the credit for the invention to the wrong man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Six years later, George Stephenson, a Scotchman, who had been building
+ locomotives for the purpose of hauling coal from the mine-pit to smelting
+ ovens and cotton factories, built his famous "travelling engine" which
+ reduced the price of coal by almost seventy per cent and which made it
+ possible to establish the first regular passenger service between
+ Manchester and Liverpool, when people were whisked from city to city at
+ the unheard-of speed of fifteen miles per hour. A dozen years later, this
+ speed had been increased to twenty miles per hour. At the present time,
+ any well-behaved flivver (the direct descendant of the puny little
+ motor-driven machines of Daimler and Levassor of the eighties of the last
+ century) can do better than these early "Puffing Billies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while these practically-minded engineers were improving upon their
+ rattling "heat engines," a group of "pure" scientists (men who devote
+ fourteen hours of each day to the study of those "theoretical" scientific
+ phenomena without which no mechanical progress would be possible) were
+ following a new scent which promised to lead them into the most secret and
+ hidden domains of Nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two thousand years ago, a number of Greek and Roman philosophers (notably
+ Thales of Miletus and Pliny who was killed while trying to study the
+ eruption of Vesuvius of the year 79 when Pompeii and Herculaneum were
+ buried beneath the ashes) had noticed the strange antics of bits of straw
+ and of feather which were held near a piece of amber which was being
+ rubbed with a bit of wool. The schoolmen of the Middle Ages had not been
+ interested in this mysterious "electric" power. But immediately after the
+ Renaissance, William Gilbert, the private physician of Queen Elizabeth,
+ wrote his famous treatise on the character and behaviour of Magnets.
+ During the Thirty Years War Otto von Guericke, the burgomaster of
+ Magdeburg and the inventor of the air-pump, constructed the first
+ electrical machine. During the next century a large number of scientists
+ devoted themselves to the study of electricity. Not less than three
+ professors invented the famous Leyden Jar in the year 1795. At the same
+ time, Benjamin Franklin, the most universal genius of America next to
+ Benjamin Thomson (who after his flight from New Hampshire on account of
+ his pro-British sympathies became known as Count Rumford) was devoting his
+ attention to this subject. He discovered that lightning and the electric
+ spark were manifestations of the same electric power and continued his
+ electric studies until the end of his busy and useful life. Then came
+ Volta with his famous "electric pile" and Galvani and Day and the Danish
+ professor Hans Christian Oersted and Ampere and Arago and Faraday, all of
+ them diligent searchers after the true nature of the electric forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They freely gave their discoveries to the world and Samuel Morse (who like
+ Fulton began his career as an artist) thought that he could use this new
+ electric current to transmit messages from one city to another. He
+ intended to use copper wire and a little machine which he had invented.
+ People laughed at him. Morse therefore was obliged to finance his own
+ experiments and soon he had spent all his money and then he was very poor
+ and people laughed even louder. He then asked Congress to help him and a
+ special Committee on Commerce promised him their support. But the members
+ of Congress were not at all interested and Morse had to wait twelve years
+ before he was given a small congressional appropriation. He then built a
+ "telegraph" between Baltimore and Washington. In the year 1887 he had
+ shown his first successful "telegraph" in one of the lecture halls of New
+ York University. Finally, on the 24th of May of the year 1844 the first
+ long-distance message was sent from Washington to Baltimore and to-day the
+ whole world is covered with telegraph wires and we can send news from
+ Europe to Asia in a few seconds. Twenty-three years later Alexander Graham
+ Bell used the electric current for his telephone. And half a century
+ afterwards Marconi improved upon these ideas by inventing a system of
+ sending messages which did away entirely with the old-fashioned wires.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Morse, the New Englander, was working on his "telegraph," Michael
+ Faraday, the Yorkshire-man, had constructed the first "dynamo." This tiny
+ little machine was completed in the year 1881 when Europe was still
+ trembling as a result of the great July revolutions which had so severely
+ upset the plans of the Congress of Vienna. The first dynamo grew and grew
+ and grew and to-day it provides us with heat and with light (you know the
+ little incandescent bulbs which Edison, building upon French and English
+ experiments of the forties and fifties, first made in 1878) and with power
+ for all sorts of machines. If I am not mistaken the electric-engine will
+ soon entirely drive out the "heat engine" just as in the olden days the
+ more highly-organised prehistoric animals drove out their less efficient
+ neighbours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Personally (but I know nothing about machinery) this will make me very
+ happy. For the electric engine which can be run by waterpower is a clean
+ and companionable servant of mankind but the "heat-engine," the marvel of
+ the eighteenth century, is a noisy and dirty creature for ever filling the
+ world with ridiculous smoke-stacks and with dust and soot and asking that
+ it be fed with coal which has to be dug out of mines at great
+ inconvenience and risk to thousands of people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And if I were a novelist and not a historian, who must stick to facts and
+ may not use his imagination, I would describe the happy day when the last
+ steam locomotive shall be taken to the Museum of Natural History to be
+ placed next to the skeleton of the Dynosaur and the Pteredactyl and the
+ other extinct creatures of a by-gone age.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0060" id="link2H_4_0060">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE SOCIAL REVOLUTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BUT THE NEW ENGINES WERE VERY EXPENSIVE AND ONLY PEOPLE OF WEALTH COULD
+ AFFORD THEM. THE OLD CARPENTER OR SHOEMAKER WHO HAD BEEN HIS OWN MASTER IN
+ HIS LITTLE WORKSHOP WAS OBLIGED TO HIRE HIMSELF OUT TO THE OWNERS OF THE
+ BIG MECHANICAL TOOLS, AND WHILE HE MADE MORE MONEY THAN BEFORE, HE LOST
+ HIS FORMER INDEPENDENCE AND HE DID NOT LIKE THAT
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the olden days the work of the world had been done by independent
+ workmen who sat in their own little workshops in the front of their
+ houses, who owned their tools, who boxed the ears of their own apprentices
+ and who, within the limits prescribed by their guilds, conducted their
+ business as it pleased them. They lived simple lives, and were obliged to
+ work very long hours, but they were their own masters. If they got up and
+ saw that it was a fine day to go fishing, they went fishing and there was
+ no one to say "no."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the introduction of machinery changed this. A machine is really
+ nothing but a greatly enlarged tool. A railroad train which carries you at
+ the speed of a mile a minute is in reality a pair of very fast legs, and a
+ steam hammer which flattens heavy plates of iron is just a terrible big
+ fist, made of steel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But whereas we can all afford a pair of good legs and a good strong fist,
+ a railroad train and a steam hammer and a cotton factory are very
+ expensive pieces of machinery and they are not owned by a single man, but
+ usually by a company of people who all contribute a certain sum and then
+ divide the profits of their railroad or cotton mill according to the
+ amount of money which they have invested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Therefore, when machines had been improved until they were really
+ practicable and profitable, the builders of those large tools, the machine
+ manufacturers, began to look for customers who could afford to pay for
+ them in cash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the early middle ages, when land had been almost the only form of
+ wealth, the nobility were the only people who were considered wealthy. But
+ as I have told you in a previous chapter, the gold and silver which they
+ possessed was quite insignificant and they used the old system of barter,
+ exchanging cows for horses and eggs for honey. During the crusades, the
+ burghers of the cities had been able to gather riches from the reviving
+ trade between the east and the west, and they had been serious rivals of
+ the lords and the knights.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French revolution had entirely destroyed the wealth of the nobility
+ and had enormously increased that of the middle class or "bourgeoisie."
+ The years of unrest which followed the Great Revolution had offered many
+ middle-class people a chance to get more than their share of this world's
+ goods. The estates of the church had been confiscated by the French
+ Convention and had been sold at auction. There had been a terrific amount
+ of graft. Land speculators had stolen thousands of square miles of
+ valuable land, and during the Napoleonic wars, they had used their capital
+ to "profiteer" in grain and gun-powder, and now they possessed more wealth
+ than they needed for the actual expenses of their households, and they
+ could afford to build themselves factories and to hire men and women to
+ work the machines.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This caused a very abrupt change in the lives of hundreds of thousands of
+ people. Within a few years, many cities doubled the number of their
+ inhabitants and the old civic centre which had been the real "home" of the
+ citizens was surrounded with ugly and cheaply built suburbs where the
+ workmen slept after their eleven or twelve hours, or thirteen hours, spent
+ in the factories and from where they returned to the factory as soon as
+ the whistle blew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far and wide through the countryside there was talk of the fabulous sums
+ of money that could be made in the towns. The peasant boy, accustomed to a
+ life in the open, went to the city. He rapidly lost his old health amidst
+ the smoke and dust and dirt of those early and badly ventilated workshops,
+ and the end, very often, was death in the poor-house or in the hospital.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course the change from the farm to the factory on the part of so many
+ people was not accomplished without a certain amount of opposition. Since
+ one engine could do as much work as a hundred men, the ninety-nine others
+ who were thrown out of employment did not like it. Frequently they
+ attacked the factory-buildings and set fire to the machines, but Insurance
+ Companies had been organised as early as the 17th century and as a rule
+ the owners were well protected against loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon, newer and better machines were installed, the factory was surrounded
+ with a high wall and then there was an end to the rioting. The ancient
+ guilds could not possibly survive in this new world of steam and iron.
+ They went out of existence and then the workmen tried to organise regular
+ labour unions. But the factory-owners, who through their wealth could
+ exercise great influence upon the politicians of the different countries,
+ went to the Legislature and had laws passed which forbade the forming of
+ such trade unions because they interfered with the "liberty of action" of
+ the working man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Please do not think that the good members of Parliament who passed these
+ laws were wicked tyrants. They were the true sons of the revolutionary
+ period when everybody talked of "liberty" and when people often killed
+ their neighbours because they were not quite as liberty-loving as they
+ ought to have been. Since "liberty" was the foremost virtue of man, it was
+ not right that labour-unions should dictate to their members the hours
+ during which they could work and the wages which they must demand. The
+ workman must at all times, be "free to sell his services in the open
+ market," and the employer must be equally "free" to conduct his business
+ as he saw fit. The days of the Mercantile System, when the state had
+ regulated the industrial life of the entire community, were coming to an
+ end. The new idea of "freedom" insisted that the state stand entirely
+ aside and let commerce take its course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last half of the 18th century had not merely been a time of
+ intellectual and political doubt, but the old economic ideas, too, had
+ been replaced by new ones which better suited the need of the hour.
+ Several years before the French revolution, Turgot, who had been one of
+ the unsuccessful ministers of finance of Louis XVI, had preached the novel
+ doctrine of "economic liberty." Turgot lived in a country which had
+ suffered from too much red-tape, too many regulations, too many officials
+ trying to enforce too many laws. "Remove this official supervision," he
+ wrote, "let the people do as they please, and everything will be all
+ right." Soon his famous advice of "laissez faire" became the battle-cry
+ around which the economists of that period rallied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time in England, Adam Smith was working on his mighty volumes
+ on the "Wealth of Nations," which made another plea for "liberty" and the
+ "natural rights of trade." Thirty years later, after the fall of Napoleon,
+ when the reactionary powers of Europe had gained their victory at Vienna,
+ that same freedom which was denied to the people in their political
+ relations was forced upon them in their industrial life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The general use of machinery, as I have said at the beginning of this
+ chapter, proved to be of great advantage to the state. Wealth increased
+ rapidly. The machine made it possible for a single country, like England,
+ to carry all the burdens of the great Napoleonic wars. The capitalists
+ (the people who provided the money with which machines were bought) reaped
+ enormous profits. They became ambitious and began to take an interest in
+ politics. They tried to compete with the landed aristocracy which still
+ exercised great influence upon the government of most European countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In England, where the members of Parliament were still elected according
+ to a Royal Decree of the year 1265, and where a large number of recently
+ created industrial centres were without representation, they brought about
+ the passing of the Reform Bill of the year 1882, which changed the
+ electoral system and gave the class of the factory-owners more influence
+ upon the legislative body. This however caused great discontent among the
+ millions of factory workers, who were left without any voice in the
+ government. They too began an agitation for the right to vote. They put
+ their demands down in a document which came to be known as the "People's
+ Charter." The debates about this charter grew more and more violent. They
+ had not yet come to an end when the revolutions of the year 1848 broke
+ out. Frightened by the threat of a new outbreak or Jacobinism and
+ violence, the English government placed the Duke of Wellington, who was
+ now in his eightieth year, at the head of the army, and called for
+ Volunteers. London was placed in a state of siege and preparations were
+ made to suppress the coming revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Chartist movement killed itself through bad leadership and no acts
+ of violence took place. The new class of wealthy factory owners, (I
+ dislike the word "bourgeoisie" which has been used to death by the
+ apostles of a new social order,) slowly increased its hold upon the
+ government, and the conditions of industrial life in the large cities
+ continued to transform vast acres of pasture and wheat-land into dreary
+ slums, which guard the approach of every modern European town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0061" id="link2H_4_0061">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ EMANCIPATION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE GENERAL INTRODUCTION OF MACHINERY DID NOT BRING ABOUT THE ERA OF
+ HAPPINESS AND PROSPERITY WHICH HAD BEEN PREDICTED BY THE GENERATION WHICH
+ SAW THE STAGE COACH REPLACED BY THE RAILROAD. SEVERAL REMEDIES WERE
+ SUGGESTED BUT NONE OF THESE QUITE SOLVED THE PROBLEM
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN the year 1831, just before the passing of the first Reform Bill Jeremy
+ Bentham, the great English student of legislative methods and the most
+ practical political reformer of that day, wrote to a friend: "The way to
+ be comfortable is to make others comfortable. The way to make others
+ comfortable is to appear to love them. The way to appear to love them is
+ to love them in reality." Jeremy was an honest man. He said what he
+ believed to be true. His opinions were shared by thousands of his
+ countrymen. They felt responsible for the happiness of their less
+ fortunate neighbours and they tried their very best to help them. And
+ Heaven knows it was time that something be done!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ideal of "economic freedom" (the "laissez faire" of Turgot) had been
+ necessary in the old society where mediaeval restrictions lamed all
+ industrial effort. But this "liberty of action" which had been the highest
+ law of the land had led to a terrible, yea, a frightful condition. The
+ hours in the fac-tory were limited only by the physical strength of the
+ workers. As long as a woman could sit before her loom, without fainting
+ from fatigue, she was supposed to work. Children of five and six were
+ taken to the cotton mills, to save them from the dangers of the street and
+ a life of idleness. A law had been passed which forced the children of
+ paupers to go to work or be punished by being chained to their machines.
+ In return for their services they got enough bad food to keep them alive
+ and a sort of pigsty in which they could rest at night. Often they were so
+ tired that they fell asleep at their job. To keep them awake a foreman
+ with a whip made the rounds and beat them on the knuckles when it was
+ necessary to bring them back to their duties. Of course, under these
+ circumstances thousands of little children died. This was regrettable and
+ the employers, who after all were human beings and not without a heart,
+ sincerely wished that they could abolish "child labour." But since man was
+ "free" it followed that children were "free" too. Besides, if Mr. Jones
+ had tried to work his factory without the use of children of five and six,
+ his rival, Mr. Stone, would have hired an extra supply of little boys and
+ Jones would have been forced into bankruptcy. It was therefore impossible
+ for Jones to do without child labour until such time as an act of
+ Parliament should forbid it for all employers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as Parliament was no longer dominated by the old landed aristocracy
+ (which had despised the upstart factory-owners with their money bags and
+ had treated them with open contempt), but was under control of the
+ representatives from the industrial centres, and as long as the law did
+ not allow workmen to combine in labour-unions, very little was
+ accomplished. Of course the intelligent and decent people of that time
+ were not blind to these terrible conditions. They were just helpless.
+ Machinery had conquered the world by surprise and it took a great many
+ years and the efforts of thousands of noble men and women to make the
+ machine what it ought to be, man's servant, and not his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Curiously enough, the first attack upon the outrageous system of
+ employment which was then common in all parts of the world, was made on
+ behalf of the black slaves of Africa and America. Slavery had been
+ introduced into the American continent by the Spaniards. They had tried to
+ use the Indians as labourers in the fields and in the mines, but the
+ Indians, when taken away from a life in the open, had lain down and died
+ and to save them from extinction a kind-hearted priest had suggested that
+ negroes be brought from Africa to do the work. The negroes were strong and
+ could stand rough treatment. Besides, association with the white man would
+ give them a chance to learn Christianity and in this way, they would be
+ able to save their souls, and so from every possible point of view, it
+ would be an excellent arrangement both for the kindly white man and for
+ his ignorant black brother. But with the introduction of machinery there
+ had been a greater demand for cotton and the negroes were forced to work
+ harder than ever before, and they too, like the Indians, began to die
+ under the treatment which they received at the hands of the overseers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of incredible cruelty constantly found their way to Europe and in
+ all countries men and women began to agitate for the abolition of slavery.
+ In England, William Wilberforce and Zachary Macaulay, (the father of the
+ great historian whose history of England you must read if you want to know
+ how wonderfully interesting a history-book can be,) organised a society
+ for the suppression of slavery. First of all they got a law passed which
+ made "slave trading" illegal. And after the year 1840 there was not a
+ single slave in any of the British colonies. The revolution of 1848 put an
+ end to slavery in the French possessions. The Portuguese passed a law in
+ the year 1858 which promised all slaves their liberty in twenty years from
+ date. The Dutch abolished slavery in 1863 and in the same year Tsar
+ Alexander II returned to his serfs that liberty which had been taken away
+ from them more than two centuries before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the United States of America the question led to grave difficulties and
+ a prolonged war. Although the Declaration of Independence had laid down
+ the principle that "all men were created free and equal," an exception had
+ been made for those men and women whose skins were dark and who worked on
+ the plantations of the southern states. As time went on, the dislike of
+ the people of the North for the institution of slavery increased and they
+ made no secret of their feelings. The southerners however claimed that
+ they could not grow their cotton without slave-labour, and for almost
+ fifty years a mighty debate raged in both the Congress and the Senate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The North remained obdurate and the South would not give in. When it
+ appeared impossible to reach a compromise, the southern states threatened
+ to leave the Union. It was a most dangerous point in the history of the
+ Union. Many things "might" have happened. That they did not happen was the
+ work of a very great and very good man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the sixth of November of the year 1860, Abraham Lincoln, an Illinois
+ lawyer, and a man who had made his own intellectual fortune, had been
+ elected president by the Republicans who were very strong in the
+ anti-slavery states. He knew the evils of human bondage at first hand and
+ his shrewd common-sense told him that there was no room on the northern
+ continent for two rival nations. When a number of southern states seceded
+ and formed the "Confederate States of America," Lincoln accepted the
+ challenge. The Northern states were called upon for volunteers. Hundreds
+ of thousands of young men responded with eager enthusiasm and there
+ followed four years of bitter civil war. The South, better prepared and
+ following the brilliant leadership of Lee and Jackson, repeatedly defeated
+ the armies of the North. Then the economic strength of New England and the
+ West began to tell. An unknown officer by the name of Grant arose from
+ obscurity and became the Charles Martel of the great slave war. Without
+ interruption he hammered his mighty blows upon the crumbling defences of
+ the South. Early in the year 1863, President Lincoln issued his
+ "Emancipation Proclamation" which set all slaves free. In April of the
+ year 1865 Lee surrendered the last of his brave armies at Appomattox. A
+ few days later, President Lincoln was murdered by a lunatic. But his work
+ was done. With the exception of Cuba which was still under Spanish
+ domination, slavery had come to an end in every part of the civilised
+ world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But while the black man was enjoying an increasing amount of liberty, the
+ "free" workmen of Europe did not fare quite so well. Indeed, it is a
+ matter of surprise to many contemporary writers and observers that the
+ masses of workmen (the so-called proletariat) did not die out from sheer
+ misery. They lived in dirty houses situated in miserable parts of the
+ slums. They ate bad food. They received just enough schooling to fit them
+ for their tasks. In case of death or an accident, their families were not
+ provided for. But the brewery and distillery interests, (who could
+ exercise great influence upon the Legislature,) encouraged them to forget
+ their woes by offering them unlimited quantities of whisky and gin at very
+ cheap rates.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The enormous improvement which has taken place since the thirties and the
+ forties of the last century is not due to the efforts of a single man. The
+ best brains of two generations devoted themselves to the task of saving
+ the world from the disastrous results of the all-too-sudden introduction
+ of machinery. They did not try to destroy the capitalistic system. This
+ would have been very foolish, for the accumulated wealth of other people,
+ when intelligently used, may be of very great benefit to all mankind. But
+ they tried to combat the notion that true equality can exist between the
+ man who has wealth and owns the factories and can close their doors at
+ will without the risk of going hungry, and the labourer who must take
+ whatever job is offered, at whatever wage he can get, or face the risk of
+ starvation for himself, his wife and his children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They endeavoured to introduce a number of laws which regulated the
+ relations between the factory owners and the factory workers. In this, the
+ reformers have been increasingly successful in all countries. To-day, the
+ majority of the labourers are well protected; their hours are being
+ reduced to the excellent average of eight, and their children are sent to
+ the schools instead of to the mine pit and to the carding-room of the
+ cotton mills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But there were other men who also contemplated the sight of all the
+ belching smoke-stacks, who heard the rattle of the railroad trains, who
+ saw the store-houses filled with a surplus of all sorts of materials, and
+ who wondered to what ultimate goal this tremendous activity would lead in
+ the years to come. They remembered that the human race had lived for
+ hundreds of thousands of years without commercial and industrial
+ competition. Could they change the existing order of things and do away
+ with a system of rivalry which so often sacrificed human happiness to
+ profits?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This idea&mdash;this vague hope for a better day&mdash;was not restricted
+ to a single country. In England, Robert Owen, the owner of many cotton
+ mills, established a so-called "socialistic community" which was a
+ success. But when he died, the prosperity of New Lanark came to an end and
+ an attempt of Louis Blanc, a French journalist, to establish "social
+ workshops" all over France fared no better. Indeed, the increasing number
+ of socialistic writers soon began to see that little individual
+ communities which remained outside of the regular industrial life, would
+ never be able to accomplish anything at all. It was necessary to study the
+ fundamental principles underlying the whole industrial and capitalistic
+ society before useful remedies could be suggested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The practical socialists like Robert Owen and Louis Blanc and Francois
+ Fournier were succeeded by theoretical students of socialism like Karl
+ Marx and Friedrich Engels. Of these two, Marx is the best known. He was a
+ very brilliant Jew whose family had for a long time lived in Germany. He
+ had heard of the experiments of Owen and Blanc and he began to interest
+ himself in questions of labour and wages and unemployment. But his liberal
+ views made him very unpopular with the police authorities of Germany, and
+ he was forced to flee to Brussels and then to London, where he lived a
+ poor and shabby life as the correspondent of the New York Tribune.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one, thus far, had paid much attention to his books on economic
+ subjects. But in the year 1864 he organised the first international
+ association of working men and three years later in 1867, he published the
+ first volume of his well-known treatise called "Capital." Marx believed
+ that all history was a long struggle between those who "have" and those
+ who "don't have." The introduction and general use of machinery had
+ created a new class in society, that of the capitalists who used their
+ surplus wealth to buy the tools which were then used by the labourers to
+ produce still more wealth, which was again used to build more factories
+ and so on, until the end of time. Meanwhile, according to Marx, the third
+ estate (the bourgeoisie) was growing richer and richer and the fourth
+ estate (the proletariat) was growing poorer and poorer, and he predicted
+ that in the end, one man would possess all the wealth of the world while
+ the others would be his employees and dependent upon his good will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To prevent such a state of affairs, Marx advised working men of all
+ countries to unite and to fight for a number of political and economic
+ measures which he had enumerated in a Manifesto in the year 1848, the year
+ of the last great European revolution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These views of course were very unpopular with the governments of Europe,
+ many countries, especially Prussia, passed severe laws against the
+ Socialists and policemen were ordered to break up the Socialist meetings
+ and to arrest the speakers. But that sort of persecution never does any
+ good. Martyrs are the best possible advertisements for an unpopular cause.
+ In Europe the number of socialists steadily increased and it was soon
+ clear that the Socialists did not contemplate a violent revolution but
+ were using their increasing power in the different Parliaments to promote
+ the interests of the labouring classes. Socialists were even called upon
+ to act as Cabinet Ministers, and they co-operated with progressive
+ Catholics and Protestants to undo the damage that had been caused by the
+ Industrial Revolution and to bring about a fairer division of the many
+ benefits which had followed the introduction of machinery and the
+ increased production of wealth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0062" id="link2H_4_0062">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE AGE OF SCIENCE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ BUT THE WORLD HAD UNDERGONE ANOTHER CHANGE WHICH WAS OF GREATER IMPORTANCE
+ THAN EITHER THE POLITICAL OR THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONS. AFTER GENERATIONS
+ OF OPPRESSION AND PERSECUTION, THE SCIENTIST HAD AT LAST GAINED LIBERTY OF
+ ACTION AND HE WAS NOW TRYING TO DISCOVER THE FUNDAMENTAL LAWS WHICH GOVERN
+ THE UNIVERSE
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE Egyptians, the Babylonians, the Chaldeans, the Greeks and the Romans,
+ had all contributed something to the first vague notions of science and
+ scientific investigation. But the great migrations of the fourth century
+ had destroyed the classical world of the Mediterranean, and the Christian
+ Church, which was more interested in the life of the soul than in the life
+ of the body, had regarded science as a manifestation of that human
+ arrogance which wanted to pry into divine affairs which belonged to the
+ realm of Almighty God, and which therefore was closely related to the
+ seven deadly sins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Renaissance to a certain but limited extent had broken through this
+ wall of Mediaeval prejudices. The Reformation, however, which had
+ overtaken the Renaissance in the early 16th century, had been hostile to
+ the ideals of the "new civilisation," and once more the men of science
+ were threatened with severe punishment, should they try to pass beyond the
+ narrow limits of knowledge which had been laid down in Holy Writ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our world is filled with the statues of great generals, atop of prancing
+ horses, leading their cheering soldiers to glorious victory. Here and
+ there, a modest slab of marble announces that a man of science has found
+ his final resting place. A thousand years from now we shall probably do
+ these things differently, and the children of that happy generation shall
+ know of the splendid courage and the almost inconceivable devotion to duty
+ of the men who were the pioneers of that abstract knowledge, which alone
+ has made our modern world a practical possibility.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of these scientific pioneers suffered poverty and contempt and
+ humiliation. They lived in garrets and died in dungeons. They dared not
+ print their names on the title-pages of their books and they dared not
+ print their conclusions in the land of their birth, but smuggled the
+ manuscripts to some secret printing shop in Amsterdam or Haarlem. They
+ were exposed to the bitter enmity of the Church, both Protestant and
+ Catholic, and were the subjects of endless sermons, inciting the
+ parishioners to violence against the "heretics."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here and there they found an asylum. In Holland, where the spirit of
+ tolerance was strongest, the authorities, while regarding these scientific
+ investigations with little favour, yet refused to interfere with people's
+ freedom of thought. It became a little asylum for intellectual liberty
+ where French and English and German philosophers and mathematicians and
+ physicians could go to enjoy a short spell of rest and get a breath of
+ free air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another chapter I have told you how Roger Bacon, the great genius of
+ the thirteenth century, was prevented for years from writing a single
+ word, lest he get into new troubles with the authorities of the church.
+ And five hundred years later, the contributors to the great philosophic
+ "Encyclopaedia" were under the constant supervision of the French
+ gendarmerie. Half a century afterwards, Darwin, who dared to question the
+ story of the creation of man, as revealed in the Bible, was denounced from
+ every pulpit as an enemy of the human race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even to-day, the persecution of those who venture into the unknown realm
+ of science has not entirely come to an end. And while I am writing this
+ Mr. Bryan is addressing a vast multitude on the "Menace of Darwinism,"
+ warning his hearers against the errors of the great English naturalist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this, however, is a mere detail. The work that has to be done
+ invariably gets done, and the ultimate profit of the discoveries and the
+ inventions goes to the mass of those same people who have always decried
+ the man of vision as an unpractical idealist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seventeenth century had still preferred to investigate the far off
+ heavens and to study the position of our planet in relation to the solar
+ system. Even so, the Church had disapproved of this unseemly curiosity,
+ and Copernicus who first of all had proved that the sun was the centre of
+ the universe, did not publish his work until the day of his death. Galileo
+ spent the greater part of his life under the supervision of the clerical
+ authorities, but he continued to use his telescope and provided Isaac
+ Newton with a mass of practical observations, which greatly helped the
+ English mathematician when he dis-covered the existence of that
+ interesting habit of falling objects which came to be known as the Law of
+ Gravitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That, for the moment at least, exhausted the interest in the Heavens, and
+ man began to study the earth. The invention of a workable microscope, (a
+ strange and clumsy little thing,) by Anthony van Leeuwenhoek during the
+ last half of the 17th century, gave man a chance to study the
+ "microscopic" creatures who are responsible for so many of his ailments.
+ It laid the foundations of the science of "bacteriology" which in the last
+ forty years has delivered the world from a great number of diseases by
+ discovering the tiny organisms which cause the complaint. It also allowed
+ the geologists to make a more careful study of different rocks and of the
+ fossils (the petrified prehistoric plants) which they found deep below the
+ surface of the earth. These investigations convinced them that the earth
+ must be a great deal older than was stated in the book of Genesis and in
+ the year 1830, Sir Charles Lyell published his "Principles of Geology"
+ which denied the story of creation as related in the Bible and gave a far
+ more wonderful description of slow growth and gradual development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time, the Marquis de Laplace was working on a new theory of
+ creation, which made the earth a little blotch in the nebulous sea out of
+ which the planetary system had been formed and Bunsen and Kirchhoff, by
+ the use of the spectroscope, were investigating the chemical composition
+ of the stars and of our good neighbour, the sun, whose curious spots had
+ first been noticed by Galileo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile after a most bitter and relentless warfare with the clerical
+ authorities of Catholic and Protestant lands, the anatomists and
+ physiologists had at last obtained permission to dissect bodies and to
+ substitute a positive knowledge of our organs and their habits for the
+ guesswork of the mediaeval quack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within a single generation (between 1810 and 1840) more progress was made
+ in every branch of science than in all the hundreds of thousands of years
+ that had passed since man first looked at the stars and wondered why they
+ were there. It must have been a very sad age for the people who had been
+ educated under the old system. And we can understand their feeling of
+ hatred for such men as Lamarck and Darwin, who did not exactly tell them
+ that they were "descended from monkeys," (an accusation which our
+ grandfathers seemed to regard as a personal insult,) but who suggested
+ that the proud human race had evolved from a long series of ancestors who
+ could trace the family-tree back to the little jelly-fishes who were the
+ first inhabitants of our planet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dignified world of the well-to-do middle class, which dominated the
+ nineteenth century, was willing to make use of the gas or the electric
+ light, of all the many practical applications of the great scientific
+ discoveries, but the mere investigator, the man of the "scientific theory"
+ without whom no progress would be possible, continued to be distrusted
+ until very recently. Then, at last, his services were recognised. Today
+ the rich people who in past ages donated their wealth for the building of
+ a cathedral, construct vast laboratories where silent men do battle upon
+ the hidden enemies of mankind and often sacrifice their lives that coming
+ generations may enjoy greater happiness and health.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed it has come to pass that many of the ills of this world, which our
+ ancestors regarded as inevitable "acts of God," have been exposed as
+ manifestations of our own ignorance and neglect. Every child nowadays
+ knows that he can keep from getting typhoid fever by a little care in the
+ choice of his drinking water. But it took years and years of hard work
+ before the doctors could convince the people of this fact. Few of us now
+ fear the dentist chair. A study of the microbes that live in our mouth has
+ made it possible to keep our teeth from decay. Must perchance a tooth be
+ pulled, then we take a sniff of gas, and go our way rejoicing. When the
+ newspapers of the year 1846 brought the story of the "painless operation"
+ which had been performed in America with the help of ether, the good
+ people of Europe shook their heads. To them it seemed against the will of
+ God that man should escape the pain which was the share of all mortals,
+ and it took a long time before the practice of taking ether and chloroform
+ for operations became general.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the battle of progress had been won. The breach in the old walls of
+ prejudice was growing larger and larger, and as time went by, the ancient
+ stones of ignorance came crumbling down. The eager crusaders of a new and
+ happier social order rushed forward. Suddenly they found themselves facing
+ a new obstacle. Out of the ruins of a long-gone past, another citadel of
+ reaction had been erected, and millions of men had to give their lives
+ before this last bulwark was destroyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0063" id="link2H_4_0063">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ART
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ A CHAPTER OF ART
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ WHEN a baby is perfectly healthy and has had enough to eat and has slept
+ all it wants, then it hums a little tune to show how happy it is. To
+ grown-ups this humming means nothing. It sounds like "goo-zum, goo-zum,
+ goo-o-o-o-o," but to the baby it is perfect music. It is his first
+ contribution to art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as he (or she) gets a little older and is able to sit up, the
+ period of mud-pie making begins. These mud-pies do not interest the
+ outside world. There are too many million babies, making too many million
+ mud-pies at the same time. But to the small infant they represent another
+ expedition into the pleasant realm of art. The baby is now a sculptor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the age of three or four, when the hands begin to obey the brain, the
+ child becomes a painter. His fond mother gives him a box of coloured
+ chalks and every loose bit of paper is rapidly covered with strange
+ pothooks and scrawls which represent houses and horses and terrible naval
+ battles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Soon however this happiness of just "making things" comes to an end.
+ School begins and the greater part of the day is filled up with work. The
+ business of living, or rather the business of "making a living," becomes
+ the most important event in the life of every boy and girl. There is
+ little time left for "art" between learning the tables of multiplication
+ and the past participles of the irregular French verbs. And unless the
+ desire for making certain things for the mere pleasure of creating them
+ without any hope of a practical return be very strong, the child grows
+ into manhood and forgets that the first five years of his life were mainly
+ devoted to art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nations are not different from children. As soon as the cave-man had
+ escaped the threatening dangers of the long and shivering ice-period, and
+ had put his house in order, he began to make certain things which he
+ thought beautiful, although they were of no earthly use to him in his
+ fight with the wild animals of the jungle. He covered the walls of his
+ grotto with pictures of the elephants and the deer which he hunted, and
+ out of a piece of stone, he hacked the rough figures of those women he
+ thought most attractive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the Egyptians and the Babylonians and the Persians and all the
+ other people of the east had founded their little countries along the Nile
+ and the Euphrates, they began to build magnificent palaces for their
+ kings, invented bright pieces of jewellery for their women and planted
+ gardens which sang happy songs of colour with their many bright flowers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our own ancestors, the wandering nomads from the distant Asiatic prairies,
+ enjoying a free and easy existence as fighters and hunters, composed songs
+ which celebrated the mighty deeds of their great leaders and invented a
+ form of poetry which has survived until our own day. A thousand years
+ later, when they had established themselves on the Greek mainland, and had
+ built their "city-states," they expressed their joy (and their sorrows) in
+ magnificent temples, in statues, in comedies and in tragedies, and in
+ every conceivable form of art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romans, like their Carthaginian rivals, were too busy administering
+ other people and making money to have much love for "useless and
+ unprofitable" adventures of the spirit. They conquered the world and built
+ roads and bridges but they borrowed their art wholesale from the Greeks.
+ They invented certain practical forms of architecture which answered the
+ demands of their day and age. But their statues and their histories and
+ their mosaics and their poems were mere Latin imitations of Greek
+ originals. Without that vague and hard-to-define something which the world
+ calls "personality," there can be no art and the Roman world distrusted
+ that particular sort of personality. The Empire needed efficient soldiers
+ and tradesmen. The business of writing poetry or making pictures was left
+ to foreigners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the Dark Ages. The barbarian was the proverbial bull in the
+ china-shop of western Europe. He had no use for what he did not
+ understand. Speaking in terms of the year 1921, he liked the magazine
+ covers of pretty ladies, but threw the Rembrandt etchings which he had
+ inherited into the ash-can. Soon he came to learn better. Then he tried to
+ undo the damage which he had created a few years before. But the ash-cans
+ were gone and so were the pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But by this time, his own art, which he had brought with him from the
+ east, had developed into something very beautiful and he made up for his
+ past neglect and indifference by the so-called "art of the Middle Ages"
+ which as far as northern Europe is concerned was a product of the Germanic
+ mind and had borrowed but little from the Greeks and the Latins and
+ nothing at all from the older forms of art of Egypt and Assyria, not to
+ speak of India and China, which simply did not exist, as far as the people
+ of that time were concerned. Indeed, so little had the northern races been
+ influenced by their southern neighbours that their own architectural
+ products were completely misunderstood by the people of Italy and were
+ treated by them with downright and unmitigated contempt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You have all heard the word Gothic. You probably associate it with the
+ picture of a lovely old cathedral, lifting its slender spires towards high
+ heaven. But what does the word really mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It means something "uncouth" and "barbaric"&mdash;something which one
+ might expect from an "uncivilised Goth," a rough backwoods-man who had no
+ respect for the established rules of classical art and who built his
+ "modern horrors" to please his own low tastes without a decent regard for
+ the examples of the Forum and the Acropolis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet for several centuries this form of Gothic architecture was the
+ highest expression of the sincere feeling for art which inspired the whole
+ northern continent. From a previous chapter, you will remember how the
+ people of the late Middle Ages lived. Unless they were peasants and dwelt
+ in villages, they were citizens of a "city" or "civitas," the old Latin
+ name for a tribe. And indeed, behind their high walls and their deep
+ moats, these good burghers were true tribesmen who shared the common
+ dangers and enjoyed the common safety and prosperity which they derived
+ from their system of mutual protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the old Greek and Roman cities the market-place, where the temple
+ stood, had been the centre of civic life. During the Middle Ages, the
+ Church, the House of God, became such a centre. We modern Protestant
+ people, who go to our church only once a week, and then for a few hours
+ only, hardly know what a mediaeval church meant to the community. Then,
+ before you were a week old, you were taken to the Church to be baptised.
+ As a child, you visited the Church to learn the holy stories of the
+ Scriptures. Later on you became a member of the congregation, and if you
+ were rich enough you built yourself a separate little chapel sacred to the
+ memory of the Patron Saint of your own family. As for the sacred edifice,
+ it was open at all hours of the day and many of the night. In a certain
+ sense it resembled a modern club, dedicated to all the inhabitants of the
+ town. In the church you very likely caught a first glimpse of the girl who
+ was to become your bride at a great ceremony before the High Altar. And
+ finally, when the end of the journey had come, you were buried beneath the
+ stones of this familiar building, that all your children and their
+ grandchildren might pass over your grave until the Day of Judgement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Because the Church was not only the House of God but also the true centre
+ of all common life, the building had to be different from anything that
+ had ever been constructed by the hands of man. The temples of the
+ Egyptians and the Greeks and the Romans had been merely the shrine of a
+ local divinity. As no sermons were preached before the images of Osiris or
+ Zeus or Jupiter, it was not necessary that the interior offer space for a
+ great multitude. All the religious processions of the old Mediterranean
+ peoples took place in the open. But in the north, where the weather was
+ usually bad, most functions were held under the roof of the church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During many centuries the architects struggled with this problem of
+ constructing a building that was large enough. The Roman tradition taught
+ them how to build heavy stone walls with very small windows lest the walls
+ lose their strength. On the top of this they then placed a heavy stone
+ roof. But in the twelfth century, after the beginning of the Crusades,
+ when the architects had seen the pointed arches of the Mohammedan
+ builders, the western builders discovered a new style which gave them
+ their first chance to make the sort of building which those days of an
+ intense religious life demanded. And then they developed this strange
+ style upon which the Italians bestowed the contemptuous name of "Gothic"
+ or barbaric. They achieved their purpose by inventing a vaulted roof which
+ was supported by "ribs." But such a roof, if it became too heavy, was apt
+ to break the walls, just as a man of three hundred pounds sitting down
+ upon a child's chair will force it to collapse. To overcome this
+ difficulty, certain French architects then began to re-enforce the walls
+ with "buttresses" which were merely heavy masses of stone against which
+ the walls could lean while they supported the roof. And to assure the
+ further safety of the roof they supported the ribs of the roof by
+ so-called "flying buttresses," a very simple method of construction which
+ you will understand at once when you look at our picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This new method of construction allowed the introduction of enormous
+ windows. In the twelfth century, glass was still an expensive curiosity,
+ and very few private buildings possessed glass windows. Even the castles
+ of the nobles were without protection and this accounts for the eternal
+ drafts and explains why people of that day wore furs in-doors as well as
+ out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, the art of making coloured glass, with which the ancient
+ people of the Mediterranean had been familiar, had not been entirely lost.
+ There was a revival of stained glass-making and soon the windows of the
+ Gothic churches told the stories of the Holy Book in little bits of
+ brilliantly coloured window-pane, which were caught in a long framework of
+ lead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behold, therefore, the new and glorious house of God, filled with an eager
+ multitude, "living" its religion as no people have ever done either before
+ or since! Nothing is considered too good or too costly or too wondrous for
+ this House of God and Home of Man. The sculptors, who since the
+ destruction of the Roman Empire have been out of employment, haltingly
+ return to their noble art. Portals and pillars and buttresses and cornices
+ are all covered with carven images of Our Lord and the blessed Saints. The
+ embroiderers too are set to work to make tapestries for the walls. The
+ jewellers offer their highest art that the shrine of the altar may be
+ worthy of complete adoration. Even the painter does his best. Poor man, he
+ is greatly handicapped by lack of a suitable medium.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thereby hangs a story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Romans of the early Christian period had covered the floors and the
+ walls of their temples and houses with mosaics; pictures made of coloured
+ bits of glass. But this art had been exceedingly difficult. It gave the
+ painter no chance to express all he wanted to say, as all children know
+ who have ever tried to make figures out of coloured blocks of wood. The
+ art of mosaic painting therefore died out during the late Middle Ages
+ except in Russia, where the Byzantine mosaic painters had found a refuge
+ after the fall of Constantinople and continued to ornament the walls of
+ the orthodox churches until the day of the Bolsheviki, when there was an
+ end to the building of churches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course, the mediaeval painter could mix his colours with the water of
+ the wet plaster which was put upon the walls of the churches. This method
+ of painting upon "fresh plaster" (which was generally called "fresco" or
+ "fresh" painting) was very popular for many centuries. To-day, it is as
+ rare as the art of painting miniatures in manuscripts and among the
+ hundreds of artists of our modern cities there is perhaps one who can
+ handle this medium successfully. But during the Middle Ages there was no
+ other way and the artists were "fresco" workers for lack of something
+ better. The method however had certain great disadvantages. Very often the
+ plaster came off the walls after only a few years, or dampness spoiled the
+ pictures, just as dampness will spoil the pattern of our wall paper.
+ People tried every imaginable expedient to get away from this plaster
+ background. They tried to mix their colours with wine and vinegar and with
+ honey and with the sticky white of egg, but none of these methods were
+ satisfactory. For more than a thousand years these experiments continued.
+ In painting pictures upon the parchment leaves of manuscripts the
+ mediaeval artists were very successful. But when it came to covering large
+ spaces of wood or stone with paint which would stick, they did not succeed
+ very well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last, during the first half of the fifteenth century, the problem was
+ solved in the southern Netherlands by Jan and Hubert van Eyck. The famous
+ Flemish brothers mixed their paint with specially prepared oils and this
+ allowed them to use wood and canvas or stone or anything else as a
+ background for their pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But by this time the religious ardour of the early Middle Ages was a thing
+ of the past. The rich burghers of the cities were succeeding the bishops
+ as patrons of the arts. And as art invariably follows the full
+ dinner-pail, the artists now began to work for these worldly employers and
+ painted pictures for kings, for grand-dukes and for rich bankers. Within a
+ very short time, the new method of painting with oil spread through Europe
+ and in every country there developed a school of special painting which
+ showed the characteristic tastes of the people for whom these portraits
+ and landscapes were made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In Spain, for example, Velasquez painted court-dwarfs and the weavers of
+ the royal tapestry-factories, and all sorts of persons and subjects
+ connected with the king and his court. But in Holland, Rembrandt and Frans
+ Hals and Vermeer painted the barnyard of the merchant's house, and they
+ painted his rather dowdy wife and his healthy but bumptious children and
+ the ships which had brought him his wealth. In Italy on the other hand,
+ where the Pope remained the largest patron of the arts, Michelangelo and
+ Correggio continued to paint Madonnas and Saints, while in England, where
+ the aristocracy was very rich and powerful and in France where the kings
+ had become uppermost in the state, the artists painted distinguished
+ gentlemen who were members of the government, and very lovely ladies who
+ were friends of His Majesty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great change in painting, which came about with the neglect of the old
+ church and the rise of a new class in society, was reflected in all other
+ forms of art. The invention of printing had made it possible for authors
+ to win fame and reputation by writing books for the multitudes. In this
+ way arose the profession of the novelist and the illustrator. But the
+ people who had money enough to buy the new books were not the sort who
+ liked to sit at home of nights, looking at the ceiling or just sitting. They
+ wanted to be amused. The few minstrels of the Middle Ages were not
+ sufficient to cover the demand for entertainment. For the first time since
+ the early Greek city-states of two thousand years before, the professional
+ playwright had a chance to ply his trade. The Middle Ages had known the
+ theatre merely as part of certain church celebrations. The tragedies of
+ the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries had told the story of the
+ suffering of our Lord. But during the sixteenth century the worldly
+ theatre made its reappearance. It is true that, at first, the position of
+ the professional playwright and actor was not a very high one. William
+ Shakespeare was regarded as a sort of circus-fellow who amused his
+ neighbours with his tragedies and comedies. But when he died in the year
+ 1616 he had begun to enjoy the respect of his neighbours and actors were
+ no longer subjects of police supervision.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ William's contemporary, Lope de Vega, the incredible Spaniard who wrote no
+ less than 1800 worldly and 400 religious plays, was a person of rank who
+ received the papal approval upon his work. A century later, Moliere, the
+ Frenchman, was deemed worthy of the companionship of none less than King
+ Louis XIV.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since then, the theatre has enjoyed an ever increasing affection on the
+ part of the people. To-day a "theatre" is part of every well-regulated
+ city, and the "silent drama" of the movies has penetrated to the tiniest
+ of our prairie hamlets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another art, however, was to become the most popular of all. That was
+ music. Most of the old art-forms demanded a great deal of technical skill.
+ It takes years and years of practice before our clumsy hand is able to
+ follow the commands of the brain and reproduce our vision upon canvas or
+ in marble. It takes a life-time to learn how to act or how to write a good
+ novel. And it takes a great deal of training on the part of the public to
+ appreciate the best in painting and writing and sculpture. But almost any
+ one, not entirely tone-deaf, can follow a tune and almost everybody can
+ get enjoyment out of some sort of music. The Middle Ages had heard a
+ little music but it had been entirely the music of the church. The holy
+ chants were subject to very severe laws of rhythm and harmony and soon
+ these became monotonous. Besides, they could not well be sung in the
+ street or in the market-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Renaissance changed this. Music once more came into its own as the
+ best friend of man, both in his happiness and in his sorrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Egyptians and the Babylonians and the ancient Jews had all been great
+ lovers of music. They had even combined different instruments into regular
+ orchestras. But the Greeks had frowned upon this barbaric foreign noise.
+ They liked to hear a man recite the stately poetry of Homer and Pindar.
+ They allowed him to accompany himself upon the lyre (the poorest of all
+ stringed instruments). That was as far as any one could go without
+ incurring the risk of popular disapproval. The Romans on the other hand
+ had loved orchestral music at their dinners and parties and they had
+ invented most of the instruments which (in VERY modified form) we use
+ to-day. The early church had despised this music which smacked too much of
+ the wicked pagan world which had just been destroyed. A few songs rendered
+ by the entire congregation were all the bishops of the third and fourth
+ centuries would tolerate. As the congregation was apt to sing dreadfully
+ out of key without the guidance of an instrument, the church had
+ afterwards allowed the use of an organ, an invention of the second century
+ of our era which consisted of a combination of the old pipes of Pan and a
+ pair of bellows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the great migrations. The last of the Roman musicians were
+ either killed or became tramp-fiddlers going from city to city and playing
+ in the street, and begging for pennies like the harpist on a modern
+ ferry-boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the revival of a more worldly civilisation in the cities of the late
+ Middle Ages had created a new demand for musicians. Instruments like the
+ horn, which had been used only as signal-instruments for hunting and
+ fighting, were remodelled until they could reproduce sounds which were
+ agreeable in the dance-hall and in the banqueting room. A bow strung with
+ horse-hair was used to play the old-fashioned guitar and before the end of
+ the Middle Ages this six-stringed instrument (the most ancient of all
+ string-instruments which dates back to Egypt and Assyria) had grown into
+ our modern four-stringed fiddle which Stradivarius and the other Italian
+ violin-makers of the eighteenth century brought to the height of
+ perfection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And finally the modern piano was invented, the most wide-spread of all
+ musical instruments, which has followed man into the wilderness of the
+ jungle and the ice-fields of Greenland. The organ had been the first of
+ all keyed instruments but the performer always depended upon the
+ co-operation of some one who worked the bellows, a job which nowadays is
+ done by electricity. The musicians therefore looked for a handier and less
+ circumstantial instrument to assist them in training the pupils of the
+ many church choirs. During the great eleventh century, Guido, a
+ Benedictine monk of the town of Arezzo (the birthplace of the poet
+ Petrarch) gave us our modern system of musical annotation. Some time
+ during that century, when there was a great deal of popular interest in
+ music, the first instrument with both keys and strings was built. It must
+ have sounded as tinkly as one of those tiny children's pianos which you
+ can buy at every toy-shop. In the city of Vienna, the town where the
+ strolling musicians of the Middle Ages (who had been classed with jugglers
+ and card sharps) had formed the first separate Guild of Musicians in the
+ year 1288, the little monochord was developed into something which we can
+ recognise as the direct ancestor of our modern Steinway. From Austria the
+ "clavichord" as it was usually called in those days (because it had
+ "craves" or keys) went to Italy. There it was perfected into the "spinet"
+ which was so called after the inventor, Giovanni Spinetti of Venice. At
+ last during the eighteenth century, some time between 1709 and 1720,
+ Bartolomeo Cristofori made a "clavier" which allowed the performer to play
+ both loudly and softly or as it was said in Italian, "piano" and "forte."
+ This instrument with certain changes became our "pianoforte" or piano.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then for the first time the world possessed an easy and convenient
+ instrument which could be mastered in a couple of years and did not need
+ the eternal tuning of harps and fiddles and was much pleasanter to the
+ ears than the mediaeval tubas, clarinets, trombones and oboes. Just as the
+ phonograph has given millions of modern people their first love of music
+ so did the early "pianoforte" carry the knowledge of music into much wider
+ circles. Music became part of the education of every well-bred man and
+ woman. Princes and rich merchants maintained private orchestras. The
+ musician ceased to be a wandering "jongleur" and became a highly valued
+ member of the community. Music was added to the dramatic performances of
+ the theatre and out of this practice, grew our modern Opera. Originally
+ only a few very rich princes could afford the expenses of an "opera
+ troupe." But as the taste for this sort of entertainment grew, many cities
+ built their own theatres where Italian and afterwards German operas were
+ given to the unlimited joy of the whole community with the exception of a
+ few sects of very strict Christians who still regarded music with deep
+ suspicion as something which was too lovely to be entirely good for the
+ soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the middle of the eighteenth century the musical life of Europe was in
+ full swing. Then there came forward a man who was greater than all others,
+ a simple organist of the Thomas Church of Leipzig, by the name of Johann
+ Sebastian Bach. In his compositions for every known instrument, from comic
+ songs and popular dances to the most stately of sacred hymns and
+ oratorios, he laid the foundation for all our modern music. When he died
+ in the year 1750 he was succeeded by Mozart, who created musical fabrics
+ of sheer loveliness which remind us of lace that has been woven out of
+ harmony and rhythm. Then came Ludwig van Beethoven, the most tragic of
+ men, who gave us our modern orchestra, yet heard none of his greatest
+ compositions because he was deaf, as the result of a cold contracted
+ during his years of poverty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beethoven lived through the period of the great French Revolution. Full of
+ hope for a new and glorious day, he had dedicated one of his symphonies to
+ Napoleon. But he lived to regret the hour. When he died in the year 1827,
+ Napoleon was gone and the French Revolution was gone, but the steam engine
+ had come and was filling the world with a sound that had nothing in common
+ with the dreams of the Third Symphony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the new order of steam and iron and coal and large factories had
+ little use for art, for painting and sculpture and poetry and music. The
+ old protectors of the arts, the Church and the princes and the merchants
+ of the Middle Ages and the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries no longer
+ existed. The leaders of the new industrial world were too busy and had too
+ little education to bother about etchings and sonatas and bits of carved
+ ivory, not to speak of the men who created those things, and who were of
+ no practical use to the community in which they lived. And the workmen in
+ the factories listened to the drone of their engines until they too had
+ lost all taste for the melody of the flute or fiddle of their peasant
+ ancestry. The arts became the step-children of the new industrial era. Art
+ and Life became entirely separated. Whatever paintings had been left, were
+ dying a slow death in the museums. And music became a monopoly of a few
+ "virtuosi" who took the music away from the home and carried it to the
+ concert-hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But steadily, although slowly, the arts are coming back into their own.
+ People begin to understand that Rembrandt and Beethoven and Rodin are the
+ true prophets and leaders of their race and that a world without art and
+ happiness resembles a nursery without laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0064" id="link2H_4_0064">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ COLONIAL EXPANSION AND WAR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A CHAPTER WHICH OUGHT TO GIVE YOU A GREAT DEAL OF POLITICAL INFORMATION
+ ABOUT THE LAST FIFTY YEARS, BUT WHICH REALLY CONTAINS SEVERAL EXPLANATIONS
+ AND A FEW APOLOGIES
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IF I had known how difficult it was to write a History of the World, I
+ should never have undertaken the task. Of course, any one possessed of
+ enough industry to lose himself for half a dozen years in the musty stacks
+ of a library, can compile a ponderous tome which gives an account of the
+ events in every land during every century. But that was not the purpose of
+ the present book. The publishers wanted to print a history that should
+ have rhythm&mdash;a story which galloped rather than walked. And now that
+ I have almost finished I discover that certain chapters gallop, that
+ others wade slowly through the dreary sands of long forgotten ages&mdash;that
+ a few parts do not make any progress at all, while still others indulge in
+ a veritable jazz of action and romance. I did not like this and I
+ suggested that we destroy the whole manuscript and begin once more from
+ the beginning. This, however, the publishers would not allow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the next best solution of my difficulties, I took the type-written
+ pages to a number of charitable friends and asked them to read what I had
+ said, and give me the benefit of their advice. The experience was rather
+ disheartening. Each and every man had his own prejudices and his own
+ hobbies and preferences. They all wanted to know why, where and how I
+ dared to omit their pet nation, their pet statesman, or even their most
+ beloved criminal. With some of them, Napoleon and Jenghiz Khan were
+ candidates for high honours. I explained that I had tried very hard to be
+ fair to Napoleon, but that in my estimation he was greatly inferior to
+ such men as George Washington, Gustavus Wasa, Augustus, Hammurabi or
+ Lincoln, and a score of others all of whom were obliged to content
+ themselves with a few paragraphs, from sheer lack of space. As for Jenghiz
+ Khan, I only recognise his superior ability in the field of wholesale
+ murder and I did not intend to give him any more publicity than I could
+ help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is very well as far as it goes," said the next critic, "but how
+ about the Puritans? We are celebrating the tercentenary of their arrival
+ at Plymouth. They ought to have more space." My answer was that if I were
+ writing a history of America, the Puritans would get fully one half of the
+ first twelve chapters; that however this was a history of mankind and that
+ the event on Plymouth rock was not a matter of far-reaching international
+ importance until many centuries later; that the United States had been
+ founded by thirteen colonies and not by a single one; that the most
+ prominent leaders of the first twenty years of our history had been from
+ Virginia, from Pennsylvania, and from the island of Nevis, rather than
+ from Massachusetts; and that therefore the Puritans ought to content
+ themselves with a page of print and a special map.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next came the prehistoric specialist. Why in the name of the great
+ Tyrannosaur had I not devoted more space to the wonderful race of
+ Cro-Magnon men, who had developed such a high stage of civilisation 10,000
+ years ago?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, and why not? The reason is simple. I do not take as much stock in
+ the perfection of these early races as some of our most noted
+ anthropologists seem to do. Rousseau and the philosophers of the
+ eighteenth century created the "noble savage" who was supposed to have
+ dwelt in a state of perfect happiness during the beginning of time. Our
+ modern scientists have discarded the "noble savage," so dearly beloved by
+ our grandfathers, and they have replaced him by the "splendid savage" of
+ the French Valleys who 35,000 years ago made an end to the universal rule
+ of the low-browed and low-living brutes of the Neanderthal and other
+ Germanic neighbourhoods. They have shown us the elephants the Cro-Magnon
+ painted and the statues he carved and they have surrounded him with much
+ glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I do not mean to say that they are wrong. But I hold that we know by far
+ too little of this entire period to re-construct that early west-European
+ society with any degree (however humble) of accuracy. And I would rather
+ not state certain things than run the risk of stating certain things that
+ were not so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there were other critics, who accused me of direct unfairness. Why
+ did I leave out such countries as Ireland and Bulgaria and Siam while I
+ dragged in such other countries as Holland and Iceland and Switzerland? My
+ answer was that I did not drag in any countries. They pushed themselves in
+ by main force of circumstances, and I simply could not keep them out. And
+ in order that my point may be understood, let me state the basis upon
+ which active membership to this book of history was considered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was but one rule. "Did the country or the person in question produce
+ a new idea or perform an original act without which the history of the
+ entire human race would have been different?" It was not a question of
+ personal taste. It was a matter of cool, almost mathematical judgment. No
+ race ever played a more picturesque role in history than the Mongolians,
+ and no race, from the point of view of achievement or intelligent
+ progress, was of less value to the rest of mankind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The career of Tiglath-Pileser, the Assyrian, is full of dramatic episodes.
+ But as far as we are concerned, he might just as well never have existed
+ at all. In the same way, the history of the Dutch Republic is not
+ interesting because once upon a time the sailors of de Ruyter went fishing
+ in the river Thames, but rather because of the fact that this small
+ mud-bank along the shores of the North Sea offered a hospitable asylum to
+ all sorts of strange people who had all sorts of queer ideas upon all
+ sorts of very unpopular subjects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is quite true that Athens or Florence, during the hey-day of their
+ glory, had only one tenth of the population of Kansas City. But our
+ present civilisation would be very different had neither of these two
+ little cities of the Mediterranean basin existed. And the same (with due
+ apologies to the good people of Wyandotte County) can hardly be said of
+ this busy metropolis on the Missouri River.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And since I am being very personal, allow me to state one other fact.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When we visit a doctor, we find out before hand whether he is a surgeon or
+ a diagnostician or a homeopath or a faith healer, for we want to know from
+ what angle he will look at our complaint. We ought to be as careful in the
+ choice of our historians as we are in the selection of our physicians. We
+ think, "Oh well, history is history," and let it go at that. But the
+ writer who was educated in a strictly Presbyterian household somewhere in
+ the backwoods of Scotland will look differently upon every question of
+ human relationships from his neighbour who as a child, was dragged to
+ listen to the brilliant exhortations of Robert Ingersoll, the enemy of all
+ revealed Devils. In due course of time, both men may forget their early
+ training and never again visit either church or lecture hall. But the
+ influence of these impressionable years stays with them and they cannot
+ escape showing it in whatever they write or say or do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the preface to this book, I told you that I should not be an infallible
+ guide and now that we have almost reached the end, I repeat the warning. I
+ was born and educated in an atmosphere of the old-fashioned liberalism
+ which had followed the discoveries of Darwin and the other pioneers of the
+ nineteenth century. As a child, I happened to spend most of my waking
+ hours with an uncle who was a great collector of the books written by
+ Montaigne, the great French essayist of the sixteenth century. Because I
+ was born in Rotterdam and educated in the city of Gouda, I ran continually
+ across Erasmus and for some unknown reason this great exponent of
+ tolerance took hold of my intolerant self. Later I discovered Anatole
+ France and my first experience with the English language came about
+ through an accidental encounter with Thackeray's "Henry Esmond," a story
+ which made more impression upon me than any other book in the English
+ language.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If I had been born in a pleasant middle western city I probably should
+ have a certain affection for the hymns which I had heard in my childhood.
+ But my earliest recollection of music goes back to the afternoon when my
+ Mother took me to hear nothing less than a Bach fugue. And the
+ mathematical perfection of the great Protestant master influenced me to
+ such an extent that I cannot hear the usual hymns of our prayer-meetings
+ without a feeling of intense agony and direct pain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, if I had been born in Italy and had been warmed by the sunshine of
+ the happy valley of the Arno, I might love many colourful and sunny
+ pictures which now leave me indifferent because I got my first artistic
+ impressions in a country where the rare sun beats down upon the
+ rain-soaked land with almost cruel brutality and throws everything into
+ violent contrasts of dark and light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I state these few facts deliberately that you may know the personal bias
+ of the man who wrote this history and may understand his point-of-view.
+ The bibliography at the end of this book, which represents all sorts of
+ opinions and views, will allow you to compare my ideas with those of other
+ people. And in this way, you will be able to reach your own final
+ conclusions with a greater degree of fairness than would otherwise be
+ possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After this short but necessary excursion, we return to the history of the
+ last fifty years. Many things happened during this period but very little
+ occurred which at the time seemed to be of paramount importance. The
+ majority of the greater powers ceased to be mere political agencies and
+ became large business enterprises. They built railroads. They founded and
+ subsidized steam-ship lines to all parts of the world. They connected
+ their different possessions with telegraph wires. And they steadily
+ increased their holdings in other continents. Every available bit of
+ African or Asiatic territory was claimed by one of the rival powers.
+ France became a colonial nation with interests in Algiers and Madagascar
+ and Annam and Tonkin (in eastern Asia). Germany claimed parts of southwest
+ and east Africa, built settlements in Kameroon on the west coast of Africa
+ and in New Guinea and many of the islands of the Pacific, and used the
+ murder of a few missionaries as a welcome excuse to take the harbour of
+ Kisochau on the Yellow Sea in China. Italy tried her luck in Abyssinia,
+ was disastrously defeated by the soldiers of the Negus, and consoled
+ herself by occupying the Turkish possessions in Tripoli in northern
+ Africa. Russia, having occupied all of Siberia, took Port Arthur away from
+ China. Japan, having defeated China in the war of 1895, occupied the
+ island of Formosa and in the year 1905 began to lay claim to the entire
+ empire of Corea. In the year 1883 England, the largest colonial empire the
+ world has ever seen, undertook to "protect" Egypt. She performed this task
+ most efficiently and to the great material benefit of that much neglected
+ country, which ever since the opening of the Suez canal in 1868 had been
+ threatened with a foreign invasion. During the next thirty years she
+ fought a number of colonial wars in different parts of the world and in
+ 1902 (after three years of bitter fighting) she conquered the independent
+ Boer republics of the Transvaal and the Orange Free State. Meanwhile she
+ had encouraged Cecil Rhodes to lay the foundations for a great African
+ state, which reached from the Cape almost to the mouth of the Nile, and
+ had faithfully picked up such islands or provinces as had been left
+ without a European owner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shrewd king of Belgium, by name Leopold, used the discoveries of Henry
+ Stanley to found the Congo Free State in the year 1885. Originally this
+ gigantic tropical empire was an "absolute monarchy." But after many years
+ of scandalous mismanagement, it was annexed by the Belgian people who made
+ it a colony (in the year 1908) and abolished the terrible abuses which had
+ been tolerated by this very unscrupulous Majesty, who cared nothing for
+ the fate of the natives as long as he got his ivory and rubber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the United States, they had so much land that they desired no
+ further territory. But the terrible misrule of Cuba, one of the last of
+ the Spanish possessions in the western hemisphere, practically forced the
+ Washington government to take action. After a short and rather uneventful
+ war, the Spaniards were driven out of Cuba and Puerto Rico and the
+ Philippines, and the two latter became colonies of the United States.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This economic development of the world was perfectly natural. The
+ increasing number of factories in England and France and Germany needed an
+ ever increasing amount of raw materials and the equally increasing number
+ of European workers needed an ever increasing amount of food. Everywhere
+ the cry was for more and for richer markets, for more easily accessible
+ coal mines and iron mines and rubber plantations and oil-wells, for
+ greater supplies of wheat and grain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The purely political events of the European continent dwindled to mere
+ insignificance in the eyes of men who were making plans for steamboat
+ lines on Victoria Nyanza or for railroads through the interior of
+ Shantung. They knew that many European questions still remained to be
+ settled, but they did not bother, and through sheer indifference and
+ carelessness they bestowed upon their descendants a terrible inheritance
+ of hate and misery. For untold centuries the south-eastern corner of
+ Europe had been the scene of rebellion and bloodshed. During the seventies
+ of the last century the people of Serbia and Bulgaria and Montenegro and
+ Roumania were once more trying to gain their freedom and the Turks (with
+ the support of many of the western powers), were trying to prevent this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a period of particularly atrocious massacres in Bulgaria in the year
+ 1876, the Russian people lost all patience. The Government was forced to
+ intervene just as President McKinley was obliged to go to Cuba and stop
+ the shooting-squads of General Weyler in Havana. In April of the year 1877
+ the Russian armies crossed the Danube, stormed the Shipka pass, and after
+ the capture of Plevna, marched southward until they reached the gates of
+ Constantinople. Turkey appealed for help to England. There were many
+ English people who denounced their government when it took the side of the
+ Sultan. But Disraeli (who had just made Queen Victoria Empress of India
+ and who loved the picturesque Turks while he hated the Russians who were
+ brutally cruel to the Jewish people within their frontiers) decided to
+ interfere. Russia was forced to conclude the peace of San Stefano (1878)
+ and the question of the Balkans was left to a Congress which convened at
+ Berlin in June and July of the same year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This famous conference was entirely dominated by the personality of
+ Disraeli. Even Bismarck feared the clever old man with his well-oiled
+ curly hair and his supreme arrogance, tempered by a cynical sense of humor
+ and a marvellous gift for flattery. At Berlin the British prime-minister
+ carefully watched over the fate of his friends the Turks. Montenegro,
+ Serbia and Roumania were recognised as independent kingdoms. The
+ principality of Bulgaria was given a semi-independent status under Prince
+ Alexander of Battenberg, a nephew of Tsar Alexander II. But none of those
+ countries were given the chance to develop their powers and their
+ resources as they would have been able to do, had England been less
+ anxious about the fate of the Sultan, whose domains were necessary to the
+ safety of the British Empire as a bulwark against further Russian
+ aggression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To make matters worse, the congress allowed Austria to take Bosnia and
+ Herzegovina away from the Turks to be "administered" as part of the
+ Habsburg domains. It is true that Austria made an excellent job of it. The
+ neglected provinces were as well managed as the best of the British
+ colonies, and that is saying a great deal. But they were inhabited by many
+ Serbians. In older days they had been part of the great Serbian empire of
+ Stephan Dushan, who early in the fourteenth century had defended western
+ Europe against the invasions of the Turks and whose capital of Uskub had
+ been a centre of civilisation one hundred and fifty years before Columbus
+ discovered the new lands of the west. The Serbians remembered their
+ ancient glory as who would not? They resented the presence of the
+ Austrians in two provinces, which, so they felt, were theirs by every
+ right of tradition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was in Sarajevo, the capital of Bosnia, that the archduke
+ Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne, was murdered on June 28 of the
+ year 1914. The assassin was a Serbian student who had acted from purely
+ patriotic motives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the blame for this terrible catastrophe which was the immediate,
+ though not the only cause of the Great World War did not lie with the
+ half-crazy Serbian boy or his Austrian victim. It must be traced back to
+ the days of the famous Berlin Conference when Europe was too busy building
+ a material civilisation to care about the aspirations and the dreams of a
+ forgotten race in a dreary corner of the old Balkan peninsula.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0065" id="link2H_4_0065">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A NEW WORLD
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ THE GREAT WAR WHICH WAS REALLY THE STRUGGLE FOR A NEW AND BETTER WORLD
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ THE Marquis de Condorcet was one of the noblest characters among the small
+ group of honest enthusiasts who were responsible for the outbreak of the
+ great French Revolution. He had devoted his life to the cause of the poor
+ and the unfortunate. He had been one of the assistants of d'Alembert and
+ Diderot when they wrote their famous Encyclopedie. During the first years
+ of the Revolution he had been the leader of the Moderate wing of the
+ Convention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His tolerance, his kindliness, his stout common sense, had made him an
+ object of suspicion when the treason of the king and the court clique had
+ given the extreme radicals their chance to get hold of the government and
+ kill their opponents. Condorcet was declared "hors de loi," or outlawed,
+ an outcast who was henceforth at the mercy of every true patriot. His
+ friends offered to hide him at their own peril. Condorcet refused to
+ accept their sacrifice. He escaped and tried to reach his home, where he
+ might be safe. After three nights in the open, torn and bleeding, he
+ entered an inn and asked for some food. The suspicious yokels searched him
+ and in his pockets they found a copy of Horace, the Latin poet. This
+ showed that their prisoner was a man of gentle breeding and had no
+ business upon the highroads at a time when every educated person was
+ regarded as an enemy of the Revolutionary state. They took Condorcet and
+ they bound him and they gagged him and they threw him into the village
+ lock-up, but in the morning when the soldiers came to drag him back to
+ Paris and cut his head off, behold! he was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This man who had given all and had received nothing had good reason to
+ despair of the human race. But he has written a few sentences which ring
+ as true to-day as they did one hundred and thirty years ago. I repeat them
+ here for your benefit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nature has set no limits to our hopes," he wrote, "and the picture of the
+ human race, now freed from its chains and marching with a firm tread on
+ the road of truth and virtue and happiness, offers to the philosopher a
+ spectacle which consoles him for the errors, for the crimes and the
+ injustices which still pollute and afflict this earth."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The world has just passed through an agony of pain compared to which the
+ French Revolution was a mere incident. The shock has been so great that it
+ has killed the last spark of hope in the breasts of millions of men. They
+ were chanting a hymn of progress, and four years of slaughter followed
+ their prayers for peace. "Is it worth while," so they ask, "to work and
+ slave for the benefit of creatures who have not yet passed beyond the
+ stage of the earliest cave men?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is but one answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That answer is "Yes!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The World War was a terrible calamity. But it did not mean the end of
+ things. On the contrary it brought about the coming of a new day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is easy to write a history of Greece and Rome or the Middle Ages. The
+ actors who played their parts upon that long-forgotten stage are all dead.
+ We can criticize them with a cool head. The audience that applauded their
+ efforts has dispersed. Our remarks cannot possibly hurt their feelings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it is very difficult to give a true account of contemporary events.
+ The problems that fill the minds of the people with whom we pass through
+ life, are our own problems, and they hurt us too much or they please us
+ too well to be described with that fairness which is necessary when we are
+ writing history and not blowing the trumpet of propaganda. All the same I
+ shall endeavour to tell you why I agree with poor Condorcet when he
+ expressed his firm faith in a better future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Often before have I warned you against the false impression which is
+ created by the use of our so-called historical epochs which divide the
+ story of man into four parts, the ancient world, the Middle Ages, the
+ Renaissance and the Reformation, and Modern Time. The last of these terms
+ is the most dangerous. The word "modern" implies that we, the people of
+ the twentieth century, are at the top of human achievement. Fifty years
+ ago the liberals of England who followed the leadership of Gladstone felt
+ that the problem of a truly representative and democratic form of
+ government had been solved forever by the second great Reform Bill, which
+ gave workmen an equal share in the government with their employers. When
+ Disraeli and his conservative friends talked of a dangerous "leap in the
+ dark" they answered "No." They felt certain of their cause and trusted
+ that henceforth all classes of society would co-operate to make the
+ government of their common country a success. Since then many things have
+ happened, and the few liberals who are still alive begin to understand
+ that they were mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is no definite answer to any historical problem.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every generation must fight the good fight anew or perish as those
+ sluggish animals of the prehistoric world have perished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you once get hold of this great truth you will get a new and much
+ broader view of life. Then, go one step further and try to imagine
+ yourself in the position of your own great-great-grandchildren who will
+ take your place in the year 10,000. They too will learn history. But what
+ will they think of those short four thousand years during which we have
+ kept a written record of our actions and of our thoughts? They will think
+ of Napoleon as a contemporary of Tiglath Pileser, the Assyrian conqueror.
+ Perhaps they will confuse him with Jenghiz Khan or Alexander the
+ Macedonian. The great war which has just come to an end will appear in the
+ light of that long commercial conflict which settled the supremacy of the
+ Mediterranean when Rome and Carthage fought during one hundred and
+ twenty-eight years for the mastery of the sea. The Balkan troubles of the
+ 19th century (the struggle for freedom of Serbia and Greece and Bulgaria
+ and Montenegro) to them will seem a continuation of the disordered
+ conditions caused by the Great Migrations. They will look at pictures of
+ the Rheims cathedral which only yesterday was destroyed by German guns as
+ we look upon a photograph of the Acropolis ruined two hundred and fifty
+ years ago during a war between the Turks and the Venetians. They will
+ regard the fear of death, which is still common among many people, as a
+ childish superstition which was perhaps natural in a race of men who had
+ burned witches as late as the year 1692. Even our hospitals and our
+ laboratories and our operating rooms of which we are so proud will look
+ like slightly improved workshops of alchemists and mediaeval surgeons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the reason for all this is simple. We modern men and women are not
+ "modern" at all. On the contrary we still belong to the last generations
+ of the cave-dwellers. The foundation for a new era was laid but yesterday.
+ The human race was given its first chance to become truly civilised when
+ it took courage to question all things and made "knowledge and
+ understanding" the foundation upon which to create a more reasonable and
+ sensible society of human beings. The Great War was the "growing-pain" of
+ this new world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time to come people will write mighty books to prove that this
+ or that or the other person brought about the war. The Socialists will
+ publish volumes in which they will accuse the "capitalists" of having
+ brought about the war for "commercial gain." The capitalists will answer
+ that they lost infinitely more through the war than they made&mdash;that
+ their children were among the first to go and fight and be killed&mdash;and
+ they will show how in every country the bankers tried their very best to
+ avert the outbreak of hostilities. French historians will go through the
+ register of German sins from the days of Charlemagne until the days of
+ William of Hohenzollern and German historians will return the compliment
+ and will go through the list of French horrors from the days of
+ Charlemagne until the days of President Poincare. And then they will
+ establish to their own satisfaction that the other fellow was guilty of
+ "causing the war." Statesmen, dead and not yet dead, in all countries will
+ take to their typewriters and they will explain how they tried to avert
+ hostilities and how their wicked opponents forced them into it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The historian, a hundred years hence, will not bother about these
+ apologies and vindications. He will understand the real nature of the
+ underlying causes and he will know that personal ambitions and personal
+ wickedness and personal greed had very little to do with the final
+ outburst. The original mistake, which was responsible for all this misery,
+ was committed when our scientists began to create a new world of steel and
+ iron and chemistry and electricity and forgot that the human mind is
+ slower than the proverbial turtle, is lazier than the well-known sloth,
+ and marches from one hundred to three hundred years behind the small group
+ of courageous leaders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Zulu in a frock coat is still a Zulu. A dog trained to ride a bicycle
+ and smoke a pipe is still a dog. And a human being with the mind of a
+ sixteenth century tradesman driving a 1921 Rolls-Royce is still a human
+ being with the mind of a sixteenth century tradesman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If you do not understand this at first, read it again. It will become
+ clearer to you in a moment and it will explain many things that have
+ happened these last six years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps I may give you another, more familiar, example, to show you what I
+ mean. In the movie theatres, jokes and funny remarks are often thrown upon
+ the screen. Watch the audience the next time you have a chance. A few
+ people seem almost to inhale the words. It takes them but a second to read
+ the lines. Others are a bit slower. Still others take from twenty to
+ thirty seconds. Finally those men and women who do not read any more than
+ they can help, get the point when the brighter ones among the audience
+ have already begun to decipher the next cut-in. It is not different in
+ human life, as I shall now show you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a former chapter I have told you how the idea of the Roman Empire
+ continued to live for a thousand years after the death of the last Roman
+ Emperor. It caused the establishment of a large number of "imitation
+ empires." It gave the Bishops of Rome a chance to make themselves the head
+ of the entire church, because they represented the idea of Roman
+ world-supremacy. It drove a number of perfectly harmless barbarian
+ chieftains into a career of crime and endless warfare because they were
+ for ever under the spell of this magic word "Rome." All these people,
+ Popes, Emperors and plain fighting men were not very different from you or
+ me. But they lived in a world where the Roman tradition was a vital issue
+ something living&mdash;something which was remembered clearly both by the
+ father and the son and the grandson. And so they struggled and sacrificed
+ themselves for a cause which to-day would not find a dozen recruits.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In still another chapter I have told you how the great religious wars took
+ place more than a century after the first open act of the Reformation and
+ if you will compare the chapter on the Thirty Years War with that on
+ Inventions, you will see that this ghastly butchery took place at a time
+ when the first clumsy steam engines were already puffing in the
+ laboratories of a number of French and German and English scientists. But
+ the world at large took no interest in these strange contraptions, and
+ went on with a grand theological discussion which to-day causes yawns, but
+ no anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it goes. A thousand years from now, the historian will use the same
+ words about Europe of the out-going nineteenth century, and he will see
+ how men were engaged upon terrific nationalistic struggles while the
+ laboratories all around them were filled with serious folk who cared not
+ one whit for politics as long as they could force nature to surrender a
+ few more of her million secrets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You will gradually begin to understand what I am driving at. The engineer
+ and the scientist and the chemist, within a single generation, filled
+ Europe and America and Asia with their vast machines, with their
+ telegraphs, their flying machines, their coal-tar products. They created a
+ new world in which time and space were reduced to complete insignificance.
+ They invented new products and they made these so cheap that almost every
+ one could buy them. I have told you all this before but it certainly will
+ bear repeating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To keep the ever increasing number of factories going, the owners, who had
+ also become the rulers of the land, needed raw materials and coal.
+ Especially coal. Meanwhile the mass of the people were still thinking in
+ terms of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and clinging to the old
+ notions of the state as a dynastic or political organisation. This clumsy
+ mediaeval institution was then suddenly called upon to handle the highly
+ modern problems of a mechanical and industrial world. It did its best,
+ according to the rules of the game which had been laid down centuries
+ before. The different states created enormous armies and gigantic navies
+ which were used for the purpose of acquiring new possessions in distant
+ lands. Whereever{sic} there was a tiny bit of land left, there arose an
+ English or a French or a German or a Russian colony. If the natives
+ objected, they were killed. In most cases they did not object, and were
+ allowed to live peacefully, provided they did not interfere with the
+ diamond mines or the coal mines or the oil mines or the gold mines or the
+ rubber plantations, and they derived many benefits from the foreign
+ occupation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes it happened that two states in search of raw materials wanted
+ the same piece of land at the same time. Then there was a war. This
+ occurred fifteen years ago when Russia and Japan fought for the possession
+ of certain terri-tories which belonged to the Chinese people. Such
+ conflicts, however, were the exception. No one really desired to fight.
+ Indeed, the idea of fighting with armies and battleships and submarines
+ began to seem absurd to the men of the early 20th century. They associated
+ the idea of violence with the long-ago age of unlimited monarchies and
+ intriguing dynasties. Every day they read in their papers of still further
+ inventions, of groups of English and American and German scientists who
+ were working together in perfect friendship for the purpose of an advance
+ in medicine or in astronomy. They lived in a busy world of trade and of
+ commerce and factories. But only a few noticed that the development of the
+ state, (of the gigantic community of people who recognise certain common
+ ideals,) was lagging several hundred years behind. They tried to warn the
+ others. But the others were occupied with their own affairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have used so many similes that I must apologise for bringing in one
+ more. The Ship of State (that old and trusted expression which is ever new
+ and always picturesque,) of the Egyptians and the Greeks and the Romans
+ and the Venetians and the merchant adventurers of the seventeenth century
+ had been a sturdy craft, constructed of well-seasoned wood, and commanded
+ by officers who knew both their crew and their vessel and who understood
+ the limitations of the art of navigating which had been handed down to
+ them by their ancestors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the new age of iron and steel and machinery. First one part,
+ then another of the old ship of state was changed. Her dimensions were
+ increased. The sails were discarded for steam. Better living quarters were
+ established, but more people were forced to go down into the stoke-hole,
+ and while the work was safe and fairly remunerative, they did not like it
+ as well as their old and more dangerous job in the rigging. Finally, and
+ almost imperceptibly, the old wooden square-rigger had been transformed
+ into a modern ocean liner. But the captain and the mates remained the
+ same. They were appointed or elected in the same way as a hundred years
+ before. They were taught the same system of navigation which had served
+ the mariners of the fifteenth century. In their cabins hung the same
+ charts and signal flags which had done service in the days of Louis XIV
+ and Frederick the Great. In short, they were (through no fault of their
+ own) completely incompetent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sea of international politics is not very broad. When those Imperial
+ and Colonial liners began to try and outrun each other, accidents were
+ bound to happen. They did happen. You can still see the wreckage if you
+ venture to pass through that part of the ocean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the moral of the story is a simple one. The world is in dreadful need
+ of men who will assume the new leadership&mdash;who will have the courage
+ of their own visions and who will recognise clearly that we are only at
+ the beginning of the voyage, and have to learn an entirely new system of
+ seamanship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They will have to serve for years as mere apprentices. They will have to
+ fight their way to the top against every possible form of opposition. When
+ they reach the bridge, mutiny of an envious crew may cause their death.
+ But some day, a man will arise who will bring the vessel safely to port,
+ and he shall be the hero of the ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AS IT EVER SHALL BE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "The more I think of the problems of our lives, the more I am persuaded
+ that we ought to choose Irony and Pity for our "assessors and judges" as
+ the ancient Egyptians called upon "the Goddess Isis and the Goddess
+ Nephtys" on behalf of their dead. "Irony and Pity" are both of good
+ counsel; the first with her "smiles" makes life agreeable; the other
+ sanctifies it with her tears." "The Irony which I invoke is no cruel
+ Deity. She mocks neither love nor beauty. She is gentle and kindly
+ disposed. Her mirth disarms and it is she who teaches us to laugh at
+ rogues and fools, whom but for her we might be so weak as to despise and
+ hate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with these wise words of a very great Frenchman I bid you farewell. 8
+ Barrow Street, New York. Saturday, June 26, xxi.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AN ANIMATED CHRONOLOGY, 500,000 B.C.&mdash;A.D. 1922 THE END <a
+ name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CONCERNING THE PICTURES
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ CONCERNING THE PICTURES OF THIS BOOK AND A FEW WORDS ABOUT THE
+ BIBLIOGRAPHY.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day of the historical textbook without illustrations has gone.
+ Pictures and photographs of famous personages and equally famous
+ occurrences cover the pages of Breasted and Robinson and Beard. In this
+ volume the photographs have been omitted to make room for a series of
+ home-made drawings which represent ideas rather than events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the author lays no claim to great artistic excellence (being
+ possessed of a decided leaning towards drawing as a child, he was taught
+ to play the violin as a matter of discipline,) he prefers to make his own
+ maps and sketches because he knows exactly what he wants to say and cannot
+ possibly explain this meaning to his more proficient brethren in the field
+ of art. Besides, the pictures were all drawn for children and their ideas
+ of art are very different from those of their parents.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To all teachers the author would give this advice&mdash;let your boys and
+ girls draw their history after their own desire just as often as you have
+ a chance. You can show a class a photograph of a Greek temple or a
+ mediaeval castle and the class will dutifully say, "Yes, Ma'am," and
+ proceed to forget all about it. But make the Greek temple or the Roman
+ castle the centre of an event, tell the boys to make their own picture of
+ "the building of a temple," or "the storming of the castle," and they will
+ stay after school-hours to finish the job. Most children, before they are
+ taught how to draw from plaster casts, can draw after a fashion, and often
+ they can draw remarkably well. The product of their pencil may look a bit
+ prehistoric. It may even resemble the work of certain native tribes from
+ the upper Congo. But the child is quite frequently prehistoric or
+ upper-Congoish in his or her own tastes, and expresses these primitive
+ instincts with a most astonishing accuracy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The main thing in teaching history, is that the pupil shall remember
+ certain events "in their proper sequence." The experiments of many years
+ in the Children's School of New York has convinced the author that few
+ children will ever forget what they have drawn, while very few will ever
+ remember what they have merely read.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is the same with the maps. Give the child an ordinary conventional map
+ with dots and lines and green seas and tell him to revaluate that
+ geographic scene in his or her own terms. The mountains will be a bit out
+ of gear and the cities will look astonishingly mediaeval. The outlines
+ will be often very imperfect, but the general effect will be quite as
+ truthful as that of our conventional maps, which ever since the days of
+ good Gerardus Mercator have told a strangely erroneous story. Most
+ important of all, it will give the child a feeling of intimacy with
+ historical and geographic facts which cannot be obtained in any other way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither the publishers nor the author claim that "The Story of Mankind" is
+ the last word to be said upon the subject of history for children. It is
+ an appetizer. The book tries to present the subject in such a fashion that
+ the average child shall get a taste for History and shall ask for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To facilitate the work of both parents and teachers, the publishers have
+ asked Miss Leonore St. John Power (who knows more upon this particular
+ subject than any one else they could discover) to compile a list of
+ readable and instructive books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The list was made and was duly printed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parents who live near our big cities will experience no difficulty in
+ ordering these volumes from their booksellers. Those who for the sake of
+ fresh air and quiet, dwell in more remote spots, may not find it
+ convenient to go to a book-store. In that case, Boni and Liveright will be
+ happy to act as middle-man and obtain the books that are desired. They
+ want it to be distinctly understood that they have not gone into the
+ retail book business, but they are quite willing to do their share towards
+ a better and more general historical education, and all orders will
+ receive their immediate attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AN HISTORICAL READING LIST FOR CHILDREN
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Don't stop (I say) to explain that Hebe was (for once) the legitimate
+ daughter of Zeus and, as such, had the privilege to draw wine for the
+ Gods. Don't even stop, just yet, to explain who the Gods were. Don't
+ discourse on amber, otherwise ambergris; don't explain that 'gris' in this
+ connection doesn't mean 'grease'; don't trace it through the Arabic into
+ Noah's Ark; don't prove its electrical properties by tearing up paper into
+ little bits and attracting them with the mouth-piece of your pipe rubbed
+ on your sleeve. Don't insist philologically that when every shepherd
+ 'tells his tale' he is not relating an anecdote but simply keeping 'tally'
+ of his flock. Just go on reading, as well as you can, and be sure that
+ when the children get the thrill of the story, for which you wait, they
+ will be asking more questions, and pertinent ones, than you are able to
+ answer."&mdash;("On the Art of Reading for Children," by Sir Arthur
+ Quiller-Couch.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Days Before History
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How the Present Came From the Past," by Margaret E. Wells, Volume I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How earliest man learned to make tools and build homes, and the stories he
+ told about the fire-makers, the sun and the frost. A simple, illustrated
+ account of these things for children. "The Story of Ab," by Stanley
+ Waterloo.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A romantic tale of the time of the cave-man. (A much simplified edition of
+ this for little children is "Ab, the Cave Man" adapted by William Lewis
+ Nida.) "Industrial and Social History Series," by Katharine E. Dopp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Tree Dwellers&mdash;The Age of Fear"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Early Cave-Men&mdash;The Age of Combat"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Later Cave-Men&mdash;The Age of the Chase"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Early Sea People&mdash;First Steps in the Conquest of the Waters"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Tent-Dwellers&mdash;The Early Fishing Men"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very simple stories of the way in which man learned how to make pottery,
+ how to weave and spin, and how to conquer land and sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ancient Man," written and drawn and done into colour by Hendrik Willem
+ van Loon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beginning of civilisations pictured and written in a new and
+ fascinating fashion, with story maps showing exactly what happened in all
+ parts of the world. A book for children of all ages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Dawn of History
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Civilisation of the Ancient Egyptians," by A. Bothwell Gosse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No country possesses so many wonders, and has such a number of works
+ which defy description." An excellent, profusely illustrated account of
+ the domestic life, amusements, art, religion and occupations of these
+ wonderful people. "How the Present Came From the Past," by Margaret E.
+ Wells, Volume II.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the Egyptians, the Babylonians, the Assyrians and the Persians
+ contributed to civilisation. This is brief and simple and may be used as a
+ first book on the subject.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stories of Egyptian Gods and Heroes," by F. H. Brooksbank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beliefs of the Egyptians, the legend of Isis and Osiris, the builders
+ of the Pyramids and the Temples, the Riddle of the Sphinx, all add to the
+ fascination of this romantic picture of Egypt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wonder Tales of the Ancient World," by Rev. James Baikie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tales of the Wizards, Tales of Travel and Adventure, and Legends of the
+ Gods all gathered from ancient Egyptian literature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ancient Assyria," by Rev. James Baikie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which tells of a city 2800 years ago with a street lined with beautiful
+ enamelled reliefs, and with libraries of clay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Bible for Young People," arranged from the King James version, with
+ twenty-four full page illustrations from old masters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Old, Old Tales From the Old, Old Book," by Nora Archibald Smith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Written in the East these characters live forever in the West&mdash;they
+ pervade the world." A good rendering of the Old Testament. "The Jewish
+ Fairy Book," translated and adapted by Gerald Friedlander.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of great nobility and beauty from the Talmud and the old Jewish
+ chap-books. "Eastern Stories and Legends," by Marie L. Shedlock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The soldiers of Alexander who had settled in the East, wandering
+ merchants of many nations and climes, crusading knights and hermits
+ brought these Buddha Stories from the East to the West."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of Greece and Rome "The Story of the Golden Age," by James
+ Baldwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the most beautiful of the old Greek myths woven into the story of
+ the Odyssey make this book a good introduction to the glories of the
+ Golden Age. "A Wonder Book and Tanglewood Tales," by Nathaniel Hawthorne,
+ with pictures by Maxfield Parrish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Adventures of Odysseus and the Tale of Troy," by Padraic Colum,
+ presented by Willy Pogany.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An attractive, poetically rendered account of "the world's greatest
+ story."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Story of Rome," by Mary Macgregor, with twenty plates in colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attractively illustrated and simply presented story of Rome from the
+ earliest times to the death of Augustus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Plutarch's Lives for Boys and Girls," retold by W. H. Weston. "The Lays
+ of Ancient Rome," by Lord Macaulay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The early history of Rome is indeed far more poetical than anything else
+ in Latin Literature."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Children of the Dawn," by Elsie Finnemore Buckley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Old Greek tales of love, adventure, heroism, skill, achievement, or defeat
+ exceptionally well told. Especially recommended for girls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Heroes; or, Greek Fairy Tales for My Children," by Charles Kingsley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Story of Greece," by Mary Macgregor, with nineteen plates in colour
+ by Walter Crane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Attractively illustrated and simply presented&mdash;a good book to begin
+ on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Christianity
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Story of Jesus," pictures from paintings by Giotto, Fra Angelico,
+ Duccio, Ghirlandais, and Barnja-da-Siena. Descriptive text from the New
+ Testament, selected and arranged by Ethel Natalie Dana.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A beautiful book and a beautiful way to present the Christ Story. "A
+ Child's Book of Saints," by William Canton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sympathetically told and charmingly written stories of men and women whose
+ faith brought about strange miracles, and whose goodness to man and beast
+ set the world wondering. "The Seven Champions of Christendom," edited by
+ F. J. H. Darton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How the knights of old&mdash;St. George of England, St. Denis of France,
+ St. James of Spain, and others&mdash;fought with enchanters and evil
+ spirits to preserve the Kingdom of God. Fine old romances interestingly
+ told for children. "Stories From the Christian East," by Stephen Gaselee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Unusual stories which have been translated from the Coptic, the Greek, the
+ Latin and the Ethiopic. "Jerusalem and the Crusades," by Estelle Blyth,
+ with eight plates in colour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Historical stories telling how children and priests, hermits and knights
+ all strove to keep the Cross in the East.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of Legend and Chivalry
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stories of Norse Heroes From the Eddas and Sagas," retold by E. M.
+ Wilmot-Buxton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These are tales which the Northmen tell concerning the wisdom of
+ All-Father Odin, and how all things began and how they ended. A good book
+ for all children, and for story-tellers. "The Story of Siegfried," by
+ James Baldwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A good introduction to this Northern hero whose strange and daring deeds
+ fill the pages of the old sagas. "The Story of King Arthur and His
+ Knights," written and illustrated by Howard Pyle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This, and the companion volumes, "The Story of the Champions of the Round
+ Table," "The Story of Sir Launcelot and His Companions," "The Story of the
+ Grail and the Passing of Arthur," form an incomparable collection for
+ children. "The Boy's King Arthur," edited by Sidney Lanier, illustrated by
+ N. C. Wyeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very good rendering of Malory's King Arthur, made especially attractive
+ by the coloured illustrations. "Irish Fairy Tales," by James Stephens,
+ illustrated by Arthur Rackham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beautifully pictured and poetically told legends of Ireland's epic hero
+ Fionn. A book for the boy or girl who loves the old romances, and a book
+ for story-telling or reading aloud. "Stories of Charlemagne and the Twelve
+ Peers of France," by A. J. Church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories from the old French and English chronicles showing the romantic
+ glamour surrounding the great Charlemagne and his crusading knights. "The
+ Merry Adventures of Robin Hood," written and illustrated by Howard Pyle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both in picture and in story this book holds first place in the hearts of
+ children. "A Book of Ballad Stories," by Mary Macleod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good prose versions of some of the famous old ballads sung by the
+ minstrels of England and Scotland. "The Story of Roland," by James
+ Baldwin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is, in short, no country in Europe, and no language, in which the
+ exploits of Charlemagne and Roland have not at some time been recounted
+ and sung." This book will serve as a good introduction to a fine heroic
+ character. "The Boy's Froissart," being Sir John Froissart's Chronicles of
+ Adventure, Battle, and Custom in England, France, Spain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Froissart sets the boy's mind upon manhood and the man's mind upon
+ boyhood." An invaluable background for the future study of history. "The
+ Boy's Percy," being old ballads of War, Adventure and Love from Percy's
+ Reliques of Ancient English Poetry, edited by Sidney Lanier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He who walks in the way these following ballads point, will be manful in
+ necessary fight, loyal in love, generous to the poor, tender in the
+ household, prudent in living, merry upon occasion, and honest in all
+ things." "Tales of the Canterbury Pilgrims," retold from Chaucer and
+ others by E. J H. Darton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sometimes a pilgrimage seemed nothing but an excuse for a lively and
+ pleasant holiday, and the travellers often made themselves very merry on
+ the road, with their jests and songs, and their flutes and fiddles and
+ bagpipes." A good prose version much enjoyed by boys and girls. "Joan of
+ Arc," written and illustrated by M. Boutet de Monvel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A very fine interpretation of the life of this great heroine. A book to be
+ owned by every boy and girl. "When Knights Were Bold," by Eva March
+ Tappan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Telling of the training of a knight, of the daily life in a castle, of
+ pilgrimages and crusades, of merchant guilds, of schools and literature,
+ in short, a full picture of life in the days of chivalry. A good book to
+ supplement the romantic stories of the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adventurers in New Worlds
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A Book of Discovery," by M. B. Synge, fully illustrated from authentic
+ sources and with maps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A thoroughly fascinating book about the world's exploration from the
+ earliest times to the discovery of the South Pole. A book to be owned by
+ older boys and girls who like true tales of adventure. "A Short History of
+ Discovery From the Earliest Times to the Founding of the Colonies on the
+ American Continent," written and done into colour by Hendrik Willem van
+ Loon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dear Children: History is the most fascinating and entertaining and
+ instructive of arts." A book to delight children of all ages. "The Story
+ of Marco Polo," by Noah Brooks. "Olaf the Glorious," by Robert Leighton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An historical story of the Viking age. "The Conquerors of Mexico," retold
+ from Prescott's "Conquest of Mexico," by Henry Gilbert. "The Conquerors of
+ Peru," retold from Prescott's "Conquest of Peru," by Henry Gilbert.
+ "Vikings of the Pacific," by A. C. Laut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adventures of Bering the Dane; the outlaw hunters of Russia; Benyowsky,
+ the Polish pirate; Cook and Vancouver; Drake, and other soldiers of
+ fortune on the West Coast of America. "The Argonauts of Faith," by Basil
+ Mathews.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Adventures of the "Mayflower" Pilgrims. "Pathfinders of the West," by
+ A. C. Laut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The thrilling story of the adventures of the men who discovered the great
+ Northwest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Beyond the Old Frontier," by George Bird Grinnell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adventures of Indian Fighters, Hunters, and Fur-Traders on the Pacific
+ Coast. "A History of Travel in America," by Seymour Dunbar, illustrated
+ from old woodcuts and engravings. 4 volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An interesting book for children who wish to understand the problems and
+ difficulties their grandfathers had in the conquest of the West. This is a
+ standard book upon the subject of early travel, but is so readable as to
+ be of interest to older children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Golden Book of the Dutch Navigators," by Hendrik Willem van Loon.
+ Fully illustrated from old prints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The World's Progress in Invention&mdash;Art&mdash;Music.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gabriel and the Hour Book," by Evaleen Stein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How a boy learned from the monks how to grind and mix the colours for
+ illuminating the beautiful hand-printed books of the time and how he
+ himself made books that are now treasured in the museums of France and
+ England. "Historic Inventions," by Rupert S. Holland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of the invention of printing, the steam-engine, the
+ spinning-jenny, the safety-lamp, the sewing machine, electric light, and
+ other wonders of mechanism. "A History of Everyday Things in England,"
+ written and illustrated by Marjorie and C. V. B. Quennell. 2 Volumes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A most fascinating book, profusely illustrated in black and white and in
+ colour, giving a vivid picture of life in England from 1066-1799. It tells
+ of wars and of home-life, of amusements and occupations, of art and
+ literature, of science and invention. A book to be owned by every boy and
+ girl. "First Steps in the Enjoyment of Pictures," by Maude I. G. Oliver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A book designed to help children in their appreciation of art by giving
+ them technical knowledge of the media, the draughtsmanship, the
+ composition and the technique of well-known American pictures. "Knights of
+ Art," by Amy Steedman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of Italian Painters. Attractively illustrated in colour from old
+ masters. "Masters of Music," by Anna Alice Chapin. "Story Lives of Men of
+ Science," by F. J. Rowbotham. "All About Treasures of the Earth," by
+ Frederick A. Talbot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A book that tells many interesting things about coal, salt, iron, rare
+ metals and precious stones. "The Boys' Book of New Inventions," by Harry
+ E. Maule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An account of the machines and mechancial{sic} processes that are making
+ the history of our time more dramatic than that of any other age since the
+ world began. "Masters of Space," by Walter Kellogg Towers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stories of the wonders of telegraphing through the air and beneath the sea
+ with signals, and of speaking across continents. "All About Railways," by
+ F. S. Hartnell. "The Man-of-War, What She Has Done and What She Is Doing,"
+ by Commander E. Hamilton Currey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ True stories about galleys and pirate ships, about the Spanish Main and
+ famous frigates, and about slave-hunting expeditions in the days of old.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Democracy of To-Day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Land of Fair Play," by Geoffrey Parsons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This book aims to make clear the great, unseen services that America
+ renders each of us, and the active devotion each of us must yield in
+ return for America to endure." An excellent book on our government for
+ boys and girls. "The American Idea as Expounded by American Statesmen,"
+ compiled by Joseph B. Gilder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A good collection, including The Declaration of Independence, The
+ Constitution of the United States, the Monroe Doctrine, and the famous
+ speeches of Washington, Lincoln, Webster and Roosevelt. "The Making of an
+ American," by Jacob A. Riis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The true story of a Danish boy who became one of America's finest
+ citizens. "The Promised Land," by Mary Antin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A true story about a little immigrant. "Before we came, the New World knew
+ not the Old; but since we have begun to come, the Young World has taken
+ the Old by the hand, and the two are learning to march side by side,
+ seeking a common destiny."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Illustrated Histories in French.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ (The colourful and graphic pictures make these histories beloved by all
+ children whether they read the text or not.) "Voyages et Glorieuses
+ Decouvertes des Grands Navigateurs et Explorateurs Francais, illustre par
+ Edy Segrand." "Collection d'Albums Historiques." Louis XI, texte de
+ Georges Montorgueil, aquarelles de Job. Francois I, texte de G. Gustave
+ Toudouze, aquarelles de Job. Henri IV, texte de Georges Montorgueil,
+ aquarelles de H. Yogel. Richelieu, texte de Th. Cahu, aquarelles de
+ Maurice Leloir. Le Roy Soleil, texte de Gustave Toudouze, aquarelles de
+ Mauriae Leloir. Bonaparte, texte de Georges Montorgueil, aquarelles de
+ Job. "Fabliaux et Contes du Moyen-Age"; illustrations de A. Robida
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ INDEX {Not included}
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Story of Mankind, by Hendrik van Loon
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+</pre>
+ </body>
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