<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<div class='tnotes covernote'>
<p class='c000'><b>Transcriber’s Note:</b></p>
<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
</div>
<div class='titlepage'>
<div>
<h1 id='title' class='c001'>Washington and the Riddle of Peace</h1></div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c002'>
<div>BY</div>
<div><span class='large'>H. G. WELLS</span></div>
<div class='c003'><span class='large'><b>New York</b></span></div>
<div><span class='large'>THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span></div>
<div><span class='large'>1922</span></div>
<div><i>All rights reserved</i></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='nf-center-c0'>
<div class='nf-center c004'>
<div>Copyright, 1921,</div>
<div><span class='sc'>By</span> THE PRESS PUBLISHING COMPANY</div>
<div>AND</div>
<div>THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE.</div>
<div class='c002'>Copyright, 1922,</div>
<div><span class='sc'>By</span> H. G. WELLS.</div>
<div class='c002'>Set up and electrotyped. Published January, 1922.</div>
<div class='c002'>Printed in the United States of America</div>
</div></div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c003' /></div>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
<h2 id='INTRODUCTION' class='c005'>INTRODUCTION</h2></div>
<p class='c006'>These twenty-nine papers do not profess to
be a record or description of the Washington
Conference. They give merely the impressions
and fluctuating ideas of one visitor to that conference.
They show the reaction of that gathering
upon a mind keenly set upon the idea of
an organized world peace; they record phases
of enthusiasm, hope, doubt, depression and irritation.
They have scarcely been touched, except
to correct a word or a phrase here or
there; they are dated; in all essentials they are
the articles just as they appeared in the <cite>New
York World</cite>, the <cite>Chicago Tribune</cite>, and the other
American and European papers which first
gave them publicity. It is due to the enterprise
and driving energy of the <cite>New York World</cite>, be
it noted, that they were ever written at all. But
in spite of the daily change and renewal of
mood and attitude, inevitable under the circumstances,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>they do tell a consecutive story; they
tell of the growth and elaboration of a conviction
of how things can be done, and of how they
need to be done, if our civilization is indeed to
be rescued from the dangers that encompass it
and set again upon the path of progress. They
record—and in a very friendly and appreciative
spirit—the birth and unfolding of the “Association
of Nations” idea, the Harding idea,
of world pacification, they note some of the
peculiar circumstances of that birth, and they
study the chief difficulties on its way to realization.
It is, the writer believes, the most practical
and hopeful method of attacking this riddle
of the Sphinx that has hitherto been proposed.</p>
<div class='lg-container-r'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'><span class='sc'>H. G. Wells.</span></div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 id='CONTENTS' class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2></div>
<dl class='dl_1 c002'>
<br/>
<br/><SPAN href='#INTRODUCTION'>INTRODUCTION</SPAN>
<br/><SPAN href='#I'>I</SPAN>
<br/>THE IMMENSITY OF THE ISSUE AND THE TRIVIALITY OF MEN
<br/><SPAN href='#II'>II</SPAN>
<br/>ARMAMENTS THE FUTILITY OF MERE LIMITATION
<br/><SPAN href='#III'>III</SPAN>
<br/>THE TRAIL OF VERSAILLES TWO GREAT POWERS ARE SILENT AND ABSENT
<br/><SPAN href='#IV'>IV</SPAN>
<br/>THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER OF THE GREAT WAR
<br/><SPAN href='#V'>V</SPAN>
<br/>THE PRESIDENT AT ARLINGTON
<br/><SPAN href='#VI'>VI</SPAN>
<br/>THE FIRST MEETING
<br/><SPAN href='#VII'>VII</SPAN>
<br/>WHAT IS JAPAN?
<br/><SPAN href='#VIII'>VIII</SPAN>
<br/>CHINA IN THE BACKGROUND
<br/><SPAN href='#IX'>IX</SPAN>
<br/>THE FUTURE OF JAPAN
<br/><SPAN href='#X'>X</SPAN>
<br/>“SECURITY”—THE NEW AND BEAUTIFUL CATCHWORD
<br/><SPAN href='#XI'>XI</SPAN>
<br/>FRANCE IN THE LIMELIGHT
<br/><SPAN href='#XII'>XII</SPAN>
<br/>THUS FAR
<br/><SPAN href='#XIII'>XIII</SPAN>
<br/>THE LARGER QUESTION BEHIND THE CONFERENCE
<br/><SPAN href='#XIV'>XIV</SPAN>
<br/>THE REAL THREAT TO CIVILIZATION
<br/><SPAN href='#XV'>XV</SPAN>
<br/>THE POSSIBLE BREAKDOWN OF CIVILIZATION
<br/><SPAN href='#XVI'>XVI</SPAN>
<br/>WHAT OF AMERICA?
<br/><SPAN href='#XVII'>XVII</SPAN>
<br/>EBB TIDE AT WASHINGTON
<br/><SPAN href='#XVIII'>XVIII</SPAN>
<br/>AMERICA AND ENTANGLING ALLIANCES
<br/><SPAN href='#XIX'>XIX</SPAN>
<br/>AN ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS
<br/><SPAN href='#XX'>XX</SPAN>
<br/>FRANCE AND ENGLAND—THE PLAIN FACTS OF THE CASE
<br/><SPAN href='#XXI'>XXI</SPAN>
<br/>A REMINDER ABOUT WAR
<br/><SPAN href='#XXII'>XXII</SPAN>
<br/>SOME STIFLED VOICES
<br/><SPAN href='#XXIII'>XXIII</SPAN>
<br/>INDIA, THE BRITISH EMPIRE AND THE ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS
<br/><SPAN href='#XXIV'>XXIV</SPAN>
<br/>THE OTHER END OF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE—THE SIEVE FOR GOOD INTENTIONS
<br/><SPAN href='#XXV'>XXV</SPAN>
<br/>AFRICA AND THE ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS
<br/><SPAN href='#XXVI'>XXVI</SPAN>
<br/>THE FOURTH PLENARY SESSION
<br/><SPAN href='#XXVII'>XXVII</SPAN>
<br/>ABOUT THE WAR DEBTS
<br/><SPAN href='#XXVIII'>XXVIII</SPAN>
<br/>THE FOUNDATION STONE AND THE BUILDING
<br/><SPAN href='#XXIX'>XXIX</SPAN>
<br/>WHAT A STABLY ORGANIZED WORLD PEACE MEANS FOR MANKIND
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
<h2 id='I' class='c005'>I<br/> THE IMMENSITY OF THE ISSUE AND THE TRIVIALITY OF MEN</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 7.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The conference nominally for the limitation
of armaments that now gathers at Washington
may become a cardinal event in the history of
mankind. It may mark a turning point in
human affairs or it may go on record as one
of the last failures to stave off the disasters
and destruction that gather about our race.</p>
<p class='c007'>In August, 1914, an age of insecure progress
and accumulation came to an end. When at
last, on the most momentous summer night in
history, the long preparations of militarism
burst their bounds and the little Belgian village
Vise went up in flames, men said: “This is a
catastrophe.” But they found it hard to anticipate
the nature of the catastrophe. They
<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>thought for the most part of the wounds and
killing and burning of war and imagined that
when at last the war was over we should count
our losses and go on again much as we did before
1914.</p>
<p class='c007'>As well might a little shopkeeper murder his
wife in the night and expect to carry on “business
as usual” in the morning. “Business as
usual”—that was the catchword in Britain in
1914; of all the catchwords of the world it carries
now the heaviest charge of irony.</p>
<p class='c007'>The catastrophe of 1914 is still going on. It
does not end; it increases and spreads. This
winter more people will suffer dreadful things
and more people will die untimely through the
clash of 1914 than suffered and died in the first
year of the war. It is true that the social collapse
of Russia in 1917 and the exhaustion of
food and munitions in Central Europe in 1918
produced a sort of degradation and enfeeblement
of the combatant efforts of our race and
that a futile conference at Versailles settled
nothing, with an air of settling everything, but
that was no more an end to disaster than it
<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>would be if a man who was standing up and receiving
horrible wounds were to fall down and
writhe and bleed in the dust. It would be
merely a new phase of disaster. Since 1919
this world has not so much healed its wounds
as realized its injuries.</p>
<p class='c007'>Chief among these injuries is the progressive
economic breakdown, the magnitude of which
we are only beginning to apprehend. The
breakdown is a real decay that spreads and
spreads. In a time of universal shortage there
is an increasing paralysis in production; and
there is a paralysis of production because the
monetary system of the world, which was sustained
by the honest co-operation of Governments,
is breaking down. The fluctuations in
the real value of money become greater and
greater and they shake and shatter the entire
fabric of social co-operation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Our civilization is, materially, a cash and
credit system, dependent on men’s confidence in
the value of money. But now money fails us
and cheats us; we work for wages and they give
us uncertain paper. No one now dare make
<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>contracts ahead; no one can fix up a stable
wages agreement; no one knows what one hundred
dollars or francs or pounds will mean in
two years’ time.</p>
<p class='c007'>What is the good of saving? What is the
good of foresight? Business and employment
become impossible. Unless money can be
steadied and restored, our economic and social
life will go on disintegrating, and it can be
restored only by a world effort.</p>
<p class='c007'>But such a world effort to restore business
and prosperity is <i>only possible between governments
sincerely at peace</i>, and because of the
failure of Versailles there is no such sincere
peace. Everywhere the Governments, and notably
Japan and France, arm. Amidst the
steady disintegration of the present system of
things, they prepare for fresh wars, wars that
can have only one end—an extension of the
famine and social collapse that have already
engulfed Russia to the rest of the world.</p>
<p class='c007'>In Russia, in Austria, in many parts of Germany,
this social decay is visible in actual
ruins, in broken down railways and suchlike
<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>machinery falling out of use. But even in
Western Europe, in France and England, there
is a shabbiness, there is a decline visible to any
one with a keen memory.</p>
<p class='c007'>The other day my friend Mr. Charlie Chaplin
brought his keen observant eyes back to
London, after an absence of ten years.</p>
<p class='c007'>“People are not laughing and careless here
as they used to be,” he told me. “It isn’t the
London I remember. They are anxious. Something
hangs over them.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Coming as I do from Europe to America, I
am amazed at the apparent buoyancy and
abundance of New York. The place seems to
possess an inexhaustible vitality. But this towering,
thundering, congested city, with such a
torrent of traffic and such a concourse of people
as I have never seen before, is, after all,
the European door of America; it draws this
superabundant and astounding life from trade,
from a trade whose roots are dying.</p>
<p class='c007'>When one looks at New York its assurance
is amazing; when one reflects we realize its tremendous
peril. It is going on—as London is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>going on—by accumulated inertia. With the
possible exception of London, the position of
New York seems to me the most perilous of
that of any city in the world. What is to happen
to this immense crowd of people if the trade
that feeds it ebbs? As assuredly it will ebb
unless the decline of European money and business
can be arrested, unless, that is, the world
problem of trade and credit can be grappled
with as a world affair.</p>
<p class='c007'>The world’s economic life, its civilization, embodied
in its great towns, is disintegrating and
collapsing through the strains of the modern
war threat and of the disunited control of modern
affairs.</p>
<p class='c007'>This in general terms is the situation of mankind
today; this is the situation, the tremendous
and crucial situation, that President Harding,
the head and spokesman of what is now
the most powerful and influential state in the
world, has called representatives from most of
the states in the world to Washington to
discuss.</p>
<p class='c007'>Whatever little modifications and limitations
<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>the small cunning of diplomatists may impose
upon the terms of reference of the conference,
the plain common sense of mankind will insist
that its essential inquiry is, “What are we to
do, if anything can possibly be done, to arrest
and reverse the slide toward continuing war
preparation and war and final social collapse?”
And you would imagine that this momentous
conference would gather in a mood of exalted
responsibility, with every conceivable help and
every conceivable preparation to grasp the
enormous issues involved.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us dismiss any such delusion from our
minds.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us face a reality too often ignored in the
dignified discussion of such business as this
Washington Conference, and that is this: that
the human mind takes hold of such very big
questions as the common peace of the earth and
the general security of mankind with very great
reluctance and that it leaves go with extreme
alacrity.</p>
<p class='c007'>We are all naturally trivial creatures. We
do not live from year to year; we live from day
<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>to day. Our minds naturally take short views
and are distracted by little, immediate issues.
We forget with astonishing facility. And this
is as true of the high political persons who will
gather at Washington as it is of any overworked
clerk who will read about the conference
in a street car or on the way home to supper
and bed. These big questions affect everybody,
and also they are too big for anybody.
A great intellectual and moral effect is required
if they are to be dealt with in any effectual
manner.</p>
<p class='c007'>I find the best illustration of this incurable
drift toward triviality in myself. In the world
of science the microscope helps the telescope
and the infinitely little illuminates the infinitely
great.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let me put myself under the lens: Exhibit 1—If
any one has reason to focus the whole of
his mental being upon this Washington Conference
it is I. It is my job to attend to it and
to think of it and of nothing else. Whatever I
write about it, wise or foolish, will be conspicuously
published in a great number of newspapers
<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>and will do much to make or mar my
reputation. Intellectually, I am convinced
of the supreme possibilities of the occasion.
It may make or mar mankind. The smallest
and the greatest of motives march together;
therefore my self-love and my care for mankind.
And the occasion touches all my future
happiness.</p>
<p class='c007'>If this downward drift toward disorder and
war is not arrested, in a few years’ time it will
certainly catch my sons and probably mutilate
or kill them; and my wife and I, instead of
spending our declining years in comfort, will be
involved in the general wretchedness and possibly
perish in some quite miserable fashion, as
thousands of just our sort of family have already
perished in Austria and Russia. This is
indeed the outlook for most of us if these
efforts to secure permanent peace which are
now being concentrated at Washington fail.</p>
<p class='c007'>Here surely are reasons enough, from the
most generous to the most selfish, for putting
my whole being, with the utmost concentration,
into this business. You might imagine I think
<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>nothing but conference, do nothing but work
upon the conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>Well, I find I don’t.</p>
<p class='c007'>Before such evils as now advance upon humanity,
man’s imagination seems scarcely more
adequate than that of the park deer I have seen
feeding contentedly beside the body of a shot
companion.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am, when I recall my behavior in the last
few weeks, astonished at my own levity. I
have been immensely interested by the voyage
across the Atlantic; I have been tremendously
amused by the dissertations of a number of
fellow-travellers upon the little affair of Prohibition;
I have been looking up old friends and
comparing the New York City of today with the
New York City of fifteen years ago. I spent an
afternoon loitering along Fifth Avenue, childishly
pleased by the shops and the crowd, I find
myself tempted to evade luncheon where I shall
hear a serious discussion of the Pacific question,
because I want to explore the mysteries of
a chop suey without outside assistance.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yet no one knows better than I do that this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>very attractive, glitteringly attractive, thundering,
towering city is in the utmost danger.
Within a very few years the same chill wind of
economic disaster that has wrecked Petersburg
and brought death to Vienna and Warsaw
may be rusting and tarnishing all this glistening,
bristling vitality. In a little while, within
my lifetime, New York City may stand even
more gaunt, ruinous, empty and haunted than
that stricken and terrible ruin, Petersburg.</p>
<p class='c007'>My mind was inadequate against the confident
reality of a warm October afternoon,
against bright clothes and endless automobiles,
against the universal suggestion that everything
would shine on forever. And my mind is
something worse than thus inadequate; I find it
is deliberately evasive. It tries to run away
from the task I have set it. I find my mind, at
the slightest pretext, slipping off from this difficult
tangle of problems through which the
Washington Conference has to make its way.</p>
<p class='c007'>For instance, I have got it into my head that
I shall owe it to myself to take a holiday after
the conference, and two beautiful words have
<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>taken possession of my mind—Florida and the
Everglades. A vision of exploration amidst
these wonderful sun-soaked swamps haunts me.
I consult a guide book for information about
Washington and the procedure of Congress,
and I discover myself reading about Miami or
Indian River.</p>
<p class='c007'>So it is we are made. A good half of those
who read this and who have been pulling themselves
together to think about the hard tasks
and heavy dangers of international affairs will
brighten up at this mention of a holiday in the
Everglades—either because they have been
there or because they would like to go. They
will want to offer experiences and suggestions
and recommend hotels and guides.</p>
<p class='c007'>And apart from this triviality of the attention,
this pathetic disposition to get as directly
as possible to the nearest agreeable thoughts
which I am certain every statesman and politician
at the conference shares in some measure
with the reader and myself, we are also encumbered,
every one of us, with prejudices and
prepossessions.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>There is patriotism—the passion that makes
us see human affairs as a competitive game instead
of a common interest; a game in which
“our side,” by fair means or foul, has to get
the better—inordinately—of the rest of mankind.
For my own part, though I care very
little for the British Empire, which I think a
temporary, patched-up thing, I have a passionate
pride in being of the breed that produced
such men as Shakespeare, Milton, Bacon, Cromwell,
Newton, Washington, Darwin, Nelson and
Lincoln. And I love the peculiar humor and
kindly temper of an English crowd and the soft
beauty of an English countryside with a strong,
possessive passion.</p>
<p class='c007'>I find it hard to think that other peoples matter
quite as much as the English. I want to
serve the English and to justify the English.
Intellectually I know better, but no man’s intelligence
is continually dominant; fatigue him
or surprise him, and habits and emotions take
control. And not only that I have this
bias which will always tend to make me run
crooked in favor of my own people, but also
<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>I come to Washington with deep, irrational
hostilities.</p>
<p class='c007'>For example: Political events have exasperated
me with the present Polish Government.
It is an unhappy thing that Poland should rise
from being the unwilling slave of German and
Russian reaction to become the willing tool
of French reaction. But that is no reason why
one should drift into a dislike of Poland and all
things Polish, and because Poland is so ill-advised
as to grab more than she is entitled to,
that one should be disposed to give her less than
she is entitled to. Yet I do find a drift in that
direction.</p>
<p class='c007'>And prejudice soon breaks away into downright
quarrelsomeness. It is amusing or distressing,
as you will, to find how easily I, as a
professional peacemaker, can be tempted into a
belligerent attitude. “Of course,” I say, ruffled
by some argument, “if Japan chooses to be
unreasonable”—</p>
<p class='c007'>I make no apologies for this autobiographical
tone. It is easier and less contentious to dissect
one’s self than to set to work on any one
<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>else for anatomical ends. This is Exhibit No.
1. We are all like this. There are no demigods
or supermen in our world superior to such trivialities,
limitations, prejudices and patriotisms.
We have all got them, as we have all got livers.</p>
<p class='c007'>Every soul that gathers in Washington will
have something of that disposition to get away
to the immediately pleasant, will be disposed to
take a personal advantage, will have a bias for
race and country, will have imperfectly suppressed
racial and national animosities, will be
mentally hurried and crowded. That mental
hurrying and crowding has to be insisted upon.</p>
<p class='c007'>This will be a great time for Washington, no
doubt, to have a very gay and exciting time. It
becomes the focus of the world’s affairs. All
sorts of interesting people are heading for
Washington, bright-eyed and expectant. There
will be lunches, dinners, receptions and such
like social occasions in great abundance, dramatic,
and encounters, flirtations, scandals,
jealousies and quarrels. Quiet thought, reconsideration—will
Washington afford any hole or
cover for such things? A most distracting time
<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>it will be and it will be extraordinarily difficult
to keep its real significance in mind.</p>
<p class='c007'>So let us repeat here its real significance.</p>
<p class='c007'>The great war has struck a blow at the very
foundations of our civilization; it has shattered
the monetary system which is the medium of all
our economic life. A rotting down of civilization
is spreading now very rapidly and nothing
is being done to arrest it. Production stagnates
and dwindles. This can only be restored
by the frank collective action of the chief powers
of the world.</p>
<p class='c007'>At present the chief powers of the world
show no signs of the collective action demanded.
They are still obsessed by old-fashioned ideas
of national sovereignty and national competition,
and though all verge on bankruptcy, they
maintain and develop fresh armies and fleets.
That is to say, they are in the preparatory
stage of another war. So long as this divided
and threatening state of affairs continues there
can be no stability, no real general recovery;
shortages will increase, famine will spread;
towns, cities, communications will decay; increasing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>masses of starving unemployed will
resort to more and more desperate and violent
protests, until they assume a quasi-revolutionary
character. Education will ebb, and social
security dwindle and fade into anarchy. Civilization
as we know it will go under and a new
Dark Age begin.</p>
<p class='c007'>And this fate is not threatening civilization;
it is happening to civilization before our eyes.
The ship of civilization is not going to sink in
five years’ time or in fifty years’ time. It is
sinking now. Russia is under the water line;
she has ceased to produce, she starves; large
areas of Eastern Europe and Asia sink toward
the same level; the industrial areas of Germany
face a parallel grim decline; the winter will be
the worst on record for British labor. The
pulse of American business weakens.</p>
<p class='c007'>To face which situation in the world’s affairs,
this crowd of hastily compiled representatives,
and their associates, dependents and satellites,
now gathers at Washington. They are all,
from President Harding down to the rawest
stenographer girl, human beings. That is to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>say, they are all inattentive, moody, trivial,
selfish, evasive, patriotic, prejudiced creatures,
unable to be intelligently selfish even, for more
than a year or so ahead, after the nature of
our Exhibit No. 1.</p>
<p class='c007'>Every one has some sort of blinding personal
interest to distort the realities that he has to
face. Politicians have to think of their personal
prestige and their party associations;
naval and military experts have to think of
their careers.</p>
<p class='c007'>One may argue it is as good a gathering as
our present circumstances permit. Probably
there is some good will for all mankind in every
one who comes. Probably not one is altogether
blind to the tremendous disaster that towers
over us, but all are forgetful.</p>
<p class='c007'>And yet this Washington Conference may
prove to be the nearest approach the human
will and intelligence has yet made to a resolute
grapple against fate upon this planet. We
cannot make ourselves wiser than we are, but
in this phase of universal danger we can at
least school ourselves to the resolve to be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>charitable and frank with one another to the
best of our ability, to be forgiving debtors,
willing to retreat from hasty and impossible
assumptions, seeking patience in hearing and
generosity in action. High aims and personal
humility may yet save mankind.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>
<h2 id='II' class='c005'>II<br/> ARMAMENTS<br/> <span class='small'>THE FUTILITY OF MERE LIMITATION</span></h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 8.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>It would seem that the peculiar circumstances
of its meeting demand that the Washington
Conference should begin with a foregone
futility, the discussion of the limitation of
armaments and of the restrictions of warfare
in certain directions, while nations are still to
remain sovereign and free to make war and
while there exists no final and conclusive court
of decision for international disputes except
warfare.</p>
<p class='c007'>A number of people do really seem to believe
that we can go on with all the various states of
the earth still as sovereign and independent of
each other as wild beasts in a jungle, with no
common rule and no common law, and yet that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>we can contrive it that they will agree to make
war only in a mild and mitigated fashion, after
due notice and according to an approved set of
regulations. Such ideas are quite seriously entertained
and they are futile and dangerous
ideas. A committee of the London League of
Nations Union, for example, has been debating
with the utmost gravity whether the use of poison
gas and the sinking of neutral ships to enforce
a blockade should be permitted and
whether “all modern developments” in warfare
should not be abolished. “The feasibility
of preventing secret preparations and the advantages
of surprise were also considered.”
It is as if warfare was a game.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is a little difficult to reason respectfully
against that sort of project. One is moved
rather to add helpful suggestions in the same
vein. As for example, that no hostilities shall
be allowed to begin or continue except in the
presence of a League of Nations referee, who
shall be marked plainly on the chest and pants
with the red cross of Geneva and who—for the
convenience of aircraft—shall carry an open
<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>sunshade similarly adorned. He shall be furnished
with a powerful whistle or hand trumpet
audible above the noise of modern artillery, and
military operations shall be at once arrested
when this whistle is blown. Contravention of
the rules laid down by the League of Nations
shall be penalized according to the gravity of
the offense, with penalties ranging from, let us
say, an hour’s free bombardment of the offender’s
position to the entire forces of the enemy
being addressed very severely by the referee
and ordered off the field.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the event of either combatant winning the
war, outright by illegitimate means, it might
further be provided that such combatant should
submit to a humiliating peace, just as if the
war had been lost.</p>
<p class='c007'>Unhappily war is not a game but the grimmest
of realities, and no power on earth exists to
prevent a nation which is fighting for existence
against another nation from resorting to any
expedient however unfair, cruel and barbarous
to enforce victory or avert disaster. Success
justifies every expedient in warfare, and you
<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>cannot prevent that being so. A nation, hoping
to win and afterward make friends with its
enemy or solicitous for the approval of some
powerful neutral, may conceivably refrain from
effective but objectionable expedients, but that
is a voluntary and strategic restraint. The fact
remains that war is an ultimate and illimitable
thing; a war that can be controlled is a war that
could have been stopped or prevented. If our
race can really bar the use of poison gas it can
bar the use of any kind of weapon. It is indeed
easier to enforce peace altogether than any
lesser limitation of war.</p>
<p class='c007'>But it is argued that this much may be true
nevertheless, that if the nations of the world
will agree beforehand not to prepare for particular
sorts of war or if they will agree to reduce
their military and naval equipment to a
minimum, that this will operate powerfully in
preventing contraventions and in a phase of
popular excitement arresting the rush toward
war. The only objection to this admirable proposal
is that no power which has desires or
rights that can only be satisfied or defended, so
<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>far as it knows, by war, will ever enter into
such a disarmament agreement in good faith.</p>
<p class='c007'>Of course countries contemplating war and
having no serious intention of disarming effectually
will enter quite readily into conferences
upon disarmament, but they will do so partly
because of the excellent propaganda value of
such a participation and mainly because of the
chance it gives them of some restriction which
will hamper a possible antagonist much more
than it will hamper themselves. For instance,
Japan would probably be very pleased to reduce
her military expenditure to quite small figures
if the United States reduced theirs to the same
amount, because the cost per head of maintaining
soldiers under arms is much less in Japan
than in America; and she would be still more
ready to restrict naval armament to ships with
a radius of action of 2,000 miles or less because
that would give her a free hand with China and
the Philippines. That sort of haggling was going
on between Britain and Germany at The
Hague at intervals before the great war.
Neither party believed in the peaceful intentions
<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>of the other nor regarded these negotiations
as anything but strategic moves. And as
things were in Europe it was difficult to regard
them in any other way.</p>
<p class='c007'>No, the limitation of armaments quite as
much as the mitigation of warfare is impossible
until war has been made impossible, and then
the complete extinction of armaments follows
without discussion; and war can only be made
impossible when the powers of the world have
done what the thirteen original States of American
Union found they had to do after their independence
was won, and that is set up a common
law and rule over themselves. Such a
project is a monstrously difficult one no doubt,
and it flies in the face of great masses of patriotic
cant and of natural prejudices and natural
suspicion, but it is a thing that can be done. It
is the only thing that can be done to avert the
destruction of civilization through war and war
preparation. Disarmament and the limitation
of warfare without such a merging of sovereignty
look, at the first glance, easier and
more modest proposals, but they suffer from
<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>the fatal defect of absolute impracticability.
They are things that cannot be made working
realities. A world that could effectually disarm
would be a world already at one, and disarmament
would be of no importance whatever.
Given stable international relations, the world
would put aside its armaments as naturally as
a man takes off his coat in winter on entering
a warm house.</p>
<p class='c007'>And as a previous article has pointed out,
wars, preparations for war and the threat of
war are only the more striking aspect of human
disunion at the present time. The smashing up
of the world’s currency system and the progressive
paralysis of industry that follows on
that is a much more immediate disaster. That
is rushing upon us. This war talk between
Japan and America may end as abruptly as the
snarling of two dogs overtaken by a flood.
There may not be another great war after all,
because both in Japan and America social disruption
may come first. Upon financial and
economic questions the powers of the earth
must get together very quickly now or perish;
<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>the signs get more imperative every day; and if
they get together upon these common issues,
then they will have little reason or excuse for
not taking up the merely international issues
at the same time.</p>
<p class='c007'>There is a curious exaggeration of respect
for patriotism and patriotic excesses in all
these projects for disarmament and the mitigation
of warfare. We have to “consider patriotic
susceptibilities”; that is the stereotyped
formula of objection to the plain necessity of
overriding the present barbaric sovereignty of
separate states by a world rule and a world law
protecting the common interests of the common
people of the world. In practice these “patriotic
susceptibilities”; will often be found to resolve
themselves into nothing more formidable
than the conceit and self-importance of some
foreign office official. In general they are little
more than a snarling suspiciousness of foreign
people. Most people are patriotically excitable,
it is in our human nature, but that no more excuses
this excessive deference to patriotism
than it would excuse a complete tolerance of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>boozing and of filthy vices and drunken and
lustful outrages because we are all more or less
susceptible to thirst and desire. And while
there is all this deference for the most ramshackle
and impromptu of nationalisms there is
a complete disregard of the influence and of the
respect due to one of the greatest and most concentrated
interests of our modern world, the
finance, the science, the experts, the labor, often
very specialized and highly skilled, of the armament
and munitions and associated trades and
industries.</p>
<p class='c007'>So far as I can ascertain, the advocates of
what I may call mere disarmament propose to
scrap this mass of interests more or less completely,
to put its tremendous array of factories,
arsenals, dockyards and so forth out of
action, to obliterate its wide-reaching net of
financial relationships, to break up its carefully
gathered staffs, and to pour all its labor, its
trained engineers and sailors and gunners and
so forth into the great flood of unemployment
into which our civilization is already sinking.
And they do not seem to grasp how subtle, various
<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>and effective the resistance of this great
complex of capable human beings to any such
treatment is likely to be. In my supply of
League of Nations literature I find only two intimations
of this real obstacle to the world common
weal. One is a suggestion that there
should be no private enterprise in the production
of war material at all, and the other that
armament concerns shall not own newspapers.
As a Socialist I am charmed by the former proposal,
which would in effect nationalize, among
others, the iron and steel and chemical industries,
but as a practical man I have to confess
that the organization of no existing state is yet
at the level of efficiency necessary if the transfer
is to be a hopeful one, and so far as the
newspaper restriction goes, it would surely
pass the wit of man to devise rules that would
prevent a great banking combination from controlling
armament firms on the one hand while
it financed newspapers on the other.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yet the fact remains that this great complex
of interests, round and about the armaments interest,
is the most real of all the oppositions to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>a world federation. It supplies substance, direction
and immediate rewards to the frothy
emotions of patriotism; it rules by dividing us
and it realizes that its existence in its present
form is conditional upon the continuance of
our suspicions and divisions. It does not positively
want or seek war, but it wants a continuing
expectation of and preparation for war.
On the other hand its ruling intelligences must
be coming to understand that in the end it cannot
escape sharing in the economic and social
smash down to which we are all now sliding so
rapidly. It is too high a type of organization
to be altogether blind and obdurate. It will
not, of course, be represented officially at Washington
for what it is, but in the form of pseudo-patriotic,
naval, military and financial experts
it will be better represented than any other side
of human nature. One of the most interesting
things to do at the conference will be to watch
its activities.</p>
<p class='c007'>How much can we common men ask for and
hope for from this great power? Self extinction
is too much—even if it were desirable.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>But it is reasonable to demand a deflection of
its activities to meet the urgent needs of our
present dangers. We do not want the extinction
of this great body of business, metallurgical,
chemical, engineering and disciplined activities,
but we do want its rapid diversion from
all too easily attained destructive ends to creative
purposes now. A world peace scheme
that does not open out an immediate prospect
for the release of financial and engineering
energy upon world-wide undertakings is a hopeless
peace scheme. Enterprise must out. Were
this world one federated state concerned about
our common welfare there would be no overwhelming
difficulty in canalizing all this force
now spent upon armament in the direction of
improved transport and communications generally
into the making of great bridges, tunnels
and the like, into the rebuilding of our cities
upon better lines, into the irrigation and fertilization
of the earth’s deserts and so forth. The
way to world peace lies not in fighting and destroying
the armament interests but in turning
them to world service.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>But to do such a thing requires a united financial
and economic effort; it cannot be done
nationally by little groups of patriots all scheming
against one another. It must be big business
for world interests, unencumbered by national
frontiers, or it is impossible.</p>
<p class='c007'>All these considerations you see converge on
the conclusion that there is no solution of the
problem of war, no possibility of a world recovery,
no possibility of arresting the rapid disintegration
of our civilization, except a Pax
Mundi, a federated world control, sufficiently
authoritative to keep any single nation in order
and sufficiently coherent to express a world
idea. We need an effective world “Association
of Nations,” to use President Harding’s
phrase, or we shall perish. And even in this
fantastic dream of Mere Disarmament, of a
world of little independent states, all sovereign,
all competing against each other and all carrying
on a mean financial and commercial warfare
against each other to the common impoverishment,
all standing in the way of any large
modern-spirited handling of modern needs, yet
<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>all remaining magically disarmed and never
making actual war on each other—even if this
dream were possible, it is still utterly detestable—more
detestable even than our present dangers
and miseries. For if there are any things
in life worse than pain, fear and destruction,
they are boredom, pettiness and inanity, and
such would be the quality of such a world.
However much the diplomatists at Washington
may seek to ignore the fact, may fence their discussion
within narrowly phrased agenda, and
rule this, that and the other vital aspect outside
the scope of the conference, the fact remains
that there is no way out, no way of escape for
mankind from the monstrous miseries and far
more monstrous dangers of the present time
except an organized international co-operation,
based upon a frank and bold resolve to turn
men’s minds from ancient jealousies and animosities
to the common aims and the common
future of our race.</p>
<p class='c007'>If the Washington Conference cannot rise to
the level of that idea, then it were better that
the Conference never gathered together.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>
<h2 id='III' class='c005'>III<br/> THE TRAIL OF VERSAILLES<br/> <span class='small'>TWO GREAT POWERS ARE SILENT AND ABSENT</span></h2></div>
<p class='c006'>Washington, the guide books say, was
planned by Major Pierre Charles L’Enfant in
imitation of Versailles. If so, it has broken
away from his intentions. I know Versailles
pretty well, and I have gone about Washington
looking vainly for anything more than the remotest
resemblance. There is something European
about Washington, I admit, an Italianate
largeness, as though a Roman design has been
given oxygen and limitless space. It is a capital
in the expanded Latin style. It has none of
the vertical uplift of a real American city. But
Versailles!</p>
<p class='c007'>Versailles was the home and embodiment of
the old French Grand Monarchy and of a Foreign
Policy that sought to dominate, Frenchify
<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>and “Versaillize” the world. A visit to Versailles
is part of one’s world education, a visit
to the rather faded, rather pretentious magnificence
of its terraces, to that Hall of Mirrors, all
plastered over with little oblongs of looking-glass,
which was once considered so wonderful,
to the stuffy, secretive royal apartments with
their convenient back stairs, to the poor foolishness
of the Queen’s toy village, the Little Trianon.
A century and a half ago the people of
France, wasted and worn by incessant wars of
aggression, weary of a Government that was an
intolerable burden to them and a nuisance to all
Europe, went to Versailles in a passion and
dragged French Policy out of Versailles for a
time.</p>
<p class='c007'>Unhappily it went back there.</p>
<p class='c007'>In 1871, when Germany struck down the
tawdry imperialism of Napoleon III (who was
also for setting up Emperors in the New
World) the Germans had the excessive bad
taste to proclaim a New German Empire in the
Hall of Mirrors. So that Versailles became
more than ever the symbol of the age-long,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>dreary, pitiful quarrel of the French and Germans
for the inheritance of “the Empire” that
has gone on ever since the death of Charlemagne.
There the glory of France had shone;
there the glory of France had been eclipsed. I
visited Versailles one autumnal day in 1912,
and it was then a rather mouldy, disheartened,
empty, picturesque show place, pervaded by
memories of flounces, furbelows, wigs and red
heels and also by the stronger, less pleasant
flavor of that later Prussian triumph.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was surely the least propitious place in the
whole world for the making of a world peace in
1919. It was inevitable that there the Rhine
frontier should loom larger than all Asia and
that the German people should be kept waiting
outside to learn what vindictive punishment
victorious France designed for them.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Peace of Versailles was not a settlement
of the world, it was the crowning of the French
revanche. And since Russia had always been
below the horizon of Versailles it was as inevitable
that the Russian people, who had saved
France from utter defeat in 1914, who had given
<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>far more dead to the war than France and
America put together, and who had collapsed
at last, utterly exhausted by their stupendous
war efforts, should be considered merely as the
defaulting debtors of France. Their Government
had incurred vast liabilities chiefly in
preparation for this very war which had restored
France to her former glorious ascendancy
over Germany. And now a new, ungracious
Government in Russia not only declared it
could not pay up but refused to pretend that it
had ever meant to perform this impossible feat.
There could be no dealing with such a Government.
The German people and the Russian
people alike had no voice at Versailles,
and the affairs of the world were settled with a
majestic disregard of these outcast and fallen
powers.</p>
<p class='c007'>They were settled so magnificently and badly
that now the Washington Conference, whatever
limitations it may propose to set upon itself,
has in effect to review and, if it can, mend or
replace that appalling settlement. The Washington
conference has practically to revise the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>verdicts of Versailles, in a fresher air and with
a wider outlook.</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not know how near future historians
may come to saying that the Washington conference
was planned in imitation of that Versailles
conference, but it certainly does start out
with one most unfortunate resemblance. There
seems to be the same tacit assumption that it
is possible to come to some permanent settlement
of the world’s affairs with no representation
of either the German or the Russian people
at the conference. The Japanese, the Italians,
the French, the Americans and the British, assisted
by modest suggestions from such small
sections of humanity as China and Spanish
America, are sitting down to arrangements that
will amount practically to a settlement of the
world’s affairs, and they are doing so without
consulting these two great peoples, and quite
without their consent and assistance. This
surely runs counter to the fundamental principle
of both American and British political life—that
is to say, the principle of government
with the consent of the governed—and it is indeed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>an altogether deplorable intention. In
some form these two great peoples will have
to be associated with any permanent settlement,
and it will be much more difficult to secure
their assent to any arrangement arrived at
without even their formal co-operation.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is necessary to remind ourselves of certain
elementary facts about Germany and
Russia and their position in the world today.
They are facts within the knowledge of all, and
yet they seem to be astonishingly forgotten in
very much of the discussion of the Washington
conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>First, let us recall certain points about Germany.
The German people occupy the most
central position in Europe; they exceed in numbers
any other European people except the Russians;
their educational level has been as high
or higher than any other people in the world;
they are, as a people, honest, industrious, and
intelligent; upon their social and political well-being
and economic prosperity the prosperity
of Britain, Scandinavia, Russia, Italy—and in a
lesser degree France—depends. It is impossible
<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>to destroy such a people, it is impossible to
wipe them off the map, but it is possible to ruin
them economically and socially. And if Germany
is ruined most of Europe is ruined.</p>
<p class='c007'>Germany has been overthrown in a great war
and it will be well to recall here certain elementary
facts about that war. Under a particularly
aggressive and offensive imperialism system
the Germans were plunged into conflict
with most of the rest of the civilized world.
But it was repeatedly declared by the British
and by the Americans, if not by others of the
combatants, that they fought not against the
German people but against this German imperialism.
The British war propaganda in particular
did its utmost to saturate Germany with
that assurance and to hold out the promise of
generous treatment and a complete restoration
of friendship <i>provided there was a German renunciation
of imperialism and militarism</i>.</p>
<p class='c007'>Germany, exhausted and beaten, surrendered
in 1918 upon the strength of these promises and
upon the similar promises implied in President
Wilson’s Fourteen Points. The declared ends
<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>of the war had been achieved. The Kaiser
bolted, and Germany repented of him publicly
and unequivocally.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the conference at Versailles treated these
promises that had been made to Germany as
mere “scraps of paper.” The peace imposed
upon the young German republic was a punitive
peace, exactly as punitive as though there
were still a Kaiser in Berlin; it was a vindictive
reversal of the Franco-German treaty of
1871 without a shred of recognition or tolerance
for the chastened Germany that faced her conquerors.
The Germans were dealt with as a
race of moral monsters, though no one in his
senses really believes they are very different,
man for man, from English, French or American
people; every German was held to be individually
responsible for the war, though every
Frenchman, Englishman and American knows
that when one’s country fights one has to fight,
and it is quite natural to fight for it whether it
is in the right or not; and a sustained attack of
oppressive occupations, dismemberment, and
impossible demands was begun and still goes on
<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>upon the shattered German civilization—which
is at least as vitally necessary to the world as
the French. The British and French nationalist
press openly confess that they do not intend
to give Germany a chance of recovery. The
European Allies have now been kicking the
prostrate body of Germany for three years; in
a little while they will be kicking a dead body;
and since they are linked geographically to
their victim almost as closely as the Siamese
twins were linked together, they will share that
victim’s decay.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is high time that this barbaric insanity,
this prolongation of the combat after surrender,
should cease and that the best minds and
wills of Germany and the very reasonable republican
government she has set up for herself
should be called into consultation. I could
wish that Washington could so far rise above
Versailles as presently to make that invitation.
Sooner or later it will have to be made if the
peace of the world is to be secured.</p>
<p class='c007'>The absence of Russia from the Washington
conference is an even graver weakness. People
<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>seem to have forgotten altogether how the Russians
bore the brunt of the opening years of
the great war. Their rapid offensive in 1914
saved Paris and saved the little British Army
from a disastrous retreat to the sea. The debt
of gratitude Britain and France owe to Russia’s
“Unknown Warrior,” that poor unhonored
hero and martyr, is incalculable. But for
Russia Germany would probably have won the
war outright before the end of 1916. It was
the blood and suffering of the Russian people
saved victory for the Allies; those incredible
soldiers fought often without artillery support,
without rifle ammunition, without boots or food,
under conditions almost inconceivable to the
well-supplied French and British and Americans
of the western front. And their tale of
killed and wounded exceeds enormously that of
any other combatant. In 1917 Russia collapsed;
she was bled white, and she remained
collapsed in spite of the sedulous kicking of her
allies to rouse her to further efforts. The intolerable
Rasputin-Czarism went down in the
disaster. After a phase of extreme disorder,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>and very largely because of the British hesitation
to support the Kerensky Government by
bold naval action in the Baltic, the hard, tyrannous,
doctrinaire government of the Bolsheviki
took control.</p>
<p class='c007'>That government is a bad government; its
faults are indeed of a different order but on the
whole, I will admit, it is almost as bad as the
former Czarist Government it superseded. Yet
let us remember certain plain facts about it. It
has remained in power to this day because it is
a Russian-speaking government standing for a
whole and undivided Russia, and the Russian
people support it because it has defended
Russia against the subsidized raiders of France
and Britain, against the Poles and against the
Esthonians and against the Japanese and
against every sort of outside interference with
their prostrate country. They prefer fanatics
to foreigners and Bolsheviks to brigands.
Frenchmen or Americans in the same horrible
position would probably make the same choice.
The Entente, the Poles, a miscellany of adventurers,
have given the Russians no breathing
<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>time to deal with their own Government in their
own fashion. And now, caught by the misadventure
of an unprecedented drought, millions
of Russians in the regions disorganized by Kolchak,
Denikene and Wrangel, are starving to
death—while Canada and America have wheat
and corn to burn. There is even food to spare
in some parts of Russia, but no adequate means
of getting it to the starving provinces without
outside assistance. And the Western World is
letting these Russian millions starve because of
the argumentative obstinacy of the Moscow
Government, which hesitated for a time to
acknowledge debts incurred by Russia—very
largely for the military preparations which
saved Europe—debts it is now inconceivable
that Russia can ever under any circumstances
pay, because of the pitiless resentment of the
creditors of Russia. Yet the suffering of
Russia cannot help the western money lender;
they merely give him his revenge.</p>
<p class='c007'>But even if some millions of Russian men,
women and children die this winter and are
added to the count of those who have already
<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>perished through the war—the war that saved
Paris from Berlin—it does not follow that
Russia will die. Peoples are not killed in this
fashion. These distresses will not alter the fact
that the Russians are the most numerous people
in Europe, and a people of unexampled gifts
and tenacity. Their magnificent resistance to
outside interference since 1914 and their toleration
of the Bolshevik Government when division
would have been as fatal to them as it has
been in China, is a proof of their solidarity and
instinctive political wisdom. There are as
many Russians as there are people in the
United States of America, and they occupy an
area as great and far richer in undeveloped resources.
In spite of the monstrous Czarist
Government which treated elementary education
as an offense against the State, the prose
literature, the drama, the music, the pictorial
art—even the science of the Russians during
the last hundred years—all this compares favorably
with that of the United States. These
Russians are indeed one of the very greatest of
people and they have survived tragic experiences
<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>that might well have destroyed any other
race. And Washington, I gather, proposes to
settle the peace of Europe, Asia and the Pacific
without them.</p>
<p class='c007'>There is, I know, a very strong case to excuse
Washington from sending an invitation to the
existing Russian Government. I would be the
last person in the world to minimize the difficulties
the Bolshevik Government puts in the
way of any fair dealings with the western
powers; it is bound by its Communist theory
not to recognize them fairly and to make gestures
of preparation for their overthrow. In
addition to its general theoretical obduracy
Moscow is also afflicted with a particularly obdurate,
pedantic, argumentative and disastrous
Foreign Minister, Chicherin. But practical necessity
knows no theories and the Bolshevik
Government, if only it can save its face, is now
extraordinarily anxious for recognition from
and dealings with the western Governments.</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not see why the western Governments,
having regard to the needs of Russia, should
try to outdo the Bolsheviks in obstinacy, pedantry
<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>and cruelty, nor why they should not make
an honest attempt to get along with the de facto
government until it develops naturally into
something else. For such a development only a
rough working peace is wanted. Given that,
and a release from impossible debts, Russia,
relieved forever from the black curse of Czarism,
will go right on to become a land of restored
cultivation, of resuscitated mines and
presently of reawakening towns, a democratic
land of common people more like the free, poor,
farming, prospecting and developing United
States of 1840 than anything else in history.</p>
<p class='c007'>So long as Russia suffers the Bolshevik Government
I think Washington ought to suffer it,
but perhaps in that opinion I go beyond the possibilities
of the case. Then I suggest that at
least Washington ought to set up some well-informed
lawyer, some bureau, to play the part
of the Russian advocate at the conference. If
Russia is not to be allowed a vote in the decision
of things, let her at least be heard.</p>
<p class='c007'>Consider what the future must hold for this
great people, and mark the amazing folly of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>insults and evils we heap upon their land. Look
it up in an atlas or encyclopaedia. Measure
what it is we ignore. In a score of years Russia
may be a renascent land as vigorous as the
United States in 1840. In a century she may
be as great and powerful and civilized as any
state on earth. For such powers as France and
Britain and Japan to sit in council upon the fate
of the world without her is as if, in the dark
years of 1863 and 1864, they had sat in council
upon the future of America without the United
States. Indeed, something of the sort did happen
in those dark years; France, I recall, sent
troops and munitions into Mexico, as recently
she has sent them into Poland and South Russia.
And somewhere in the world there is a
grave, the grave of a “white hope,” a reactionary
puppet who was to have restored Mexico to
the European system—the friend of the Emperor
Napoleon the Third, the Emperor Maximilian.</p>
<p class='c007'>When I was a small boy learning the rudiments
of geography, the earth was presented to
me in two hemispheres, the Old World and the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>new. Not once or twice only has America vindicated
her right to that title. Will Washington
confirm that great tradition and open a way
of escape now from the tangled narrowness of
Versailles? Are Germany and Russia to perish
amid the incurable quarrels of the Old World
or find their salvation in the New?</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>
<h2 id='IV' class='c005'>IV<br/> THE UNKNOWN SOLDIER OF THE GREAT WAR</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 11.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>Britain, France, Italy and now the people
of the United States, have honored and buried
the bodies of certain Unknown Soldiers, each
according to their national traditions and circumstances.
Canada, I hear, is to follow suit.</p>
<p class='c007'>So the world expresses its sense that in the
great war the only hero was the common man.
Poor Hans and poor Ivan lie rotting yet under
the soil of a hundred battlefields, bones and decay,
rags of soiled uniform and fragments of
accoutrements, still waiting for monuments and
speeches. Yet they too were mothers’ sons,
kept step, obeyed orders, went singing into battle,
and knew the strange intoxication of soldierly
fellowship and the sense of devotion to
something much greater than themselves.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>In Arlington Cemetery soldiers of the Confederate
South lie honored equally with the
Federal dead, the right or wrong of their cause
altogether forgotten and only their sacrifice remembered.
A time will come when we shall
cease to visit the crimes and blunders and misfortunes
of their Governments upon the common
soldiers and poor folk of Germany and
Russia, when our bitterness will die out and we
shall mourn them as we mourn our own, as
souls who gave their lives and suffered greatly
in one universal misfortune.</p>
<p class='c007'>A time will come when these vast personifications
of conflict, the Unknown British Soldier,
the Unknown American Soldier, the Unknown
French Soldier, etc., will merge into the thought
of a still greater personality, the embodiment
of 20,000,000 separate bodies and of many million
broken lives, the Unknown Soldier of the
great war.</p>
<p class='c007'>It would be possible, I suppose, to work out
many things concerning him. We could probably
find out his age and his height and his
weight and such like particulars very nearly.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>We could average figures and estimates that
would fix such matters within a very narrow
range of uncertainty. In race and complexion,
I suppose he would be mainly North European;
North Russian, German, Frankish, North Italian,
British and American elements would all
have the same trend toward a tallish, fairish,
possibly blue-eyed type; but also there would be
a strong Mediterranean streak in him, Indian
and Turkish elements, a fraction of Mongolian
and an infusion of African blood—brought in
not only through the American colored troops
but by the free use by the French of their Senegalese.</p>
<p class='c007'>None of these factors would be strong enough
to prevent his being mainly Northern and much
the same mixture altogether as the American
citizen of 1950 is likely to be. He would be a
white man with a touch of Asia and a touch of
color. And he would be young—I should guess
about twenty-one or twenty-two—still boyish,
probably unmarried rather than married, with
a father and mother alive and with the memories
and imaginations of the home he was born
<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>in still fresh and vivid in his mind when he died.
We could even, I suppose, figure in general
terms how he died. He was struck in daylight
amid the strange noises and confusion of a modern
battlefield by something out of the unknown—bullet,
shell fragment or the like. At the
moment he had been just a little scared—every
one is a little scared on a battlefield—but much
more excited than scared and trying hard to
remember his training and do his job properly.
When he was hit he was not so much hurt at
first as astonished. I should guess that the first
sensation of a man hard hit on a battlefield is
not so much pain as an immense chagrin.</p>
<p class='c007'>I suppose it would be possible to go on and
work out how long it was before he died after
he was hit, how long he suffered and wondered,
how long he lay before his ghost fell in with
that immense still muster in the shades, those
millions of his kind who had no longer country
to serve nor years of life before them, who had
been cut off as he had been cut off suddenly
from sights and sounds and hopes and passions.
But rather let us think of the motives and feelings
<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>that had brought him, in so gallant and
cheerful a frame of mind, to this complete sacrifice.</p>
<p class='c007'>What did the Unknown Soldier of the great
war think he was doing when he died? What
did we, we people who got him into the great
war and who are still in possession of this
world of his, what did we persuade him to think
he was doing and what is the obligation we have
incurred to him to atone for his death, for the
life and sunlight he will know no more?</p>
<p class='c007'>He was still too young a man to have his motives
very clear. To conceive what moved him
and what he desired is a difficult and disputable
task. M. George Nobelmaire at a recent meeting
of the League of Nations Assembly declared
that he had heard French lads whisper “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vive
la France!</span>” and die. He suggested that German
boys may have died saying, “Colonel, say
to my mother, ‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Vive l’Allemagne!</span>’” Possibly.
But the French are trained harder in patriotism
than any other people. I doubt if it was the
common mood. It was certainly not the common
mood among the British.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>I cannot imagine many English boys using
their last breath to say “Rule Britannia!” or
“King George for Merry England!” Some of
our young men swore out of vexation and
fretted; some, and it was not always the youngest,
became childish again and cried touchingly
for their mothers; many maintained the ironical
flippancy of our people to the end; many
died in the vein of a young miner from Durham
with whom I talked one morning in the
trenches near Martinpuich, trenches which had
been badly “strafed” overnight. War, he said,
was a beastly job, “but we’ve got to clean this
up.” That is the spirit of the lifeboat man or
fireman. That is the great spirit. I believe
that was far nearer to the true mind of the
Unknown Soldier than any tinpot Viva-ing of
any flag, nation or empire whatever.</p>
<p class='c007'>I believe that when we generalize the motives
that took the youth who died in the great war
out of the light of life and took them out at precisely
the age when life is most desirable, we
shall find that the dominating purpose was certainly
no narrow devotion to the “glory” or
“expansion” of any particular country, but a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>wide-spirited hostility to wrong and oppression.
That is clearly shown by the nature of the appeals
that were made in every country to sustain
the spirit of its soldiers.</p>
<p class='c007'>If national glory and patriotism had been the
ruling motive of these young men, then manifestly
their propaganda would have concerned
themselves mainly with national honor and flag
idolatry. But they did not do so. Nowadays
flags fly better on parades and stoop fronts
than on battlefields. The war propagandas
dwelt steadily and insistently upon the wickedness
and unrighteousness of the enemy, upon
the dangers of being overwhelmed by foreign
tyranny, and particularly upon the fact that the
enemy had planned and made the war. These
boys fought best on that—everywhere.</p>
<p class='c007'>So far as the common men in every belligerent
country went, therefore, the great war was
a war against wrong, against force, against war
itself. Whatever it was in the thoughts of the
diplomatists, it was that in the minds of the
boys who died. In the minds of these young
and generous millions who are personified in
the Unknown Soldier of the great war, in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>minds of the Germans and Russians who fought
so stoutly, quite as much as the Americans,
British, French or Italians, the war was a war
to end war.</p>
<p class='c007'>And that marks our obligation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Every speech that is made beside the graves
of these Unknown Soldiers who lie now in the
comradeship of youthful death, every speech
which exalts patriotism above peace, which hints
at reparations and revenges, which cries for
mean alliances to sustain the traditions of the
conflict, which exalts national security over the
common welfare, which wags the “glorious
flag” of this nation or that in the face of the
universal courage and tragedy of mankind, is
an insult and an outrage upon the dead youth
who lies below. He sought justice and law in
the world as he conceived these things, and
whoever approaches his resting place unprepared
to serve the establishment of a world law
and world justice, breathing the vulgar cants
and catchwords of a patriotism outworn and of
conflicts that he died to end, commits a monstrous
sacrilege and sins against all mankind.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>
<h2 id='V' class='c005'>V<br/> THE PRESIDENT AT ARLINGTON</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 11.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>I am writing this just after my return from
the funeral, in the National Cemetery, of the
American Unknown Soldier at Arlington, a
very stately and moving ceremony, under the
bright blue sky and the cold, keen air of a Virginia
November day. The body had been lying
in state at the Capitol and it was carried
through Washington to the cemetery at the
head of a great procession in which the Supreme
Court, the Cabinet, Senators, members
of the House of Representatives, war veterans
and a multitude of societies marched on foot,
a march of nearly two hours and a half duration.
Much of this gathering was of the substance
of all such processions, but one or two
of the contingents were rich with association
and suggestion.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>There were fifty or sixty, I should guess, very
old men, bent, white-headed—one with a conspicuous
long, white beard—veterans of a civil
war that was fought out to an end before I was
born. They came close to a contingent of men
who had been specially decorated in the great
war, erect and eager, still on the better side of
the prime of life. These older men had fought
in a great fight against a division, a separation
that today, thanks to their sacrifice, has become
inconceivable. They had fought to seal the Federal
Union of what were else warring States.
The young men who marched before them had
fought in a war upon the greater stage of the
whole world. Some day the tale of those abundant
heroes will have shrunken to the dimensions
of that little band of pathetic and glorious
old men. Will they live to as complete an
assurance that their cause also has been won
forever, the newer veterans of the greater union
that has yet to come?</p>
<p class='c007'>There were many points of contrast between
the ceremony I have just witnessed in the graceful
marble amphitheatre in the beautiful Virginian
<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>open country and the burials that have
taken place in the very hearts of London, Paris
and Rome. In the face of a common identity
of idea, they mark an essential difference in the
nature of the occasion.</p>
<p class='c007'>Thursday I went to see the people who were
filing past the flag-covered coffin. It was a
crowd fairly representative, I thought, of the
Washington population as one sees it on the
streets; all classes were represented, but chiefly
it consisted of that well-dressed, healthy looking
middle class sort of people who predominate
in the streets of most American cities.
They came to honor a national hero, the personification
of American courage and loyalty. Few,
I think, were actual mourners of a dead soldier.
The couples and groups of people I saw hurrying
up the sloping paths to the entrance of the
Capitol, filing up the steps to the rotunda or dispersing
on the other side were characterized
by a sort of bright eagerness and approval.</p>
<p class='c007'>They contrasted very strongly with my memory
of the great column of still and mournful
people under the dark London sky, eight deep,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>stretching all up Whitehall and down Northumberland
Avenue and along the Embankment
for a great distance, a column which moved on
slowly, step by step, and which faded away at
night to be replaced by fresh mourners on the
morrow to do honor to the Unknown Warrior
in London. That crowd, with its wreaths and
flowers, represented the families, the lovers, the
sisters and friends of perhaps a quarter of a
million of dead men from London and the south
and centre of England; the massed, mute tragedy
of its loss was overwhelming. It reduced all
the ceremony that had gathered it to comparative
unimportance. But the remote distances
of America forbade any such concentration of
sorrow. There may have been the relations
and friends of perhaps a thousand men upon
the scene at Arlington. The loss to the District
of Columbia itself was less than six hundred
killed. A group of wounded men in the amphitheatre
struck the most intimate note. The rest
of the gathering at Arlington shared a less personal
grief. They were sympathizers rather
than sufferers.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>Because of this emotional difference, the Arlington
ceremony presented itself primarily as
a ceremony. For most there it was a holiday,
a fine and noble holiday, but a holiday. By it,
America did not so much mourn the tragedy of
war as seek to arouse itself to that tragedy.
Everywhere the Stars and Stripes, the most
decorative and exhilarating of national flags,
waved and fluttered, and an irresistible expression
of America’s private life and buoyant well-being
mingled in the proceedings. For most of
the gathering that coffin under the great flag
held nothing they had ever touched personally;
it was not America’s lost treasure of youth, but
rather a warning of the fate that may yet overtake
the youth of America if war is not to
end. At Arlington, throughout the length and
breadth of America, when for two minutes at
mid-day all work and movement stopped and
America stood still, an innumerable host of
fathers and mothers and wives and friends
could whisper thanks to God in their hearts
that their sons and their beloved remained
alive.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>And I suppose it is largely because America
is still so much less war-stricken than any of
the other belligerents of the great war that so
much more powerful a sense of will was apparent
in all these proceedings. The burial of the
Unknown Soldier in America was not a thing
in itself as it was in London, in Paris or Rome;
it was a solemn prelude to action, the action of
the great conference which is to seek peace
and enduring peace for all mankind. This note
was struck even in the Chaplain’s opening invocation.
He said:</p>
<p class='c007'>“Facing the events of the morrow, when from
the workbench of the world there will be taken
an unusual task, we ask that Thou wilt accord
exceptional judgment, foresight and tactfulness
of approach to those who seek to bring about
a better understanding among men and nations
to the end that discord, which provokes war,
may disappear and that there may be world
tranquillity.”</p>
<p class='c007'>And the very fine oration of President Harding,
following closely upon this line.</p>
<p class='c007'>I saw the President for the first time at Arlington.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>He is a very big, fine-looking man and
his voice is a wonderful instrument. He spoke
slowly and very distinctly, his gestures admirably
controlled. He is—how can I say it?—more
statuesque than any of the American
Presidents of recent times, but without a trace
in his movements or appearance of posturing
or vanity. Men say he is a sincerely modest
man, determined to do the best that is in him
and at once appalled and inspired by the world
situation in which he finds himself among the
most prominent figures. Not only in its main
circumstances but in many of its incidents is
the position of the President of the United
States appalling. The President stood in the
apse to the right of the Unknown Soldier and
to the other side of him was a black box upon
a stand, a box perhaps two feet by one. This
was the receiver that was to carry his voice, intensely
amplified, to still greater gatherings in
New York, in San Francisco and over the whole
United States. Never was human utterance so
magnified. Every syllable, every slip was recorded.
He slipped once at an antithesis and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>was obliged to repeat. From the Atlantic to
the Pacific that slip was noted.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have heard much detraction of the President
both before I came to America and since
I have been here, but here I have found also
a growing and spreading belief in him. And
this address of his, rhetorical though it was in
a simple and popular American way, was nevertheless
a very dignified address and one inspired
by a spirit that is undeniably great.
Here is a fine saying:</p>
<p class='c007'>“His patriotism was none less if he craved
more than triumph of country; rather, it was
greater if he hoped for a victory for all human
kind. Indeed, I revere that citizen whose confidence
in the righteousness of his country inspired
belief that its triumph is the victory of
humanity.</p>
<p class='c007'>“This American soldier went forth to battle
with no hatred for any people in the world, but
hating war and hating the purpose of every war
for conquest.”</p>
<p class='c007'>We are to seek “the rule under which reason
and righteousness shall prevail.” There is to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>be “the commanding voice of a conscious civilization
against armed warfare,” “a new and
lasting era of peace on earth.” And with a fine
instinct for effect the President ended his oration
with the Lord’s Prayer, with its appeal for
one universal law for mankind: “Thy kingdom
come on earth....”</p>
<p class='c007'>Every other gossip tells you that President
Harding comes from Main Street and repeats
the story of Mrs. Harding saying: “We’re just
folk.” If President Harding is a fair sample
of Main Street, Sinclair Lewis has not told us
the full story and Main Street is destined to
save the world.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>
<h2 id='VI' class='c005'>VI<br/> THE FIRST MEETING</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 13.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>It was difficult at first to imagine the conference
as anything more than an admirably well
managed social occasion.</p>
<p class='c007'>Continental Hall is a quite charming building,
not too big for intimacy, not too small for
a sufficient gathering of people. The chief
members of the delegations had still to assemble;
they were to sit at green baize covered
tables in the body of the hall. About this central
arena sat the massed attaches, and under
the galleries the press representatives. In the
boxes clustered the ladies of the diplomatic
world. Members of the House of Representatives,
the Senators, their friends and a sprinkling
of privileged people occupied the big galleries
above.</p>
<p class='c007'>There was a great chatter of conversation
<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>when I entered. Everybody was greeting
friends, flitting from group to group. It was
one of those gatherings where everybody
seemed to know everybody. Socially, it was
extraordinarily like a very smart first night in
a prominent London theatre.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Last time I came to America,” I found myself
saying, “I brought a silk hat and morning
coat, and never wore them once. Now everybody
seems to be wearing a morning coat and a
silk hat.” It was the sort of occasion one
dresses for. And that was the tone of the conversation.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was difficult to believe that this gathering
could be the beginning of anything of supreme
historical importance.</p>
<p class='c007'>Came a slight hush in the conversation. The
delegates appeared, all with tremendously
familiar faces taken out of the illustrated
papers. They disposed themselves in their
seats in leisurely fashion. One seat remained
vacant for a time—the seat of the President.
Then appeared President Harding, and there
was a great clapping of hands. It became more
<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>and more like a first night. Then a hushing of
enthusiasm, and silence, and he spoke.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was a fine speech, less ornate and more
direct than the Arlington oration. And the
galleries above, behaving more and more like
a first night audience, interrupted with rounds
of applause whenever there were definite allusions
to disarmament. He finished and declared
the conference open and departed. Mr. Balfour
followed, echoing the President’s sentiments in
a few well chosen words and proposing Secretary
Hughes for the Chairman of the conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Hall became aware of a check in the onward
flow of the proceedings. An interpreter
got up and repeated Mr. Balfour’s speech in
French for the benefit of the French delegation.
He had made a shorthand note as Mr.
Balfour spoke. This, we learned, was to be the
procedure throughout the conference. Every
speech, question and interruption was to be
dealt with in this interlinear manner. Fortunately,
it was not necessary to do this in the
case of the President’s address, nor was it
<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>necessary in the case of the address of
Secretary Hughes, which was now impending
because these had already been printed
and distributed and a translation made of
them.</p>
<p class='c007'>Their linguistic isolation is likely to prove
unfortunate for the French. The Belgian, the
Dutch, the Chinese, Japanese and Portuguese
delegations all speak in English and listen to
the English speeches. Consequently, the French
are in a position in which they seem to be the
most foreign people present. This must be disconcerting
to them now.</p>
<p class='c007'>It will be much more disconcerting if, at a
later stage, German delegates speaking English
should appear upon some extension or side
committee of the conference. But I do not see
how it can be avoided. The French are a little
out of touch in the conference because of this;
they must be much more out of touch with the
incessant conversation in clubs and at dinner
tables and everywhere in Washington, which
makes the atmosphere in which the conference
is working.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>This, however, is a note by the way. Secretary
Hughes took the chair and delivered his
address. It was a very carefully arranged surprise
and its effect was really dramatical. It
jumped the conference abruptly from the fine
generalizations that had hitherto engaged it to
immediately practical things. Secretary Hughes
sketched out what was evidently a carefully
worked out scheme, a most explicit scheme, for
the complete cessation of naval armament competition.</p>
<p class='c007'>America wanted at the very outset, he said,
to convince the world that she meant business
in the conference, and so she had taken this
unexpected step of putting immediate practical
proposals upon the table. She would scrap
completely all the ships she had still under construction
and all her older ships and she would
discontinue all naval construction for ten years
if Britain and Japan would do the same.</p>
<p class='c007'>She proposed that the naval strength of the
three powers concerned should remain for ten
years in the ratio of: Britain, 22; America, 18,
and Japan, 10. In other words, she proposed
<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>so to fix things that no two of these three powers
can wage a conclusive naval war against
each other, but with America and Britain in a
position to do so jointly against Japan and with
Japan at a great disadvantage against America,
even if she were to risk an inconclusive war
with America on the chance of Britain’s not
coming in. And having unfolded this scheme,
Secretary Hughes concluded.</p>
<p class='c007'>We were a little stunned. We had expected
the opening meeting to be preliminary, to stick
to generalities. After Secretary Hughes had
finished, there was a feeling that we wanted to
go away and think. But the members of the
House of Representatives were enjoying an unwonted
sense of being in the gallery, quite irresponsibly
in the gallery, with somebody else
upon the floor. They burst in upon our statesmanlike
thoughts below with loud cries for
“Briand!”</p>
<p class='c007'>The atmosphere of friendly festival was reestablished.
M. Briand spoke eloquently—saying
nothing whatever about the proposals of
Secretary Hughes—and sat down, and his still
<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>quite abstract praises of peace were translated
into English.</p>
<p class='c007'>“Japan!” shouted the members of the House
of Representatives, a theatre gallery now in full
cry. Japan spoke in English and its sentiments
were translated into French for the benefit
of the foreigners. Japan expressed admirable
sentiments and said nothing whatever
about the proposals of Secretary Hughes.</p>
<p class='c007'>Thereafter it would have been discourteous
not to call for something from Italy, China,
Belgium, Holland and Portugal. They all spoke
in English, even Belgium spoke in English, and
what they said was translated into French.
Nobody said anything whatever about the proposals
of Secretary Hughes. The gallery applauded
each speech heartily and the atmosphere
of a first night was completely restored.
We dispersed to luncheons and tea parties and
to talk before we wrote about it. And as we
tried to get it into focus in our minds it became
clear that much more than a ceremonial opening
of the conference had occurred.</p>
<p class='c007'>Secretary Hughes has made proposals that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>challenge the whole situation in the Pacific.
For if Japan accepts them—I do not see how
they could be otherwise than acceptable to the
British—it puts Japan to so definite and permanent
a disadvantage that it amounts to an
abandonment on the part of Japan of the idea
of fighting a war on the Pacific except as the
last desperate defensive resort under the pressure
of an unavoidable attack, and Japan can
abandon that idea only if she can see her way
clearly without a war to all that she believes
to be vitally necessary to her.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is possible to say that Secretary Hughes
has narrowed down the work of the conference
by this sudden focusing of attention upon naval
warfare and Japan. But I do not think that is
the case. The challenge he has made cannot be
taken up until a number of associated issues
are settled. Certainly his proposals have precipitated
the work of the conference from the
clouds and beautiful generalities to the earth
and very concrete realities.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You accept these proposals,” America says
in effect. “If not, why not?”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>Japan must accept or reply so and so. So
from armaments we shall get to the aims behind
armaments; for no battleship is launched
except against a specific antagonist and for a
specific end. And in the matter of aims also
the conference will presently have to consider
what each power must scrap for the common
good and what it may be permitted to keep for
its own satisfaction.</p>
<p class='c007'>Since Secretary Hughes made it clear that
the conference is to approach the inevitable
general discussion of world peace by way of
the sea and the Pacific, since for a time France
and Europe generally will sit somewhat out of
the limelight, it will be well, perhaps, if in my
next article I discuss a few elementary considerations
about Japan.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
<h2 id='VII' class='c005'>VII<br/> WHAT IS JAPAN?</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 15.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>Of all the national delegations assembled
here in Washington, the most acutely scrutinized,
the most discussed and probably the least
understood is the Japanese. The limelight
gravitates toward it, moved, one feels, not so
much by an extreme respect as by an inordinate
curiosity.</p>
<p class='c007'>Of only one other people—I write as a spectator
from overseas—does one feel the same
sense of the possibility of dramatically unexpected
things, and that is the Americans. The
Japanese, we feel, we have not found out, and
the Americans, we feel, have not found out
themselves. Already the Americans have
sprung one great surprise upon the conference.
Britain, France, Italy and the other powers in
attendance are comparatively calculable—so
<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>far as their representation goes. But Japan is
different; it is not built upon the same lines, it
follows different laws.</p>
<p class='c007'>I went on Sunday night to the press reception
at the Japanese headquarters. The Ambassador
is a buoyant man of the world, speaking
excellent English and thoroughly acclimatized
to an American press gathering. But
many of the Japanese faces about him set my
imagination busy, putting them back into the
voluminous robes and the sashes holding the
double swords with which I had first met them
long ago in Japanese prints, and which would
have become them so much better.</p>
<p class='c007'>Admiral Kato spoke in Japanese and Prince
Tokugawa in English; they welcomed the
Hughes proposals with warm generalities and
hopes for peace—as we all hope for peace—with
insufficient particulars. I got no conversation
with any Japanese; they were not talking
to us; they did not want to talk; it was a reception
of hearty politeness and no exchanges.
I found myself falling back upon an earlier impression.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>Some weeks ago I had a very illuminating
talk in my garden at home with two Japanese
visitors, Mr. Mashiko and Mr. Negushi, who
had come to discuss various educational ideas
with me. And they told me things that seem
to me to be fundamentally important in this
question. “We build up our children,” said
Mr. Mushiko, “upon a diametrically different
plan from yours. We turn them the other way
round. Obedience and devotion are our leading
thoughts. All our sentiment, all our stories
and poetry, the traditions of centuries, teach
loyalty, blind, unquestioning loyalty, of wife to
husband, of man to his lord, of every one to the
monarch.</p>
<p class='c007'>“The loyalty is religious. So far as political
and social questions go, it is fundamental. But
your training cultivates independence, free
thought, the unsparing criticism of superiors,
institutions, relationships. Perhaps it is better
in the end and more invigorating; but it seems
to us wild and dangerous. * * * We begin to
have a sort of public opinion, but it is still diffident
and timid.”</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>An American and an Englishman, he said,
cared for his country because he believed it
belonged to him. A Japanese cared for his
country because he believed he belonged to it.
One could not pass from one habit of mind to
the other, he thought, without grave risks and
dangers. It is easier to destroy obedience than
to create responsibility.</p>
<p class='c007'>I was reminded of that conversation the
other day by a remark made by a fellow journalist
on the train to Washington:</p>
<p class='c007'>“A Chinese will tell you what he thinks—like
an American—but a Japanese always feels he
is an agent, even if he isn’t an accredited one.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now, this is very interesting and probably a
very fundamental comparison. This difference
in spirit will make the Japanese people a very
different instrument from the American and
English or French people. It will make the
Japanese Government a different thing from
the Governments it will be meeting in Washington.
A people built up on obedience can be held
and wielded as no modern democratic people
can be held and wielded. It is different in kind.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>Unless this point is kept in mind, there are
certain to be great and possibly dangerous misunderstandings
in the Washington discussions.
There have possibly been very dangerous misunderstandings
already of the European powers
by the Japanese. The Japanese are likely
to think the Atlantic Governments are more
free to decide than they really are, and that
what they say is more conclusive than it really
is, and the Atlantic peoples are likely to think
too much of the appearance of a liberal public
opinion in Japan and to imagine that a Japanese
Government may be thrown out and its policy
changed much more easily than is the case.
But indeed Japan is a Government, a military
Government, holding its people in its hand like
a staff or a weapon, while America and France
and Britain are people operating the Governments,
more or less imperfectly. In no relationship
is confusion upon this point more
probable and more dangerous than between
Japan and Britain or France at the present
time, and in no connection is there greater need
of perfectly plain statement.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>Seeing that Britain is still a monarchy with
many aristocratic forms, it is fatally easy for
a Japanese statesman to fall into the belief
that the British Government is as completely
in control, and its officials as able to bind or
loose, as the Japanese Government and officials,
and because of this belief to trust to the
private assurance and general attitude of personages
in high places far more than they are
justified in doing. The British democracy is
very like the American democracy in its inability
to keep watching what is happening
overseas; it is preoccupied by domestic questions
and things that are near to it. You cannot
expect a Wiltshire farmer or a Lancashire
cotton spinner to keep up, day by day, with the
concession-hunting game in Persia or South
China. But if that game of concession hunting
piles up to sufficiently serious consequences,
these democracies are likely to wake up in a
manner quite outside the Japanese range of possibilities.
And to a large extent the same is
true of France.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is the blessed privilege of an irresponsible
<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>journalist to say things that no diplomatist
could ever say, and upon the relations of Japan,
America and England there are certain truths
that seem to need saying very plainly at the
present time. But though I am an irresponsible
journalist, it is also to be noted that I am
a very English Englishman and that I know the
way of thinking of my people.</p>
<p class='c007'>The British people have been sleeping happily
upon the belief that war with America is
impossible. And for them it is impossible. In
this matter the British have a special and extraordinary
instinct. They will not fight the
United States of America. I will not go into
the peculiar feelings that produce this disposition;
they are feelings great numbers of Americans
do not understand and have indeed taken
great pains not to understand. But to the common
British, fighting Americans would have
much the same relation to fighting other peoples
that cannibalism would have to eating
meat.</p>
<p class='c007'>I hear a certain type of American over here
slowly and heavily debating the Hughes proposals
<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>on the assumption that there may be a
war of America against Britain and Japan.
Such an assumption is—if I may be permitted
the word—idiotic. As a people, the British
have not been thinking very much about the
Pacific question. They have been preoccupied
by Ireland and their own economic troubles.
But if that question presently moves toward a
level of intensity where war is possible, let
there be no mistake about it in Japan, the ordinary
English will be thinking with the Americans.
They will read much the same stuff because
they have the same language, and think
in the same way because they have kindred
habits of thought.</p>
<p class='c007'>It will not matter then what assurances and
sentiments the Japanese may have had for official
personages in Great Britain. For we are
dealing here not with a matter of agreements
but with a kind of moral gravitation. If there
is a conflict the British masses will want to
come in on the American side, and if it seems
likely to be in the least an inconclusive conflict
they will certainly come in. If the rulers of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Japanese dream that any other combination is
possible in the Pacific they are under as dangerous
a delusion as ever lured a great nation
to disaster.</p>
<p class='c007'>But there are many signs that if ever the ruling
people of Japan entertained this delusion
they are being disillusionized and that they begin
to realize that a war with America in the
Pacific will mean a war with America, Britain,
and possibly—to judge from the recent astonishing
remark by that able writer “Pertinax”—France.
France may use her influence at
Washington on behalf of Japan in certain matters,
but that is all Japan will get from France.
The Japanese, I believe, now fully realize this,
and the trend of recent Japanese utterances is
all in the direction of discussion and the disavowal
of any belligerent dreams.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yet, Japan continues to arm, and though she
now disavows war as her method, she sits very
proudly and stiffly in her weapons at the parley.
She may have limited and restrained her
dreams, but there is still some minimum in her
mind beyond which she will not retreat without
<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>a struggle. What is that minimum which will
satisfy her without war? Will it satisfy her
for good, will it seem so permanently satisfactory
to her that she will be willing not only to
set aside the thought of and preparation for an
immediate war, but—what is of far more
importance—enter into such a binding contract
for her future international relationships
as will enable her to beat the swords of
her Samurai into ploughshares for good and
all?</p>
<p class='c007'>Is Japan peculiarly an obstacle to the practical,
if informal, federation of the world to
which we all hope that things are moving?</p>
<p class='c007'>When I try to frame a hopeful answer to that
question, it occurs to me with added force that
Japan is not a people trying to express itself
through a Government as we Atlantic peoples
are, but a Government, a small ruling class, in
effective possession of an obedience-loving people.
And I remember that that small ruling
class has a long tradition of romantic and chivalrous
swordsmanship. Is that ruling class
going to keep its power and is it going to preserve
<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>its tradition? No one would be more
urgent than I for the complete disarmament of
the entire world, but no one could be more convinced
of the unwisdom of disarmament by
America or any other power while any single
country in the world maintains a spirit that
must lead at last to a resumption of warfare.
TO DISARM IN SUCH A SITUATION IS
TO LEAVE THE TROUBLE TO ACCUMULATE
UPON OUR GRAND-CHILDREN;
TO PATCH UP A TEMPORARY PEACE
BASED ON THE PERMITTED “EXPANSION”
OF SUCH A POWER IS SIMPLY
TO PREPARE FOR AN EXPANDED WAR
IN THE FUTURE.</p>
<p class='c007'>But is that Japanese ruling class resolved at
any cost, even at the cost of another World
War and at the risk of destroying Japan, to hold
onto its present power and to adhere rigidly to
its tradition? In the last hundred years Japan,
because of her aristocracy and because of her
general obedience, has achieved feats of adaptation
to new conditions that are unparalleled
in history. As we have noted, there have recently
<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>been indications of further changes in
the spirit of Japan.</p>
<p class='c007'>She is said to be pressing forward with the
education of the common people and the liberation
of thought and discussion. In the long
run, what is happening in the schools of Japan
is of more importance to mankind than what is
happening in her dockyards. But at present
we do not know what is happening in the
schools of Japan. One hears much of New
Japan and Liberal Japan, and there is even an
unofficial representative of the Japanese Opposition
in Washington. But, so far as we can
judge at this distance, we must be guided by
the policy and methods of the Japanese Government.</p>
<p class='c007'>Before we can judge these we must consider
the nature of the field in which they seem to
clash most with American ideas and with
American and European interests, namely,
China and Eastern Asia generally. In my next
paper I will ask, “What is China?” and consider
the nature of the needs and claims of
Japan in regard to China and the prohibitions
<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>and the renunciations the Western powers want
to impose upon her. For it is on account of
these restrictions and prohibitions that Japan
has been building her battleships. Her fighting
fleet is to secure her a free hand in China and
Siberia; it can have no other purpose. And I
shall take up the question whether the prohibitions
and renunciations we want to force upon
Japan are not prohibitions and restrictions
that we are bound in fairness to impose
equally upon all powers concerned with China
and the Far East. If the other powers are
not prepared for extreme general retractions
and renunciation in China; if they
want to bar out Japan from aggressive practices
and exclusive advantages that other powers
retain; if we cling to any sort of racial
distinction in these matters, then I shall submit,
we are asking impossible things from
Japan and we are forcing her toward what
must must be indeed a very desperate gamble
for her, a refusal to enter into this proposed
disarmament agreement—and that means
war.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>
<h2 id='VIII' class='c005'>VIII<br/> CHINA IN THE BACKGROUND</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 16.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The Chinese propaganda in America and
Western Europe seems on the whole to be conducted
more efficiently than the Japanese. And
the Chinese student, it seems to me, gets into
closer touch with the educated American and
European because his is a democratic and not
an aristocratic habit of mind. He has an intensely
Western sense of public opinion.</p>
<p class='c007'>The masses of China may be destitute, ignorant
and disordered, but in their mental habits
they are modern and not mediæval, in the same
sense that the Japanese are mediæval and not
modern. The Chinese seem to “get on” with
their Western social equivalents better than any
of the Asiatic people. And increasing multitudes
of Chinese are learning English today;
it is the second language in China.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Now, if Japan is the figure in the limelight
at Washington today, China is the giant in the
background and scene of the present Pacific
drama. We have had so much in the papers
lately about these two countries, we have been
treated to such a feast of particulars about
them, that most of us have long since forgotten
very thoroughly the broad facts of the case, and
it will be refreshing to recall them here and
now.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us remind ourselves that China is a country
with a population amounting at the lowest
estimate to between twice and three times the
population of the United States, or of France
and England put together. This population
has the longest unbroken tradition of peaceful
industry in the world. It is essentially civilized;
it respects learning and civility profoundly.
A common literature and ancient traditions
keep its people one.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the past China has been divided again and
again—always to reunite. But it has become
“old-fashioned,” dangerously old-fashioned,
perhaps by reason of its very stability; it has
<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>lagged behind most of the world in the development
of its transport and economic possibilities.
In mineral deposits and other natural resources
and in the industrial capability of its
sturdy and intelligent population it has more
undeveloped wealth than any other single people
in the world. It is only in the last century
or so that China has lagged behind.</p>
<p class='c007'>Only a few centuries ago China was as civilized
as Europe and politically more stable. In
a century or so she may be again the most
civilized and intelligent power in the world,
flourishing in fellowship and perfect understanding
with the great states of America and
Europe.</p>
<p class='c007'>She may be—if she is not torn to pieces and
kept in a state of enfeeblement and disorder by
the hostile action of external powers.</p>
<p class='c007'>But at present China is in a state of political
impotence. Her Manchu imperialism has
proved itself to be hopelessly inefficient and
China is now struggling to reconstruct upon
modern republican lines, obviously suggested
by the American example. A few decades ago
<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>Japan astonished the world by Europeanizing
herself upon Prussian lines. China now, under
far less favorable conditions and with a
vaster country and a less disciplined people, is
struggling to Americanize herself.</p>
<p class='c007'>But it is no easy task to make over a people
at one stride from a mediæval autocracy to a
modern democracy. It is far easier to Prussianize
than to Americanize, for in the one case
you have only to train an official class and in
the other you must educate a whole people.
China is torn by dissensions; the south jars
with the north; she has two or more Governments,
each claiming to be THE Chinese Government,
and whole provinces have fallen under
the sway of military adventurers. It is a distressing
spectacle, but it was probably an inevitable
phase in the development of New
China.</p>
<p class='c007'>Before we fall a prey to anti-Chinese propaganda
it is well to recall how long it has always
taken to build up the necessary understandings
and habits of association upon which a new
political system rests.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>France, for example, was a land of revolutions
and political instability for nearly a century
after the Great Revolution. America
wrangled feebly and dangerously for several
years after the War of Independence, before
she established her Federal Government; she
only cemented her union after a colossal struggle;
she was not really and securely one until a
century had elapsed.</p>
<p class='c007'>During these long decades of probation foreign
observers preached endlessly about the
fickleness of the French and the political inefficiency
of the Americans and foretold the certainty
of a break-up of the United States, just
as today they sneer at Young China and foretell
the political disintegration of the Chinese.
And we have to bear in mind that the forces
of reorganization and renewal in China struggle
against peculiar difficulties and interferences
quite outside the happier experiences of
France and America. In particular, they struggle
against an intolerable and paralyzing
amount of foreign interference.</p>
<p class='c007'>The brilliant series of adventures and accidents
<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>by which a London trading company
added the Empire of Great Mogul as a picturesque
but incongruously big jewel to the
British Crown set an extraordinarily bad precedent
in Asiatic affairs. It obsessed European
political thought with the impossible
dream of carving up all Asia into similar domains.
The Mogul’s empire was itself an empire
of conquest in a land saturated by ideas
of caste, and this gave all these European adventurers
the attitude of high caste men benevolently
consuming inferior races.</p>
<p class='c007'>In that spirit, Europe—with Japan coming in
presently as a hopeful student of European
methods—had been trying to cook, carve up
and fight for the portions of China for nearly a
century, treating these wonderful people as an
inferior race. The very worst that can be said
about Japan with regard to China is that she
has been too vigorously European.</p>
<p class='c007'>Consider how it would have been with the
United States in the years of discord that led
up to the Civil War if these difficulties had been
complicated by three such embarrassments as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>these: First, that most foreigners, except now
the Germans and Austrians, are outside the
reach of the native courts, that their disputes
with Chinese go before special foreign courts,
that they are specially favored in regard to
property and shipping; secondly, that the Chinese
Government is restricted from raising revenue
by any tariff above a flat rate of 5 per
cent., and that they are also strictly restricted
to 2½ per cent. in their interior dues upon foreign
(but not Chinese) trade, so that they are
in fact unable to raise enough revenue to maintain
an efficient Government; and thirdly, that
nearly all the Chinese railways—and as every
American knows, transport is the very life of
modern state—are in the grip of this foreign
country or that.</p>
<p class='c007'>These are the open and manifest inconveniences
of the situation, but behind these more
open aspects there is a vast tangle of intervention
between Chinamen and Chinese affairs—schemes
for further exploitation, financial entanglements,
vast concession plans and projects
for “spheres of influence” for this aggressive
<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>foreign nation or that. And this foreign influence
is not the influence of one foreign power
pursuing a single and consistent policy but a
number of competing powers, all pursuing different
ends and pulling things this way and
that. How could any country reconstruct itself
while it was entangled in such a net of interference?
No people on earth could do such a
thing.</p>
<p class='c007'>The plain fact is that if China is to reconstruct
herself that net has to be cut away. It
is not enough to warn Japan out of China or
to say “open door” for China. The open door
is good for the ventilation of that great apartment,
but what is also needed is a clearing out
of the encumbrance inside. These encumbrances
are not primarily Japanese.</p>
<p class='c007'>The five great powers sit at a green table in
the form of a horseshoe in the conference and
the four lesser powers are at a straight table
like the armature of a horseshoe magnet. At
the left hand corner, next the Japanese, are the
three Chinese representatives. I gather they
will be allowed to say “Shantung” at the conference
<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>in moderation but not Thibet nor Tonquin
nor the East China—or indeed any—railway.
I doubt if either Mr. Balfour or M.
Briand will nerve himself to say these forbidden
words. But an irresponsible journalist
may write them.</p>
<p class='c007'>If there is to be a real end to war and disarmament
there has to be release of China to
free Chinese control, and that means a self-denying
ordinance from ALL the great powers.
It will be an easy one for America and Italy
to accept, but it will be a difficult sacrifice indeed
for those two hoary leaders in the break-up
of China, Great Britain and France. Neither
country has a bad heart, but long ago in the
East they acquired some very bad habits. This
is a time when bad habits lead very quickly to
disaster.</p>
<p class='c007'>The real test of the quality of the conference
will appear when some issue arises which involves
an assertion or denial of the principle
of “Unhand and keep your hands off China.”
If the Chinese are worth while, the conference
has to establish that principle. It cannot be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>gracefully advanced by America because America
has so little to relinquish. It CAN be established
at the initiative of either Britain or
France.</p>
<p class='c007'>It seems plain to me that official America is
waiting for some move in this direction from
either or both of these powers. If that principle
of a free China is established at the Washington
Conference the way will have been
opened in the not very remote future to a
healthy and vigorous United States of China,
a great modern, pacific and progressive power.
And when I write “China” I mean what any
sensible man means when he writes “China”—I
mean all those parts of Asia in which the Chinese
people and the Chinese culture prevail. I
include at least South Manchuria, which is as
surely Chinese as Texas is American, and
which can no more be GIVEN to any other
power without the consent of China than my
overcoat can be given by one passerby to another.</p>
<p class='c007'>The plain alternative to a released and renascent
China is the cutting up of China among
<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>the aggressive powers to the tune of that popular
American air “The Open Door,” the demoralization
and disintegration of the Chinese,
international elbowing, competition, quarrels
among the powers who have “shared” China,
and, at last, the next great war—which it will
be just as easy for America to keep out of as
the great war of 1914–1918.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>
<h2 id='IX' class='c005'>IX<br/> THE FUTURE OF JAPAN</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 18.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>If we adopt as our guiding principle that
China is “worth while,” if we make up our
minds—and it seems to me that the American
public at least is making up its mind—that
China is to bring itself up to date and to reorganize
itself as a great union of states under
purely Chinese control, and that it is to be protected
by mutual agreement among the powers
from outside interference during the age of reorganization,
then it is clear that all dreams of
empire in China or any fragments of China on
the part of any other power must cease.</p>
<p class='c007'>This building up of a united, peaceful China
by the conscious, self-denying action of the
chief powers of the world is evidently, under
present conditions, the only sane policy before
the powers assembled at Washington, but it is,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>unhappily, quite diametrically opposed to all
traditions of competitive nationality. And I
find a most extraordinary conflict going on in
men’s minds here in Washington between the
manifest sanities of the world situation and
those habits of thought and action in which we
have all been bred. Competitive nationalism
and the long established competitive traditions
of European diplomacy have gone far toward
wrecking the world; and they may yet go far
toward wrecking the Washington Conference.
We have all got these traditions strong in us,
every one of us. These traditions, these ideas
of international intercourse as a sort of game
to beat the other fellow, have as tough a vitality
as the appetite of the wasp, which will go
on eating greedily after its abdomen has been
cut off. Indeed, some of the representatives of
the powers at Washington seem still to be
clinging to the ambition of finally devouring
China, or large parts of China—a feast which
they will not have the remotest prospect of
digesting.</p>
<p class='c007'>If that sort of thing goes on, a continuation
<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>of war preparation, a renewal of war and the
consummation of the social smash now in progress
is inevitable. Yet, on the face of that
plain, inevitable consequence, my diplomatic
friends in Washington go on talking about such
insane projects as that of ceding Manchuria to
Japan right down the Great Wall; of giving
Japan practical possession of the mines of
China; of giving “compensation” in the matter
of Chinese railways to France; of getting this
“advantage” or that for Great Britain, and so
forth and so on. I remain permanently astounded
before the Foreign Office officials.
They have such excellent, brilliant minds, but,
alas! so highly specialized—so highly specialized—that
at times one doubts whether they
have, in the general sense of the word, any
minds at all.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the face of the universal hopefulness for
satisfactory results from the conference I find
myself full of doubts. The naval disarmament
proposal of Secretary Hughes was obviously
meant only as the opening proposition, the
quite splendid opening proposition, of the conference.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>The second meeting, I felt, would find
Mr. Balfour and Admiral Kato and M. Briand
in eloquent sympathy, saying: “Certainly. All
this and more also we can do on the understanding
that a stable, explicit, exhaustive, permanent
Pacific agreement can be framed by
this conference that will remove all causes of
war whatever.” But the second meeting was
disappointing. One nation after another
agreed, as Mr. Balfour, that “old parliamentary
hand,” put it, “in principle. But”——And
now we are all playing four-handed chess
with reservations about dockyards, naval stations,
cruisers, large submarines, and the like.
We are all trying to put the effective disarmament
onto the other fellow. Meanwhile the
nine powers are sitting in secret session on the
Pacific question, and it is clear from the rumors
that nine-handed chess is in progress there.</p>
<p class='c007'>Yet the fact, plain enough to any one who is
not lost in the game of diplomacy, is that this
conference is an occasion for generosity and
renunciation. There is no way out of the Pacific
imbroglio except to disentangle China and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>form a self-denying ordinance of all the powers
concerned to leave her alone while she reconstructs.
I submit that even Japan, most intent
of all the chess players, will do best to fall in
line with such a plan.</p>
<p class='c007'>Would a world covenant to protect China
from aggression and to concede her the progressive
abolition of extra-territorial privileges
and the same unlimited rights over her own
railways and soil and revenue that are enjoyed
by the Americans and Japanese over theirs be
any serious harm to Japan? Would it not release
Japan from her imitative career as a
pseudo-Britain or a pseudo-Germany and enable
her to get on with her own proper business,
which is to be, to the fullest, completest
and richest extent, Japan?</p>
<p class='c007'>For what, after all, is it that Japan wants?
She wants safety, she declares—just as France
wants safety. She wants safety to be Japan,
just as France wants safety to be France and
England wants safety to be England. And she
makes these declarations with considerable justification.
For 300 years she believed she had
<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>that safety, and we must admit she was the
least dangerous state in the whole world. For
300 years Japan waged no foreign wars; she
was a peaceful, self-contained hermit. It was
American enterprise that dragged her out of
her seclusion and fear of Europe that drove her
to the practices of modern imperialism. They
are not natural Japanese practices. She fought
China and grabbed Corea, because otherwise
Russia would have held it like a pistol at her
throat; she fought Russia, because otherwise
Russia would have held Manchuria and Port
Arthur against her; she fought in the Great
War to oust Germany from Shantung. She is
now pursuing an entirely “European” policy
in China, intriguing to get a free hand in Manchuria
and Eastern Siberia; scheming for concessions,
privileges and the creation of obedient
puppet governments in a dismembered China;
planning to divert the natural resources of
China to her own use, primarily because she
fears that otherwise these things will be done
by rival powers and she will be cut off from
trade, from raw materials and all prosperity
<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>until at last, when she is sufficiently starved
and enfeebled, she will be attacked and Indiaized.
These are reasonable, honorable fears.
They oblige her to keep armed and aggressive;
hers is an “offensive defensive.” There is no
other way of allaying her reasonable, just fears
except by a permanent binding association of
world powers to put an end forever to the headlong
scramble for Asia that began a century
and a half ago in India between the French and
English, to recognize frankly and to put it upon
record that that phase of history has closed,
and to provide some effective means of restoration
now and the prevention of fresh aggressions
in the future.</p>
<p class='c007'>No doubt there is a military caste in Japan
loving war and not even dreading modern war.
We have to reckon with that. When we ask
Japan to release China, we ask for something
very much against Japanese habits of thought.
Her dominant military note is due both to ancient
traditions and recent experience. Japan
had most of the fun and little of the bitterness
of the Great War and her people may conceivably
<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>have a lighter attitude toward aggressive
war than any European nation. But if the
alternatives presented to her were on the one
hand disarmament and a self-denying ordinance
of the powers in relation to China, and
on the other war against the other chief powers
of the world, I doubt if the patriotism of even
the most war-loving Japanese would not outbalance
his war lust. And I cannot imagine
any other permanent settlement of the Pacific
situation except a self-denying ordinance to
which Japan, America and the European
powers can ever possibly agree.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now, Japan, disarmed and pledged and self-restrained
by treaties and associations against
aggression on the mainland of Asia, would
nevertheless reap enormous benefits from the
liberation of China. Given just and reasonable
treaties, she can do very well without armaments.
Her geographical position would make
her naturally and properly the first merchant
and the first customer of a renascent China.
She would have the first bid for all the coal and
ore and foodstuffs she needed. American
<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>goods and European goods would have to come
past her over thousands of miles of sea. Chinese
goods that didn’t come to her would go elsewhere
up a steep hill of freight charges. It is
a preposterous imagination that China would
refuse to sell to her nearest and best customer.
Moreover, Japan’s artistic and literary culture,
at once so distinctive and so sympathetic with
that of China, would receive enormous stimulation,
as it has done in the past, by a Chinese revival.
Japan would be able to keep in the van
of nations not by that headlong imitation and
adoption of European devices into which circumstances
have forced her hitherto, but by a
natural and orderly development of her own
idiosyncracies in the face of the enhanced
power that modern resources supply. An association
of Japan with other nations to insure
uninterrupted development to China would insure
that to Japan also. It would be a mutual
assurance of peace and security.</p>
<p class='c007'>But there is one set of facts, and one only,
that militates against this idea of a pacific and
progressive Japan, a splendid leader in civilization
<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>amidst a brotherhood of nations, and
that is this, that Japan is already overpopulated,
she has to import not only food but industrial
raw material, and that her population
increases now by the tremendous figure of half
a million a year. That is the reality that gives
substance to the aggressive imperialism of
Japan. That is why she casts about for such
regions for expansion as Eastern Siberia—a
region not represented at the conference, and
so beyond its purview, and that is why she
covets some preferential control in Chinese
metals and minerals and food. Were it not for
this steady invasion of the world by hungry
lives, the principle of Japan for the Japanese,
China for the Chinese, England for the English,
Eastern Siberia for its own people, would
give us the simplest, most satisfactory principle
for international peace. But Japan teems.</p>
<p class='c007'>Has any country a right to slop its population
over and beyond its boundaries or to claim
trade and food because of its heedless self-congestion?
Diplomacy is curiously mealy
mouthed about many things; I have made a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>British official here blush at the words of birth
control, but it is a fact that this aggressive
fecundity of peoples is something that can be
changed and restrained within a country, and
that this sort of modesty and innocence that
leads to a morbid development of population
and to great wars calls for intelligent discouragement
in international relations.</p>
<p class='c007'>Japan has modernized itself in many respects,
but its social organization, its family
system, is a very ancient and primitive one, involving
an extreme domestication of women
and a maximum of babies. While the sanitation
and hygiene of Japan were still mediæval, a
sufficient proportion of these babies died soon
and prevented any overpressure of population,
but now that Japan has modernized itself in
most respects it needs to modernize itself in
this respect also.</p>
<p class='c007'>I submit that the troubles arising from excessive
fecundity within a country justify not
an aggressive imperialism on the part of that
country, but a sufficient amount of birth control
within its proper boundaries.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>
<h2 id='X' class='c005'>X<br/> “SECURITY”—THE NEW AND BEAUTIFUL CATCHWORD</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, November 20.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The new and really quite beautiful catchword
that dominates the Washington Conference
is “security.” The word was produced
originally, I believe, in France. France wants
nothing in the world now but security; she has
abandoned all dreams of conquest or glory, all
aggressive economic intentions; she is the white
lamb of international affairs, washed and redeemed
by the Great War. Only—she must be
secure.</p>
<p class='c007'>Great Britain, Japan are in complete unison
with France on this subject. Great Britain
asks for nothing but a predominant fleet and
naval arsenals in perfect going order. Mr.
Balfour’s eloquent speech at the second session
<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>of the conference made the necessity of this for
security incontrovertible. Japan wants East
Siberia, the special control of raw material in
Manchuria, a grip upon China, because she is
driven by the same passionate craving for
peace and rest. We have had this explained to
us very clearly here in Washington by representative
Japanese.</p>
<p class='c007'>All these powers will accept every proposal
Secretary Hughes makes, or is prepared to
make, eloquently and sincerely—“in principle.”
They then proceed to state their minimum
requirements for that feeling of security
which is the goal of all peoples at the present
time. When these requirements have been
stated it becomes plain that these states are not
to be so much disarmed as stripped for action,
with highly efficient instead of unwieldy and
overwhelmingly expensive equipment. They do
not so much propose to give up war as to bring
it back by a gentlemanly agreement within the
restricted possibilities of their austere bankruptcy.</p>
<p class='c007'>The French conception of security is particularly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>attractive. France stipulates, I gather,
for a dominant army upon the Continent of
Europe, for a Germany retained permanently
by agreement among the powers at the extremest
pitch of wretchedness and feebleness, for an
outcast Russia, or a series of alliances by which
such countries as Poland will be militarized in
the French interest rather than industrialized
in their own. And France, in further pursuit
of the idea of perfect peace (for France), is
training great masses of barbaric Senegalese for
war, with the view of using them to police white
populations and sustain their millennium in
Europe. They can have no other use now.</p>
<p class='c007'>If they return to Africa, these trained soldiers
will accumulate as a new and interesting
element in African life until some black Napoleon
arises to demand “security” for Africa.</p>
<p class='c007'>At present France displays an astonishing
confidence in the British, but no doubt, if her
amazing peasants and her wonderful soil presently
lead to partial recuperation, she will realize
the need of bringing her now neglected fleet
up to “security” standards also. And it is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>axiomatic among the experts that no power with
a coast line is really secure unless it has a fleet
at least the double of any other fleet that can
possibly operate upon that coast.</p>
<p class='c007'>These statements are not the facetious inventions
of an irresponsible writer; they are fair
samples of the sort of thing that the various
deputations have brought with them to Washington.
These are the things we talk of and
are gradually talking out of sight. And if the
Washington Conference served no other purpose
at all in the world, it would have been
quite worth while in order to get together all
these totally incomparable conceptions of security
and by that approximation to demonstrate
their utter absurdity. Along the lines
of either unregulated or regulated armament
there can be no security for any race or people.</p>
<p class='c007'>The only security for a modern state now is <i>a
binding and mutually satisfactory</i> alliance with
the power or powers that might otherwise
attack. The only real security for France
against a German revenge is a generous and
complete understanding between the French
<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>and German Republics so that they will have a
mutual interest in each other’s prosperity.
Germany is naturally a rather bigger country
than France, and nothing on earth can alter
that. Other powers or all the powers may come
into such a treaty as guarantors, but the essential
thing for peace between France and Germany
is peace made good and clear between
them, a cessation of mutual injuries and hostile
preparations.</p>
<p class='c007'>The only effectual security for the communications
of the British Empire is the recognition
by all mankind that this great system of English-speaking
states round and about the world
is a good thing for all mankind and a resolute
effort of these states to keep to that level.
There is no other real security.</p>
<p class='c007'>This is not “lofty idealism”; it is common
sense; and the idea of “security” by armament
and by the enfeeblement of possible rivals is
not a “practical recognition of present limitations,”
but a feeble surrender to entirely vicious
tendencies of the human mind.</p>
<p class='c007'>I believe that for a little while yet Washington
<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>will continue its researches into the meaning
of armed “security,” and that then it will
turn its attention to the alternative idea, with
which the nimble French mind has also been
playing, and that is security by treaty. The
French have been disposed in the past to welcome
an Anglo-American-French treaty to
guarantee France against attack. The idea in
that form is dead, but the possibility of a far
more comprehensive agreement, a loose-fitting
but effectual association of all the nations of
the world to keep the peace and arrange their
differences by conference, is bound to recur
again as the impossibility of disarmament without
settlement becomes increasingly apparent.</p>
<p class='c007'>There drifts into my memory here a curious
feast of “security” which occurred long ago in
some Eastern equivalent of Versailles. The
great Abbassid family had suffered many
things from the Ommayyad Caliphs, and at last
it rose against them and overcame them and
secured the leadership of Islam. The remnants
of the Ommayyad clan were summoned to witness
and celebrate the new peace. But some of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>Abbassids, inspired by quite modern ideas of
“security,” had all the Ommayyads massacred
before the banquet began. A beautiful carpet
was spread over the dead and dying and the
Abbassids feasted thereon. Here was “security”
to satisfy the most exacting modern European
ideals. Yet the Abbassids made little of
their security. They never rose to the glory
of the Ommayyads; the drive and strength
seemed to have gone out of Arab Islam; their
history for all this “security” is one of division,
decline, decay. It takes all men to make a
world.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us get through with this futile haggling
for national advantages and securities and let
us get on to the organization of that brotherhood
which can alone save the world.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>
<h2 id='XI' class='c005'>XI<br/> FRANCE IN THE LIMELIGHT</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, November 21.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The first session of the Washington Conference
featured, as the cinematograph people say,
President Harding and Mr. Secretary Hughes;
the second day was Mr. Balfour’s day; this
third, from which I have just come, was the
session of M. Briand.</p>
<p class='c007'>The four personalities contrast very strikingly.
President Harding was a stately figure
making a very noble oration in the best American
fashion; Mr. Hughes was hard, exact, clear-cut,
very earnest and explicit; Mr. Balfour
slender and stooping, silvery-haired and urbane,
made his carefully worded impromptu
speech with a care that left no ragged end to a
sentence and no gap for applause. All three
are taller and neater men than M. Briand,
whose mane of hair flows back from his face in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>leonine style, whose mobile face and fluent gestures
reinforce the stirring notes of his wonderful
voice. His eloquence was so great that
many Congressmen in the gallery above, quite
innocent of French, were moved to applause by
the sheer grace and music of the performance.</p>
<p class='c007'>Eloquence could not save the day or the occasion.
M. Briand spoke to a gathering that
was saturated with scepticism for the cause he
had to plead. I watched the quiet, scrutinizing
countenances of the six men he turned about to
face as he spoke—Root, Lodge and Hughes, as
immobile as judges; Balfour trying to look like
a sympathetic ally in the face of a discourse
that insultingly ignored Great Britain as a
factor of the European situation; Lord Lee,
obliquely prostrate and judicial; Geddes, with
that faintly smiling face of his, the mask of an
unbeliever.</p>
<p class='c007'>The voice of the orator rose and fell, boomed
at them, pleaded, sought to stir them—like seas
breaking over rocks. Their still implacable
faces, hardly or politely, retained the effect of
listening to a special pleader—a special pleader
<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>doing his best, his foamy best, with an intolerably
bad case.</p>
<p class='c007'>M. Briand put before the conference no definite
proposals at all. After Mr. Hughes, with
that magnificent discourse of his, punctuated by
“we propose to scrap,” M. Briand was an anticlimax.
France proposed to scrap nothing.
France does not know how to scrap. She learns
nothing and forgets nothing. It is her supreme
misfortune. He explained the position of
France in a melodious discourse of apologetics
and excuses. The French contribution to the
Disarmament Conference is that France has
not the slightest intention of disarming. She is
reducing her term of service with the colors
from three years to two. In a Europe of untrained
men this is not disarmament, but
economy.</p>
<p class='c007'>The great feature of M. Briand’s discourse
was his pretense of the absolute unimportance
of England in European affairs. France, for
whom, as Mr. Balfour in a few words of infinite
gentleness reminded M. Briand, France, for
whom the British Empire lost a million dead—very
<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>nearly as many men as France herself
lost; France, to whose rescue from German attack
came Britain, Russia and presently Italy
and America; France, M. Briand declared, was
alone in the world, friendless and terribly
threatened by Germany and Russia. And on the
nonsensical assumption of French isolation, M.
Briand unfolded a case that was either—I hesitate
to consider which—and how shall I put
that old alternative?—deficient in its estimate
of reality, or else—just special pleading.</p>
<p class='c007'>The plain fact of the case is that France is
maintaining a vast army in the face of a disarmed
world and she is preparing energetically
for fresh warlike operations in Europe and for
war under sea against Great Britain. To excuse
this line of action M. Briand unfolded a
fabulous account of the German preparation
for a renewal of hostilities; every soldier in
the small force of troops allowed to Germany
is an officer or non-commissioned officer, so that
practically the German Army can expand at
any moment to millions, and Germany is not
morally disarmed because Ludendorff—M.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>Briand quoted him at some length—is still
writing and talking militant nonsense.</p>
<p class='c007'>Even M. Briand has to admit that the present
German Government is honest and well meaning,
but it is a weak Government. It is not the
real thing. The real Germany is the Germany
necessary for M. Briand’s argument. And behind
Germany is Russia. He conjured up a
great phantom of Soviet Russia which would
have conquered all Europe but for the French
Armies and Poland. That iniquitous attack of
Poland upon Russia last May was, he assured
his six quiet-eyed auditors and the rest of us, a
violent invasion of Western civilization by
Russia.</p>
<p class='c007'>“There were those in Germany,” he said in a
voice to make our flesh creep, “who beckoned
them on.” The French had saved us from that.
The French Army, with its gallant Senegalese,
was the peacemaker and guardian of all Europe.</p>
<p class='c007'>One listened incredulous. One waited still
incredulous to hear it over again from the interpreter.
Yes, we were confirmed; he really
<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>had said that. Poor, exhausted Russia, who
saved Paris, desiring nothing but to be left
alone; bled white, starving, invaded by a score
of subsidized adventurers; invaded from Esthonia,
from Poland, from Japan, in Murmansk,
in the Crimea, in the Ukraine, on the
Volga, incessantly invaded, it is this Russia
which has put France on the offensive-defensive!</p>
<p class='c007'>One is reminded of the navvy who kicked his
wife to death to protect himself from her violence.</p>
<p class='c007'>(It is interesting to recall here that one of
the Kaiser’s favorite excuses for German armament,
when it was Germany and not France
which aspired to dominate Europe, was his
acute dread of the Yellow Peril.)</p>
<p class='c007'>When he talked to the journalists in preparation
for this display, M. Briand excused
France for wanting submarines in quantity because,
he said, she was liable to attack upon
three coasts, but maturer reflection omitted this
aspect of the French case from M. Briand’s attention.
It was too thick even for an American
<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>audience. And even Mr. Balfour, with all his
charming tenderness for a fellow-statesman,
could not well have avoided the plain question,
“From whom does France anticipate a sea
attack?”</p>
<p class='c007'>France is in about as much danger of an attack
upon her three coasts as the United States
of America is upon her Canadian frontier.
Her ships are as safe upon the sea as a wayfarer
on Fifth Avenue. If she builds submarines
now, she builds them to attack British
commerce and for no other reason whatever.
All the Ludendorffs and Soviets in the world do
not justify a single submarine. Every submarine
she launches is almost as direct a breach of
the peace with Britain as though she were to
start target practice at Dover Harbor across
the straits, and every one in England will understand
the aim of her action as clearly. As
M. Briand, in his discourse to the journalists,
argued that the empire of France was as far-flung
as that of Britain, her need to protect her
communication was as great. This was in the
face of Mr. Balfour’s reminder that Britain
<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>can feed its people only for seven weeks if its
overseas supplies are cut off. France can feed
from her own soil all the year round. The argument
was not good enough for a boys’ debating
society, and M. Briand, who is prepared to
scrap nothing else, was at least well advised to
scrap that.</p>
<p class='c007'>I will confess that I am altogether perplexed
by the behavior of France at the present time.
I do not understand what she believes she is
doing in Europe and I do not understand her
position in this conference. Why could she not
have co-operated in this conference instead of
making it a scene of special pleading? I have
already said that the French here seem to be
more foreign than any other people and least in
touch with the general feeling of the assembly.
They seem to have come here as national advocates,
as special pleaders, without any of that
passionate desire to lay the foundations of a
world settlement that certainly animates nearly
every other delegation. They do not seem to
understand how people here regard either the
conference or France.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>There is indeed a great and enduring enthusiasm
for France in America. Marshal
Foch has gone about in America as the greatest
of heroes and the most popular figure. He has
been overwhelmed by hospitality and smothered
by every honor America could heap upon
him. The French flag is far more in evidence
than the British in both New York and Washington.
This may easily give French visitors
the idea that they are exceptional favorites
here and that France can count upon American
backing in any quarrels she chooses to pick
with the British or the Germans or Russians.</p>
<p class='c007'>There could be no greater error. The enthusiasm
for Foch is largely personal; he was
the General of all the Allies. The enthusiasm
for France is largely traditional and it does not
extend to the French nationals or the present
day. America loves, as all liberal and intelligent
men throughout the world must love,
France the great liberator of men’s minds;
France of the great Revolution; the France of
art and light, France, the beautiful and the
gallant. It is hard to write bitterly of a country
<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>that can give the world an Anatole France,
sane and smiling, or so brave and balanced a
gentleman as the late Robert d’Humiers. But
where is that France today? None of that
France has come to the Washington Conference,
but only an impenitent apologist for three
years of sins against the peace of the world, an
apologist for national aggression posturing as
fear, and reckless greed disguised as discretion.</p>
<p class='c007'>Here in New York and Washington I find
just the same steady change of opinion about
France that is going on in London. I want to
write it down as plainly as I can. I want to get
it over to my friends in France, because I have
loved France greatly, and I do not think the
French people realize what is going on among
the English-speaking peoples. People here
want to see Europe recuperating, and they are
beginning to realize that the chief obstacle to a
recuperating Europe is the obstinate French
resolve to dominate the Continent, to revive
and carry out the antiquated and impossible
policy of Louis XIV., maintaining an ancient
and intolerable quarrel, setting Pole against
<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>German and brewing mischief everywhere in
order to divide and rule, instead of entering
frankly into a European brotherhood.</p>
<p class='c007'>Feeling about Germany and Austria is
changing here, even more rapidly than in England,
to pity and indignation; feeling about
Russia is drifting the same way. One detects
these undercurrents in the minds of the most
unlikely people. People are recalling the
France of Napoleon III., that restless and mischievous
France, which came so near to a conflict
with America in Mexico and which kept
Europe in a fever for a quarter of a century.
It is an enormous loss to the Washington Conference,
it is a misfortune to all the world, that
the great qualities of the French people, their
clear-headedness, their powerful and yet practical
imaginations seem at present to be entirely
subordinated to the merely rhetorical and
emotional side of the French character.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>
<h2 id='XII' class='c005'>XII<br/> THUS FAR</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 22.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>How are we getting on in Washington?</p>
<p class='c007'>The general mood is hopefulness tempered
by congestion, mental and physical, and by
sheer fatigue. There is no rest in Washington,
no cessation. Last winter I was a happy invalid
at Amalfi, I sat in the Italian sunshine,
the hours were vast globes of golden time, my
mind and my soul were my own. Now I live to
the tune of a telephone bell and the little feverish
American hours slip through my hot, dry
hands before I can turn my thoughts around.
I wish I could attend to everything.</p>
<p class='c007'>The conference has evolved two committees,
one on disarmament and one on Pacific affairs,
which meet behind closed doors, so that one has
three or four divergent reports of what has
happened to choose from; delegates at all hours
<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>and in devious ways call together the press men
to make more or less epoch-making statements;
there are particular conferences with representative
business men of this country and educationists
of that, and so forth; one is called upon
by a multitude of well informed people insistent
upon this fact or that point of view, eloquent
sidelights from South China, Albania,
Czecho-Slovakia clamor for attention. And
there is a terrible multitude of mere pesterers
who want to do something—they know not
what. The weather here is unusually warm
and inclined to be cloudy, a brewhouse atmosphere,
due entirely, one humorist declares,
to the tremendous fermentation that is
going on.</p>
<p class='c007'>The fermenting vat overflows with the press
of all the world. All the world, we feel, is present
in spirit at Washington.</p>
<p class='c007'>Three questions stand out as of importance
and significance. The naval disarmament discussion,
as one could have foretold, becomes a
haggle for advantages. Each power seeks to
disarm the other fellow. Great Britain detests
<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>the big raider submarine and wants none of it;
it is America’s only effective long range
weapon. A clamor comes to us from across the
ocean from the French Senate for unlimited
submarines. These will be to attack Great
Britain; there can be no other possible use for
them. Perhaps the French Senate does not
really want war with Britain, but this is the
way to get it.</p>
<p class='c007'>Japan is asking for a seven to ten instead of
a six to ten basis for herself. And so on. So
long as unsettled differences remain, disarmament
discussions are bound to degenerate in
this fashion. Settlements and sincere disarmament
are inseparably interwoven. The French,
however, have led in an important pronouncement,
promising evacuations and renunciations
in the Chinese area on the part of France, provided
Britain and Japan follow suit. Lord
Riddle, on behalf of Britain, has followed suit;
Britain is ready to relinquish everything, with
the justifiable exception of Hongkong, a purely
British creation. And M. Briand has explained
why France must have an awful army to overawe
<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Europe, but that still leaves certain possibilities
of military restraint open for consideration.
We are still discussing whether we may
not hope to see conscription banished from the
earth.</p>
<p class='c007'>When such things swim up through the boiling
activities of the Washington vat, not merely
as passing suggestions and happy ideas but embodied
in more or less concrete proposals, we
cannot fail, however jaded we may feel, from
also feeling hopeful. The conference has got
only to its third session and we already seem
further from war in the Pacific and nearer security
there than at any time in the last two
years.</p>
<p class='c007'>And these intimations of success in this
world discussion, of which Washington is the
controlling nucleus, turn our minds naturally
enough to the continuation and final outcome of
this great initiative of President Harding’s.
The more fruitful the conference seems likely
to be in agreements and understandings the
more evident is the necessity for something
permanent arising out of it, to hold and maintain,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>in spirit and in fact, this accumulation of
agreements and understandings.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Washington Conference before it breaks
up and disperses must in some way lay an egg
to reproduce itself. In some fashion it must
presently return. Because we have had to
bear in mind that in the final and conclusive
sense of the word the conference can decide
nothing. It has produced a fine and generous
atmosphere about it; it will probably arrive at
an effectual temporary solution of a large
group of problems, but the power of final decision
rests with Governments and Legislatures
far away.</p>
<p class='c007'>The American proposals are only suggestive
and they have no value as a treaty, unless they
are accepted by the powers and until the American
Senate has confirmed them by a two-thirds
majority. M. Briand may have wished to be
generous and broadminded here, but in Paris
is this French Senate, inspired by a mad patriotism
that would even now begin to arm France
for an “inevitable” war with Britain. The
French Senate has made a warlike gesture
<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>directly at England, has set its feet in a path
that can end only in a supreme disaster for
both France and England, and it did so, one
guesses, in order to remind M. Briand that if
he dared to be reasonable, if he dared to be pacific,
if he acted for Great France and mankind,
instead of at the dictates of Nationalist France,
he did so at his peril. He would have been
accused of betraying his country. “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Conspuez
Briand!</span>” they would have cried in their pretty
way. So M. Briand has played the patriot’s
role.</p>
<p class='c007'>In Tokio and in London it is an open secret
that the same conflict goes on; the cables are
busy with the struggle between reason and
fierce patriotism. * * * Every concession
made by every country at Washington will go
back to the home land to be challenged as
“weakness,” as “want of patriotism,” as
“treason.”</p>
<p class='c007'>In America and Britain the ugly side of this
business has still to come, the outbreak of the
patriotic fanatics, of the disappointed politicians
who wanted to come here, of the wrecker
<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>journalists, the dealers in suspicion, the evil
minds of a thousand types. And the lassitude
that follows great expectations has also to be
reckoned with. What Washington decides will
not be the ultimate outcome; what the world
will get at last in treaties ratified and things
accomplished will be the mangled and tangled
remains of the Washington decisions.</p>
<p class='c007'>For that reason it is imperative that the
Washington Conference should meet again.
Its work is not done until its decisions are realized.
After it has sent over its reports to the
Goverments and Parliaments it will adjourn,
but it must not cease. With perhaps rather
fuller powers, with perhaps a wider or a different
representation of the world, it must come
again to a renewed invitation, to restore once
more that atmosphere of international good
will that has been created here, and to go over
the attempts to realize, or the failures to realize,
the settlement it has already worked out.
And there will be many questions ripening then
for solution that it cannot deal with now.</p>
<p class='c007'>Much remains to be done by the Washington
Conference, most of its work, indeed, is still to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>be done, but enough has been demonstrated already
here to convince any reasonable man that
a new thing, a new instrument, a new organ,
has come into human affairs and that it is a
thing that the world needs and cannot do without
again. This thing has to recur, has to
grow. It has to become a recurrent world conference.
And this being clear, it is time that
public discussion, public opinion, direct itself to
the problem of the renewal of the conference in
order that before it disperses we may be assured
that it will meet again.</p>
<p class='c007'>As a temporary, transitory thing, it will presently
fade out of men’s memories and imaginations;
but as a thing going on and living, which
has gone, but which, like the King in circuit,
will come again to try the new issues that have
arisen and to try again the experiments that
have fallen short of expectation, it may become
the symbol and rallying point of all that vast
amount of sane, humanitarian feeling and all
that devotion to mankind as a whole, and to
peace and justice, that has hitherto been formless
and ineffectual in the world, for the need
of such a banner.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>
<h2 id='XIII' class='c005'>XIII<br/> THE LARGER QUESTION BEHIND THE CONFERENCE</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, November 23.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The Washington Conference, after its tremendous
opening, seems now to be running into
slack water. It has had its three great days, in
which Secretary Hughes and Mr. Balfour and
M. Briand have respectively played the leading
parts. The broad lines of a possible naval reduction
and of a possible Chinese and Pacific
settlement are shaping themselves in men’s
minds.</p>
<p class='c007'>M. Briand has spoken and now departs.
France will not disarm until she has a binding
treaty which her former allies are not yet prepared
to give her. She ignores the assurances
of her proved allies and the experiences of the
Great War. She goes in fear of desolate
Russia and bankrupt Germany and she is “assailable
<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>on three coasts.” So she retains her
great armies, and especially her “colonial”
army. M. Briand’s departure has something
of the effect of France shaking the dust from
her feet and departing from the conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>But France cannot step out of her share in
the leadership of peace in this fashion. France
has not finished with the conference yet. She
will speak now at Washington with a voice perhaps
less romantically impressive but more
practically helpful. She has explained the terrors
of her position and the assembled delegates
have said “There! There!” to her as
politely and soothingly as possible. But nobody
really believes in the terrors of her position.
Mr. Hughes is a man of great tenacity of
purpose, and his chief reply to M. Briand’s
speech is to keep military disarmament upon
the agenda. A third committee of five powers
has been added to the two already in existence
to deal with land disarmament. It is doubtful
if it can get very far unless it can bring in German
and Russian representatives to reply to
the alarmist charges of M. Briand.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>With the formation of this third committee
the Washington Conference would seem to have
got as much before it as it is likely to handle.
The Hughes impetus has done its work and
done its work well. The conference has followed
his rigorous lead almost too rigorously.
It has cut off a manageable part of the vast
problem of world peace and seems well on the
way to manage it. That is exemplary—if limited.
To manage a sample is to go some way
toward demonstrating that the whole is manageable.
A war on the Pacific has been averted,
I think, at least for some years. But the more
general problem of world peace as one whole,
the problem of ending war for good, still remains
untouched, and it is well to bear in mind
that that is so.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is impossible not to contrast this phase in
the life of the Washington Conference with the
great propositions of the opening days, when
President Harding was speaking at Arlington
and in the Continental Building of making an
end to offensive—and with that of defensive—war
forever in the world. It is impossible to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>ignore this shrinkage of aim and to refrain
from measuring the vast omissions. That prelude,
one perceives, was the prelude to something
greater than this present conference, and
more than this conference must ensue from it.
The haggling and adjustment that is now going
on in the committee of five powers on naval limitation
and in the committee of nine powers on
the Pacific settlement I will not attempt to follow.
It is a matter for the experts and diplomatists;
the public is concerned not with the
methods of the wrangle but with the general
purport and practical outcome.</p>
<p class='c007'>We of the general public are incapable of
judging upon the merits of battle cruisers and
the possible limits to the size of submarines.
Our concern is to see such things grow rarer
and rarer until they disappear. I will not apologize,
therefore, for going outside the conference
chamber for the matter of my next few papers.
I will go back from Mr. Secretary Hughes and
his proposals and their consequences to President
Harding and to the great expectations
with which the conference assembled.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>These expectations looked not merely to an
arrest of international competition on the Pacific,
and to giving threatened China a breathing
time to bring itself up to modern conditions;
they looked frankly toward the establishment
of a world peace. But so far as Europe goes,
where as M. Briand’s speech reminded us, the
nations are locked together in a state of extreme
danger, the conference has as yet done
nothing. It is quite possible to believe that it
will do very little. It is doubtful if the peace
of Europe can ever be dealt with effectually in
Washington. The troubles of the European
Continent are an old, intricate story, and I believe
the attitude ascribed here to the American
Centre and West, the attitude of “let Europe
solve her own international problems and
not bother us with them,” is a thoroughly
sound and wise one. America has neither the
time and attention to spare nor the particular
understandings needed to grasp the tangled
difficulties of Europe. Such initiatives as those
of President Wilson about Danzig and Fiume
settle nothing and leave rankling sores. It is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>up to Europe to clear up and simplify itself before
it comes into the world arena with
America.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is just within the range of possibility,
therefore, that some sort of European conference
may arise out of the Washington gathering.
Such a conference is becoming necessary.
The divergence in spirit and aim of France and
Britain that Washington has brought out is not
a divergence to be smoothed over. Better it
should flare now than smoulder later. I have
done my own small best to exacerbate it, because
I believe that a brisk quarrel and some
plain speaking may clear the air for a better
understanding. Europe needs ventilation.
When France, Britain, Italy and Germany meet
together to discuss their common interests, cut
through their impossible entanglements and get
rid of their mutual suspicions and precautions
with the frankness of this Washington gathering,
with as open and free a discussion and as
ample a public participation, European affairs
will be on the mend.</p>
<p class='c007'>But there is another issue which America
<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>cannot keep out of as she can keep out of the
Franco-German-British situation, and upon this
second issue the world looks to her for some
sort of leadership. So far the Washington
Conference has excluded any consideration of
the economic and financial disorder of the
world. But that consideration cannot be indefinitely
delayed; it is becoming pressingly necessary.
All the while we are debating here
about Japanese autocracy and ambitions, and
what we really mean by the “open door,” and
whether we shall have 40,000 or 90,000 tons of
submarines, and so on, the economic dissolution
of the world goes on.</p>
<p class='c007'>The immediate effect of partial disarmament,
indeed, both in Britain and Japan, may be even
to increase the economic difficulties of these
countries by throwing considerable masses of
skilled labor out of work. I propose in my next
paper to discuss this process of economic and
social dissolution which is now going on
throughout the world, beneath the surface of
our formal international relations. It is the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>larger reality of the present world situation
which the brighter, more dramatic incidents of
the earlier sessions at Washington have for a
time thrust out of our attention.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>
<h2 id='XIV' class='c005'>XIV<br/> THE REAL THREAT TO CIVILIZATION</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 25.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>In the opening paper of this series I said
that Western civilization was undergoing a
very rapid process of disorganization, a process
that was already nearly complete in Russia
and that was spreading out to the whole world.
It is a huge secular process demanding unprecedented
collective action among the nations
if it is to be arrested and I welcome the Washington
Conference as the most hopeful beginning
of such concerted action.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now that the Washington Conference has defined
its scope and limitations and got down to
a definite scheme of work it will be well to return
to this ampler question of the decline in
the world’s affairs.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now there are great numbers of people, more
particularly in America, who still refuse to recognize
<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>this intermittent and variable process,
which resumes and goes on again and rests
steady for a time and then hurries, which is
taking all that we know as civilization in Europe
toward a final destruction. The mere
statement that this is going on they call “pessimism,”
and with a sort of genial hostility they
oppose any attempt to consider the possibility
of any action to turn back the evil process.</p>
<p class='c007'>I suppose they would call the note of a fire
alarm or the toot of a motor horn “pessimism”—until
the thing hit them good and hard. It
would have the same effect of a disagreeable
warning and interruption to the even tenor of
their ways. They argue that this alleged decadence
is not going on, or, what is from a
soundly practical point of view the same thing,
that it is never going to reach them or anything
that they really care for.</p>
<p class='c007'>The starvation of Russia down to an empty
shell, the break up of China, the retrogression
of Southeastern Europe to barbarism, the sinking
of Constantinople to the level of a drunken
brothel, the steadily approaching collapse of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>Germany, is nothing to these “optimists.”
America is all right, anyhow, and am I my
brother’s keeper? It is just a phase of misfortune
“over there” and the people must get out
of it as they can.</p>
<p class='c007'>Wait for the swing of the pendulum, the turn
of the tide. Things will come right again—over
the heaps of dead. There have been such
slumps before in those countries away over
there, notoriously less favored by God, as they
are, than America.</p>
<p class='c007'>It may be well therefore to go over this matter
a little more fully and to give my grounds
for supposing that there is a rot, a coming undone,
going on in our system, that will not
necessarily recover—that the movement isn’t
the swing of a pendulum, nor this ebb an ebb
that will turn again. And further, that this
rotting process is bound to affect not merely
Europe and Asia, but ultimately America.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now let us recapitulate in the most general
terms what has happened and is happening at
the present time to impoverish and disorganize
the world. First, there has been a very
<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>great destruction of life through the war, especially
in Europe. Mostly this has been the killing
of young men who would otherwise have
been the flower of the working mass of these
countries at the present time. This in itself is
a great loss of energy, but it is a recoverable
loss. A new generation is already growing up
to replace these millions of dead and to efface
the economic loss of this tragic and sorrowful
destruction.</p>
<p class='c007'>Nor is the extraordinary waste of property,
of energy and raw material spent in mere destruction,
an irreplaceable loss. Given toil,
given courage, devastated areas can be restored,
fresh energies found to replenish the
countless millions and millions of foot pounds
of work wasted upon explosives. Many beautiful
things, buildings, works of art and the like
have gone, never to be gotten again, but their
place may conceivably be taken by new efforts
of creative, artistic energy, given toil, given
confidence and hope.</p>
<p class='c007'>Far more serious, from the point of view of
the future, than the destruction of either things
<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>or lives, are certain subtler destructions, because
they strike at that toil, that courage and
hope and confidence which are essential to any
sort of recuperation.</p>
<p class='c007'>And foremost is the fact of debt, everywhere,
but particularly in the European countries. All
the billions worth of material that was smashed
up and blown to pieces on the front had to be
bought from its owners and to secure it every
belligerent Government had to incur debts.
Lives cost little, but material much. The European
combatants are overwhelmed with debts,
every European worker and toiler, every European
business man, is a debtor; every European
enterprise goes on under a crushing burden
of taxation because of these debts. An attempt
has been made to shift this unendurable
burden from the victors to the vanquished, but
the vanquished already had as much as they
could carry.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now when first mankind began to experiment
with money and credit the lot of the debtor was
an intolerable one. He might become the slave
of his creditor, he might be subjected to imprisonment
<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>and frightful punishments. But it was
early discovered that it was not to the general
advantage, it was not even to the advantage of
the creditor, to drive the debtor to despair.
Processes of bankruptcy were devised to clear
him up, get what was possible from him and
then release him to a fresh start and hope.</p>
<p class='c007'>But we have not yet extended the same leniency
to national bankruptcy because national
insolvencies have been rare. And so we have
whole nations in Europe so loaded with debts
and punitive charges that every worker, every
business man, will be under his share in this
burden from the cradle to the grave. He will
be a debt serf to the domestic or foreign creditor
and all his enterprises will be weighed and
discouraged by this obligation. Debt is one immense
and universal discouragement now
throughout all Europe.</p>
<p class='c007'>But even that might not prevent the recovery
of Europe. There is yet another and profounder
evil in operation to prevent people
“getting to work” to reconstruct their shattered
economic life. That is the increasing failure
<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>of money to do its work. Europe cannot
get to work, cannot get things going again, because
over a large part of the world the medium
of exchange has become untrustworthy and unusable.
That is the immediate thing that is destroying
civilization in the Old World.</p>
<p class='c007'>We have to remember that our whole economic
order is based on money. We do not
know any way of working a big business, a
manufactory, a large farm, a mine, except by
money payments. Payment in kind, barter and
the like are ancient and clumsy expedients; you
cannot imagine a great city like New York getting
along with its industrial and business life
on any such clumsy basis. Every modern city,
London, Paris, Berlin, is built on a money basis
and will collapse into utter ruin, as Petersburg
has already collapsed, if money fails. But over
large and increasing areas of Europe money is
now of such fluctuating value, its purchasing
power is so uncertain, that men will neither
work for it, nor attempt to save it, nor make
any monetary bargains ahead.</p>
<p class='c007'>Such a thing has never occurred to anything
<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>like the same extent in all history, and it is killing
business enterprise altogether and throwing
whole masses of working people out of employment.</p>
<p class='c007'>Europe without trustworthy money is as
paralyzed as a brain without wholesome blood.
She cannot act, she cannot move. Employment
becomes impossible and production dies away.
The towns move steadily toward the starvation
that has overtaken Petersburg and the peasants
and cultivators cease to grow anything except
to satisfy their own needs. To go to market
with produce, except to barter, is a mockery.
The schools are not working, the hospitals, the
public services; the teachers and doctors and
officials cannot live upon their pay, they starve
or go away.</p>
<p class='c007'>This state of affairs has been brought about
by the reckless manufacture of paper money by
nearly every European Government; we can
measure their recklessness roughly by comparing
their pre-war and post-war exchanges. It
is only now that we are beginning to realize
the enormity of the disaster which this demoralization
<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>of money is bringing upon the
world.</p>
<p class='c007'>We have weakened the link of cash payments,
which has hitherto held civilization together, to
the breaking point. As the link breaks, the machine
stops. The modern city will become a
formless mob of unemployed men and the countryside
will become a wilderness of food-hoarding
peasants—and since the urban masses will
have no food and no means of commanding it,
we may expect the most violent perturbations
before they are persuaded to accept their fate
in a philosophical spirit.</p>
<p class='c007'>Revolutionary social outbreaks are not the
results of plots; they are symptoms of social
disease. They are not causes but effects. This
is what I mean when I write of a breakdown of
civilization. I mean the death of town life,
which cannot go on without money and the
cessation of organized communications. I mean
a breakdown of the organizations for keeping
the peace. I mean an end to organized education.</p>
<p class='c007'>I mean the smashing of this social order in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>which we live, through the smashing of money,
which has already occurred to a large extent
in Russia, which is going on in many parts of
Eastern Europe, which seems likely to occur
within a few months in Germany, which may
spread into Italy and France, and so to Britain,
and even to the American continent, and which
can only be arrested by the most vigorous collection
action to restore validity to money.</p>
<p class='c007'>Of which vigorous collective action there is
in Washington at the present moment no sign.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>
<h2 id='XV' class='c005'>XV<br/> THE POSSIBLE BREAKDOWN OF CIVILIZATION</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, November 26.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>In a previous paper I have set out the plain
facts of the condition of Central and Eastern
Europe. It is a break-up of the modern civilization
system, due to the smashing up of
money, without which organized town life, factory
production, education and systematic communications
are unworkable. If it goes on unchecked
to its natural conclusion, Central and
Eastern Europe will follow Russia to a condition
in which the towns will be dying or dead,
empty and ruinous, the railroads passing out of
use, and in which few people will be left alive
except uneducated and degenerating peasants
and farmers, growing their own food and keeping
a rough order among themselves in their
own fashion. We are faced, indeed with a return
<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>to barbarism over all these areas. They
are going back to the conditions of rural Asia
Minor or the Balkans.</p>
<p class='c007'>How far is this degeneration going to
spread?</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us recognize at once that it need spread
no further. It is not an inevitable process. It
could be arrested, it could be turned back and a
rapid restoration of our shattered civilization
could be set going right away if the leading
powers of the world, sinking their political ambitions
for a time, could meet frankly to work
out a bankruptcy arrangement that would release
the impoverished nations from debt and
give them again a valid money, a stable money
with a trustworthy exchange value, that could
be accepted with confidence and saved without
deterioration. Upon that things could be set
going again quite hopefully. Education has not
so degenerated as yet, habits of work and trading
and intercourse are still strong enough to
make such a recovery possible.</p>
<p class='c007'>Except perhaps in Russia. Russia, for all
we know, may have sunken very deep.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>But if there is no vigorous world effort made
soon the trading class, the foreman class, the
technically educated class, the professional
class, the teachers, and so forth, will have been
broken up and dispersed. These classes are
comparatively easy to destroy, extremely hard
to reconstruct. Modern civilization will really
have been destroyed, if not for good, for a long
period, over great areas if these classes go.</p>
<p class='c007'>And the process is at present still spreading
rapidly. If it gets Germany—and it seems to
be getting Germany—then Italy may follow.
Italy is linked very closely to Germany economically
and financially. The death of Germany
will chill the economic blood of Italy.
Italy is passionately anxious to disarm on land
and sea. But Italy cannot disarm while France
maintains a great army and makes great naval
preparations. France’s refusal to disarm prevents
Italy from disarming. The lira sways
and sinks; its value fluctuates not perhaps so
widely as do marks and kronen but much too
widely for healthy industrial life and social security.
And Italy is troubled by its restless
<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>nationalists, a whooping flag-waving crew of
posturing adventurers without foresight or any
genuine love of country. If nothing is done, I
think I would give Germany about six months
and North Italy two years before a revolutionary
collapse occurs.</p>
<p class='c007'>And France?</p>
<p class='c007'>This new rhetorical France which remains
heavily armed while no man threatens, which
builds new ships to fight non-existent German
armies and guards itself against the threats of
long dead German Generals—one of M.
Briand’s hair-raising quotations is to be found
in the Encyclopaedia Britannica and must be
nearly twenty years stale—the renascent
France which jostles against Italy and England
and believes that it can humbug America for
good and all while it does these things, will it
pull through amid the general disaster of Europe?
Will it achieve its manifest ambition
and remain dominant in Europe, the dominance
of the last survivor, the cock upon the dunghill
of a general decay? I doubt it.</p>
<p class='c007'>Watch the franc upon the exchange as the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>true meaning of the French search for “security”
dawns upon the world. Watch the subscription
to the next French loan to pay for
more submarines and more Senegalese. It may
prove to be too difficult a feat, after all, for
France to wreck the rest of Europe, to destroy
her commerce by destroying her customers, and
yet to save herself. When France begins to
break, she may break very quickly. Under the
surface of this exuberant French patriotism
runs a deep tide of Communism, raw and red
and insanely logical.</p>
<p class='c007'>We talk of the saner, graver France, the substantial
France, that is masked by the rhetoric
of M. Briand and the flag-waving French nationalists,
of a France generous enough to help
a fallen foe and great enough to think of the
welfare of mankind. I wish we could hear
more of that saner France. And soon. I can
see nothing but a warlike orator, empty and
mischievous, leading France and all Europe to
destruction. I do not see that it is possible for a
France of armaments and adventures to dance
along the edge of the abyss without falling in.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>When we pass out of the Continental to the
Atlantic system and consider the case of Britain
we find a country with a stabler exchange
and a tradition of social give and take stronger
and deeper than that of any other country in
Europe. But she is not a self-maintaining
country. Her millions live very largely on
overseas trade. She is helplessly dependent
upon the prosperity of other countries, and
particularly of Europe; the ebb of prosperity
abroad means ebb for her at home. No other
country feels so acutely the economic prostration
of Germany; no other country suffers so
greatly from the restless activities of France.
She is struggling along now with unprecedented
masses of unemployed workers, and the
state of affairs abroad offers no hope of any
diminution of this burden. The housing of her
great population has degenerated greatly since
the war began; she cannot continue to feed,
clothe nor educate her people as she used to do
unless the decay of Continental Europe is arrested.</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not know what political form of expression
<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>a great distress in Britain might take. The
tendency toward revolutionary violence is not
very evident in the British temperament, but
people who are slow to move are often slow to
stop. The slow violence of the English might
not find expression in revolution and might not
expend itself internally. They might get resentful
about France—and perhaps Germany
might be feeling resentful about France too.
But I will confess that I cannot yet imagine
what an acutely distressed Britain might or
might not do. Yet it is plain to me that the
shadow that lies so dark over Petrograd
stretches as far as London.</p>
<p class='c007'>Such, compactly, is the condition of Europe
today. I submit to the reader that it is a fair
statement of facts in common knowledge. This
is not the Europe of the diplomatists and publicists;
it is the Europe of reality and the common
man. It is a process of decline and fall
going on under our eyes, swifter and more extensive
than the decline and fall of the Roman
Empire in the fourth and fifth centuries. Its
immediate cause is the destruction of the monetary
<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>system under the burden of war expenditure
and war debts. And the only possible
hope that it may be arrested lies in a prompt
and vigorous world conference to put an end to
war expenditures, including even these French
war expenditures that M. Briand’s admirers
find so justifiable; to extinguish debts and reinstate
stable and trustworthy money in the
world.</p>
<p class='c007'>There is no evidence yet that the Washington
Conference will take up this task or will
even contemplate this task. I find myself in
the trough of the waves today and less confident
of the outcome, even the limited outcome,
of things here. I am increasingly doubtful
whether the conference will get as far in the
direction of a stabilized Pacific as I hoped a
few days ago.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>
<h2 id='XVI' class='c005'>XVI<br/> WHAT OF AMERICA?</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, November 28.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>In my next article I will report progress of
the Washington Conference; in this I will go on
with my account in general terms of what is
happening in the world.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have written of a progressive rapid dissolution
of our civilized organization as the dominant
fact of the present time. It is very hard
indeed to keep it in one’s mind here in this city
of plenty and lavish light that anything of the
sort is going on. It is amazing how they splash
light about here; the Capitol shines all night
like a full moon, an endless stream of light
pours down the Washington Obelisk, light
blinks and glitters and spins about and spills
all over the city.</p>
<p class='c007'>I find it hard to realize the reality of the collapse
here myself, and yet I have seen the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>streets of one great European city in full daylight
as dead and empty as a skull. I have
sought my destination in the chief thoroughfare
of another European capital at night by
means of a pocket electric torch. I at least
ought to keep these memories of desolation
clear before me.</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not see how Americans who have never
seen anything of the wrecked state of Eastern
Europe and the shabbiness and privation of the
Centre can be expected to feel and see the vision
I find it so hard to keep vivid in my
thoughts. Here is a country where money is
still good; the $10 notes in my pocket assure
me I can go down to the Treasury here and get
gold for them whenever I think fit. (I believe
them so thoroughly that I do not even think fit.)
My intimations of the progressive dissolution
over there must read like a gloomy fiction. And
it is the hardest, most important fact in the
world.</p>
<p class='c007'>Everywhere here there is festival. I go to
splendid balls, to glittering receptions; I am
whirled off to a most hilarious barbecue, an ox
<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>in chains, roasts and drips over a wood fire—think
of that in Russia! Thanksgiving Day
was an inordinate feast. The portions of food
they give you in hotels, clubs and restaurants
are enormous, by present European standards;
one seems always to be eating little bits and
throwing the rest away.</p>
<p class='c007'>Neither New York nor Washington shows a
trace yet, that I can see, of the European shadow.
There is much unemployment, but not
enough yet to alarm people. Nothing of it has
struck upon my perceptions either here or in
New York. In the midst of this gay prosperity
comes a letter from my wife describing how the
police had to censor the bitter inscriptions upon
the wreaths that were laid upon the London
cenotaph on Armistice Day and how the veterans
of the Great War who marched in the
unemployed processions in London wore pawn
tickets in the place of their medals.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am forced by these contrasts to the question:
“Suppose America patches up a fairly
stable peace with Japan; lets Japan accumulate
in Manchuria, Siberia, and finally China; cuts
<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>her naval expenditure to nothing, and allows
the rest of the world, including the old English-speaking
home, to slide and go over into the
abyss—apart from the moral loss, will she suffer
very greatly?”</p>
<p class='c007'>That is a very interesting speculation.</p>
<p class='c007'>I think she may adjust herself to a self-contained
system and, in a sense, pull through. It
may involve some very severe stresses. At
present she grows more food than she can eat
or waste; she exports foodstuffs. The American
farmer sells so much of his produce for export,
not a very great percentage, but enough
to form an important item in his affairs. Given
a Europe and Asia too impoverished and
broken up to import food stuffs, that trade
goes. The American farmer will have to sell to
a shrunken demand; he will have either to
shrink himself or undersell his fellow farmer.
This will mean bad times for the American farmer
as Europe sinks; farmers will be unable
to buy as freely as usual; many agriculturists
will be going out of business.</p>
<p class='c007'>Firms like Ford will be embarrassed by overproduction.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>American manufacturers are also,
to a very marked but not overwhelming extent
exporters and much of their internal trade is to
the farmers—whose purchasing power will be
diminishing. Bad times for the industrial regions
also will follow the European disaster,
perhaps even very bad times. New York and
the Eastern cities, so far as the overseas traffic
goes, may suffer exceptionally. For them there
may be less power of recovery, for with the fall
of Europe into barbarism, the centre of American
interests will shift to the interior. But
after a series of crises, a lot of business failures
and so on, I do not see why the United
States—if there is no war with Japan—very
little reduced from the large splendor of its
present habits, should not still be getting along
in a fashion. America is not tied up to the European
system, to live and die with it, as France
or Britain is tied.</p>
<p class='c007'>And there is a limit also to the areas of the
Old World affected by the collapse of the cash
and credit system in Europe. Outside the European
seacoast towns, Asia Minor is not likely
<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>to go much lower than it is at present, though
most of Europe sink to the level of the Balkans
and Asia Minor. The dissolution of Asia
Minor resulted from the great wars of the Eastern
Empire and Persia; all that land was
ruined country before the days of Islam. It
has never recovered and Europe may never recover.</p>
<p class='c007'>Given an enfeebled Britain, there will probably
be a collapse into conflict and discord
throughout most of India; and China, unhelped,
may continue in a state of confusion which is
steadily destroying her ancient educated class
and her ancient traditions without replacing
them by any modernized educational organization.
But here again upon the Western Pacific
there may be regions which need not go the
whole way down to citylessness, illiteracy and
the peasant life.</p>
<p class='c007'>Japan is still solvent and energetic, the war
has probably strained her very little more than
it has strained America, and her participation
in the world credit system is still so recent that,
like America, she may be able to draw herself
<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>together and maintain herself and expand her
rule and culture, unimpeded, over the whole of
Eastern Asia. She will be the more able to do
this if a phase of disarmament gives her time to
rest and consolidate before her expansion is resumed.
A war between Japan and America
would be a long and costly affair and it would
no doubt topple both powers into the same
process of dissolution in which Europe now
welters, but I am assuming that America takes
no risk of such a war for the sake of China or
suchlike remote cause and that Japan is not
eager for California. An America indifferent
to the fall of Europe would probably not trouble
itself seriously if presently Australia came
under Japanese domination. It would not
trouble—until the Monroe Doctrine was invaded.
And it would get along very comfortably
and happily.</p>
<p class='c007'>So far as material considerations go, therefore,
there is not much force in an appeal to
the ordinary plain man in America to interest
himself, much less to exert himself, in the
tangled troubles of Europe and Asia now. He
<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>can remain as proudly “isolated” as his fathers;
he can refuse help, he can “avoid entangling
alliances,” and rely on his own strength;
he can weather the smash, insist on pressing
any sparks of recovery out of the European
debtor, and so far as he and his children, and
possibly even his children’s children, are concerned,
America can expect to go on living an
extremely tolerable life. There will still be
plenty of Fords, plenty of food, movies and
other amusing inventions; seed time, harvest
and thanksgiving; no armament and very light
taxation and as high a percentage of moral,
well-regulated lives as any community has ever
shown upon this planet. Until that long-distant
time when the great Asiatic Empire of
Japan turns its attention seriously to expansion
in the New World.</p>
<p class='c007'>So far as present material considerations go....</p>
<p class='c007'>But I belong to one of the races that have
populated America. I know the imagination of
my own people and something of most of the
peoples who have sent their best to this land, I
<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>have watched the people here, and listened to
them and read about them; there has been no
degeneration here but progress and invigoration,
and I will not believe that the American
spirit, distilled from all the best of Europe,
will tolerate this surrender of the future,
this quite hoggish abandonment of the leadership
of mankind that continuing isolation
implies.</p>
<p class='c007'>The American people has grown great unawares;
it still does not realize its immense
predominance now in wealth, in strength, in
hope, happiness and unbroken courage among
the children of men. The cream of all the white
races did not come to this continent to reap and
sow and eat and waste, smoke in its shirtsleeves
in a rocking-chair, and let the great
world from which its fathers came go hang. It
did not come here for sluggish ease. It came
here for liberty and to make the new beginning
of a greater civilization upon our globe. The
years of America’s growth and training are
coming to an end, the phase of world action has
begun. All America is too small a world for the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>American people; the world of their interest
now is the whole round world.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have no doubt of the heart and enterprise
of America—if America understands.</p>
<p class='c007'>But does America understand the scale and
urgency of the present situation? Is she prepared
to act now? This decadence of Europe is
urgent—urgent. So far, this Washington Conference
has not touched more than the outer
threads of the writhing international tangle
that has to be dealt with if European civilization
is to be saved.</p>
<p class='c007'>So far, these economic and financial troubles
which are already at a crisis of disaster in Europe
have been treated as though they did not
exist. But they are the very heart of the trouble
across the Atlantic, and with America, the
rich creditor of all Europe and the holder of
most of the gold in the world, lie enormous possibilities
of salvation. The political situation
becomes more and more subordinated to the
economic.</p>
<p class='c007'>If America is willing, America is able to reinstate
Europe and turn back the decline, <i>and she
<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>is in so strong a position that she can make the
effectual permanent disarmament of Europe a
primary condition of her assistance</i>. If she
have the clearness of mind to set aside the eloquent
apologetics of that one power that is still
militant, adventurous and malignant among the
ruins, she can oblige the remnant of Europe to
get together and settle outstanding differences
by the sheer strength of her financial controls.
She can demand a “League to Enforce Peace,”
and she can enforce it.</p>
<p class='c007'>Will she do that now, or will she let this occasion
pass from her—never to return?</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>
<h2 id='XVII' class='c005'>XVII<br/> EBB TIDE AT WASHINGTON</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 28.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The League of Nations was the first American
initiative toward an organized world peace.
Its beginning, the world-wide enthusiasm
evoked by its early promise, its struggle to exist,
its abandonment by America, its blunders
and omissions and the useful, incomplete body
that now represents it at Geneva, are the material
of an immense conflicting literature. For
a time at least the League is in the background.
It has not kept hold of the popular imagination
of the world.</p>
<p class='c007'>I will not touch here upon the mistakes and
disputes, the possible arrogance, the possible
jealousies, the inadvisable compromises, the
unnecessary concessions that made the League
a lesser thing than it promised to be. I will not
<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>discuss why so entirely American a project,
into which many nations came mainly to please
America, failed to retain the official support of
the American Government. Of such things the
historian or the novelist may write but not the
journalist. The fact remains that the project
was a project noble and hopeful in its beginnings,
a very great thing indeed in human history,
a dawn in the darkness of international
conflict and competition, an adventure which
threw a halo of greatness about the Nation
that produced it and about that splendid and
yet so humanly limited man who has been
chiefly identified with its promise and its partial
failure.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was, I insist, very largely an American
idea, and only America, because of her freedom
from the complex and bitter-spirited traditions
of the European Foreign Offices, could
have brought such a proposal into the arena of
practical politics. The American Nation is exceptionally
free from ancient traditions of empire,
ascendancy, expansion, glory and the like.
It is haunted by a dream, an obstinate recurrent
<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>dream, of a whole world organized for
peace. It comes back to that with a notable
persistence.</p>
<p class='c007'>The League of Nations stands now, as it were,
on the shelf, an experiment not wholly satisfactory,
not wholly a failure, destined for
searching reconsideration at no distant date.
Meanwhile, the American mind, with much
freshness and boldness, has produced this second
experiment, in a widely different direction,
the First Washington Conference for the Limitation
of Armaments. The League of Nations
was too definite and cramped in its constitution,
too wide in its powers. It was a premature superstate.
One standard objection, and a very
reasonable one, was that America might be outvoted
by quite minor powers and be obliged to
undertake responsibilities for which it had no
taste. The second experiment, therefore, has
been tried, very properly, with the loosest of
constitutions, and the most severely defined
and limited of aims. We are beginning to see
that it too is an experiment, likely to be successful
within its limits but again not wholly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>satisfactory. Instead of a world constitution
we have had a world conversation.</p>
<p class='c007'>That conversation has passed from the open
sessions of the conference to the two committees
of five upon the limitation of land and sea
armaments and the Pacific Committee of nine.
In all these committees there are wide fluctuations
of thought and temper. There are daily
communications to the press from this committee
or that, from this delegation or that, from
a score of propagandas. It is really not worth
the while of the ordinary citizen to follow these
squabbles and flights and recriminations and
excitements. Certain broad principles have
been established. The ordinary citizen will be
advised to hold firmly to these and see that he
gets them carried through.</p>
<p class='c007'>And now there has been a decided ebb in the
high spirit of the conference. These disputes
about details have produced a considerable
amount of fatigue, attention is fatigued and the
exploit of M. Briand has for a time shattered
and confused the general mentality. The
American public was in a state of pure and simple
<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>enthusiasm for peace and disarmament and
quite unprepared for the exploit of M. Briand.
Like all serious shocks, it did not at first produce
its full result.</p>
<p class='c007'>The mood was so amiable here, so eager for
cheering and emotional human brotherhood,
that when France, in the person of M. Briand,
snapped her fingers at the mere idea of disarmament
and quoted a twenty-year-old passage
from a dead German Field Marshal to justify
a vast army and an aggressive naval programme
in the face of an exhausted Europe,
there was a touching disposition on the part of
a considerable section of the American press
to greet this display as in some way conducive
to our millennial efforts. Only a few of us
called a spade a spade right away and declined
to pretend that the irony and restrained indignation
of Mr. Balfour and Signor Schanzer
were “indorsements” of M. Briand’s stupendous
claim that France with her submarines
and Senegalese might do as she pleased in Europe.</p>
<p class='c007'>The facts that the caustic and restrained utterances
<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>of these gentlemen could be so construed,
and that the London Daily Mail should
attempt to break and mutilate my comments
on the French attitude, demonstrate beyond
doubt the need there was for the utmost outspokenness
in this matter. But the situation is
now better realized. The air is already clearer
for the outburst. France, we realize, has to
stop bullying Germany and threatening Italy;
Europe can only be saved by the honest and
unreserved co-operation of Italy, France and
Britain for mutual aid and reassurance.</p>
<p class='c007'>The repercussion of the Franco-British clash
was immediately evident upon the other issues
of the conference. The practical refusal of
France to join in the generous renunciations of
America and Britain, the feeling of insecurity
created in Western Europe weakened Britain
in her ability to work with America on the Pacific
for a secure China and for restraint upon
the possible imperialism of Japan. Britain
cannot do that with a hostile neighbor behind
her and an uncertain America at her side, and
the prospects of a free China and for an effective
<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>limitation of the Japanese naval strength
were greatly imperilled. Japanese demands
stiffened. “Ten to six,” said America. “Ten
to seven,” answered Japan.</p>
<p class='c007'>The effect upon what I might call the Washington
state of mind throughout the world was
depressing. The easy onrush of the opening
days was checked. Here was hard work ahead,
complications, the traditions and mental habits
of two great European peoples were in conflict
and had somewhat to be adjusted if we were to
get on. The Anglo-French Entente, we discovered,
was in a very unsatisfactory state; it
had suddenly to be sent to the wash and the
washing had to be done in public, and this happened
at a phase of lassitude. In the ebb of the
great enthusiasm all sorts of buried rocks and
shoals became apparent again. Party politics
reappeared—and remained showing.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am an innocent child in American politics;
I know that I make my artless remarks upon
these things at considerable peril. But I gather
from the self-betrayals of one or two influential
people that things are somewhat in this
<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>frame. The Democrats feel that so far they
have been almost supernaturally “good” about
the conference. They haven’t said a word by
way of criticism; they have hailed and helped
and smiled and cheered. Still——If things
should so turn out that a kind of insufficiency
should appear, and if people’s minds should
revert thereupon toward the Democratic
League of Nations idea, so much under a cloud
at present, it would be rather more than human
not to feel a faint gleam of pleasure and perhaps
even to give the gentlest of pushes to the
process of disillusionment.</p>
<p class='c007'>And on the other hand, there betrays itself
now and then a slight nervous eagerness on the
part of loyal rather than good Republicans to
call anything that happens a success and to become
indignant when, as in the case of the Briand
oration, a spade is called a spade. And
that childish, undignified and dwindling tendency
of certain American types to regard all
foreign powers in general, and Britain in particular,
as forever engaged in diabolical machinations
against the peace and purity of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>American life is also increasingly evident.
There is an open, if incoherent, press campaign
against disarmament, against the British,
against foreigners generally, against—any
troublesome thing you like.</p>
<p class='c007'>These are ebb tide phenomena. These are the
limitations of our poor humanity under fatigue.
None the less, matters have to be thrashed out
and will be thrashed out. As I said in the beginning,
it is hard to keep hold.</p>
<p class='c007'>And so it was high time that the President,
who embodies so much of the simplicity and
strength of that real America, in which I am a
profound and obstinate believer, should come
back into the limelight from which he receded
after delivering his great speech and leaving
the chair on the opening day of the conference.
In the indirect way customary with Presidents
here he has been making some very important
pronouncements.</p>
<p class='c007'>My friend Mr. Michelson some days ago published
a sketch of very important proposals
that had already received wide support in the
informal discussions that pervade Washington—for
<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>partial rescinding of the Allied debts,
subject to disarmament conditions, to be considered
by a second conference to be presently
assembled. Following on this news the President
has been talking for publication of a third
experiment in the form of a second Washington
Conference to take up these issues. And he has
also been talking of a third conference to confirm
and go on with the disarmament arrangements,
a conference at which Germany and the
Spanish-speaking powers, if not Russia, are
apparently to have a voice. Such a periodic
repetition of the conference would presently
organize itself for a continuing life and so develop
gradually and naturally into that Association
of Nations we are all seeking.</p>
<p class='c007'>These are refreshing promises in these days
of ebb; they show that the impulse that began
so splendidly two weeks ago is not dead, that
the tide rises toward world discussion and world
organized peace will flow again presently, wider
and stronger than its previous flow. And meanwhile
these frank discussions of attitude and
detail must go on; they cannot be ignored, but
<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>at the same time they must not be magnified
into incurable quarrels and insurmountable difficulties.
They are unavoidable and necessary
things, but not the big things, the main things.
While the tide is out our main projects,
stranded in this estuary that leads perhaps to
the ocean of peace, must needs keel over and
look askew; we must scrape our keels, calk
leaks and wait for the great waters to return.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>
<h2 id='XVIII' class='c005'>XVIII<br/> AMERICA AND ENTANGLING ALLIANCES</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Nov. 30.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The power of the American impulse toward
a world peace is undeniable. It has produced
in succession the great dream of a League of
Nations and now this second great dream of a
gradually developing Association of Nations
arising out of a series of such conferences as
this one. No other nation could have raised
such hopes and no other political system has
the freedom of action needed to give these projects
the substance and dignity which the initiative
of the head of the state involves.</p>
<p class='c007'>But if these projects are to carry through
into the world of accomplished realities, if in a
lifetime or so this glorious dream of a world
peace—going on, as a world at peace must now
inevitably do, from achievement to achievement—if
<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>that dream is to be realized, certain peculiarities
of the American people and the
American situation have at no very distant
date to be faced.</p>
<p class='c007'>All such gatherings and conferences as this
are haunted by a peculiar foggy ghost called
“Tact,” which is constantly seeking to cover
up and conceal and obliterate some vitally important
but rather troublesome reality in the
matter. “Tact” is apparently a modern survival
of the ancient “Tabu.” For example, a
pleasant Indian gentleman sits among the British
delegates at the conference; “Tact” demands
that no one shall ever ask him or of him,
“What do you conceive will be the place of India
in that great World Association half a century
ahead? Will it still be a British appendix?”
And “Tact” becomes hysterical at the slightest
whisper of the word “Senegalese,” or any inquiry
about the possible uses of the French submarine.
And a third question, hitherto veiled
by “Tact” under the very thickest wrappings
of fog, to which, greatly daring, I propose to
address myself now, is: “How far is America
<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>really prepared to fix and adhere to any wide
schemes for the permanent adjustment of the
world’s affairs that may be arrived at by this
conference or its successors?”</p>
<p class='c007'>The other day a friend of mine in New York
made a profoundly wise remark to me. “I have
found,” she said, “that one can have nothing
and do nothing without paying for it. If you
do well or if you do ill, just the same you have
to pay for it. If a mother wants to do her best
by her children, she must pay for it, in giving
up personal ambitions, dreams of writing or
art, throughout the best years of life. If a man
wants to do his best in business or politics, he
must sacrifice dreams of travel and adventure.”
And whatever America does with herself in the
next few years, she too must be prepared to
pay.</p>
<p class='c007'>If she desires isolation, moral exaltation, irresponsibility
and self-sufficiency, “America
for the Americans and never mind the consequences,”
she must be prepared to witness the
decline and fall of the white civilization in Europe
and the consolidation of a profoundly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>alien system across the Pacific. If, on the other
hand, she now takes up this task for which she
seems so inclined, as the leader and helper of
white civilization, the task of organizing the
permanent peace of the world upon the lines
of the system of civilization to which she belongs,
then for that nobler role also there is a
price to be paid. She has to assume not only
the dignity but the responsibilities of leadership.
She has not merely to express noble sentiments,
but to lay hold upon the difficulties and
intricacies of the problem before her. She has
not merely to criticise but to consider and sympathize
and help, and she has to make decisions
and abide by them.</p>
<p class='c007'>When America really makes decisions, she
abides by them—vigorously. The Monroe Doctrine
was such a decision. It has saved South
America for South Americans; it has saved Europe
from a ruinous scramble for the Spanish
inheritance. It was the first great feat of
Americanism in world politics. The exponents
of “Tact” will, I know, be outraged by the reminder
that for a long time tacit approval of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>Britain and the existence of the British fleet
provided a support and shield to the Monroe
Doctrine, and also by the further reminder that
the one serious attack upon it was made by Napoleon
III. during the American Civil War—at
which time, I admit, the attitude of Great Britain
to the disunited States was also far from
impeccable. But helped or assailed, the Monroe
Doctrine held good.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Washington Conference has developed
a position with regard to the Pacific that calls
for an American decision of equal vigor. It is
as plain as daylight that Japanese liberal tendencies
can be supported and the aggressive
ambitions of Japanese imperialism can be restrained,
that China can be saved for the
Chinese and Eastern Siberia from foreign conquest,
provided America places herself unequivocally
side by side with Great Britain and
France in framing and <i>sustaining</i> a definite system
of guarantees and prohibitions in Eastern
Asia. The Anglo-Japanese agreement could be
ended in favor of such a new peace-pact and an
enormous step forward toward world peace
<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>be made. It would mark an epoch in world
statecraft.</p>
<p class='c007'>But this means an agreement of the nature
of a treaty; a mere Presidential declaration,
which means some later President might set
aside or some newly elected Senate reverse, is
not enough. If the reader will study the position
of Australia and of the British commitments
in Eastern Asia, he will see why it is not
enough. Britain is not strong enough to risk
being left alone as the chivalrous protector of
a weak, if renascent, China. She has her own
people in Australia to consider. And besides,
Britain alone—as the protector of China—after
all that has happened in the past.... It
is moral as well as material help in sustaining
the new understanding that the British will require.</p>
<p class='c007'>The plain fact of the Pacific situation is that
there are only three courses before the world—either
unchallenged Japanese domination in
Eastern Asia from now on, or a war to prevent
it soon, or an alliance of America, Britain and
Japan, with whatever government China may
<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>develop, and with the other powers concerned,
though perhaps less urgently concerned—an alliance
of all these, for mutual restraint and mutual
protection. And it is an equally plain fact,
though “Tact” cries “Hush!” at the words,
that the tradition of America for a hundred
years, a tradition which was sustained in her
refusal to come into the League of Nations, has
been against any such alliance.</p>
<p class='c007'>George Washington’s advice to his countrymen
to avoid “permanent alliances” for the
balance of power and suchlike ends, and Jefferson’s
reiterated council to his countrymen to
avoid “entangling alliances” have been interpreted
too long as injunctions to avoid any alliances
whatever, entangling or disentangling.
The habit of avoiding association in balance-of-power
schemes and the like has broadened out
into a general habit of non-association. But
alliances which are not aimed at a common
enemy but only at a common end were not, I
submit, within the intention of George Washington.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>At any rate, I do not see how the disarmament
proposals of Mr. Secretary Hughes can
possibly he accepted without a Pacific settlement,
nor how that settlement can be sustained
except by some sort of alliance, meeting periodically
in conference to apply or adapt the
settlement to such particular issues as may
arise. If America is not prepared to go as far
as that, then I do not understand the enthusiasm
of America for the Washington Conference.
I do not understand the mentality that
can contemplate world disarmament without at
least that much provision for the prevention of
future conflicts.</p>
<p class='c007'>And similarly, I do not see how any effectual
disarmament is possible in Europe or how any
dealing with the economic and financial situation
there can be possible unless America is
prepared to bind itself in an alliance of mutual
protection and accommodation with at
least France, Germany, Britain and Italy to
sustain a similar series of conferences and adjustments.
At the back of the French refusal
<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>to disarm there is a suppressed demand for a
protective alliance. That is an entirely reasonable
demand. The form of this alliance that
the French have demanded hitherto is an entangling
alliance, an alliance of America and
Britain and France against, at least, Germany
and Russia. The necessary alliance to which
France and Britain will presently assent, and
which America will come to recognize as the
only way to its peacemaking aims, will be
against no one; it is an alliance of an entirely
beneficial character, an alliance not to entangle
but to release.</p>
<p class='c007'>The disposition of the European delegations
and of the British and foreign writers at Washington
to treat the idea of America making
treaties of alliance as outside the range of possibility,
as indeed an idea <i>tabu</i>, seems to me a
profoundly mistaken one. It is “Tact” in its
extremest form. I have heard talk of the “immense
inertia” of political dogmas held for a
hundred years. For “immense inertia” I
would rather write “expiring impulse.” The
<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>policy of non-interference in affairs outside
America was an excellent thing, no doubt, for
a young Republic in the self-protective state;
it is a policy entirely unworthy of a Republic
which has now become the predominant state
in the world.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>
<h2 id='XIX' class='c005'>XIX<br/> AN ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS</h2></div>
<p class='c006'>The futility of the idea of a limitation of
armaments or any limitation of warfare as a
possible remedy for the present distresses of
mankind, without some sort of permanent settlement
of the conflicts of interest and ambition
which lie at the root of warfare, has grown
clearer and clearer with each day’s work of the
Washington Conference. And the conviction
that no permanent settlement is conceivable
without a binding alliance to sustain it also
grows stronger each day. For security and
peace in the Pacific an alliance of at least America,
Britain and Japan is imperative, and Britain
cannot play her part therein unless Europe
is safe also, through a binding alliance of at
least France, Germany, Britain and America.
To arrest the economic decadence of the world
a still wider bond is needed.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>So the inflexible logic of the situation brings
us back to the problem of a world alliance and
a world guarantee, the problem of which the
League of Nations was the first attempted solution.
The conference is being forced toward
that ampler problem again, in spite of the severe
restrictions of its agenda. After President
Wilson’s “League” comes President
Harding’s “Association.” Senator Borah, in
alarm, emerges from the silence he has hitherto
kept during the conference to declare that this
“Association” is only another name for the
“League.” On that we may differ from him.
Association and League are alike in seeking to
organize the peace of the world but in every
other respect they are different schemes, differing
in aims, scope and spirit.</p>
<p class='c007'>The primary difference is that, while the
League was a very clearly defined thing,
planned complete from the outset, a thing as
precise and inalterable as the United States
Constitution, the Harding project is a tentative,
experimental thing, capable of great adaptations
by trial and corrected error, a flexible and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>living thing that is intended to grow and change
in response to the needs of our perplexing and
incalculable world.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Harding idea, as it is growing up in
people’s minds in Washington, seems to be
something after this fashion: That this present
conference shall be followed by others having
a sort of genetic relationship to it, varying
in their scope, in their terms of reference, in
the number of states invited to participate. A
successor to the present one seems to be already
imminent in the form of a conference on
the economic and financial disorder of the
world. Such a conference would probably include
German and Spanish, and possibly Russian,
representatives, and it might take on in
addition to its economic discussion any issues
that this present conference may leave outstanding.</p>
<p class='c007'>These Washington Conferences, it is hoped,
will become a sort of international habit, will
grow into a world institution in which experience
will determine usages and usage harden
into a customary rule. They will become
<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>by insensible degrees a World Parliament,
with an authority that will grow or decline
with the success or failure of the recommendations.</p>
<p class='c007'>One advantage of having experiments made
will occur at once to those who have been present
at the plenary sittings of the present conference.
The method of trial and error will afford
an opportunity of working out the grave
inconveniences of the language difficulty. It is
plain that, with only three languages going,
French, Japanese and English, proceedings
may easily become very tedious; there is no
true debate, no possibility of interpolating a
question or a comment, no real and vivid discussion.
The real debating goes on in notes
and counter notes, in prearranged speeches,
communications to the press representatives,
and so forth.</p>
<p class='c007'>The plenary sessions exist only to announce
or confirm. They are essentially <i>ceremonial</i>.
In any polyglot gathering it seems inevitable
that this should be so. The framers of the
League of Nations constitution, with its Council
<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>and Assembly, seem to have been far too
much influenced by the analogy of single language
governing bodies in which spontaneous
discussion is frequent and free. World conferences
are much more likely to do their work
by translated correspondence and by private
sessions of preparatory committees, and to use
the general meeting only for announcement, indorsement
and confirmation.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the preparatory committees are only the
first organs developed by the conference. Certain
other organs are also likely to arise out of
it as necessary to its complete function. Whatever
agreements are arrived at here about
either the limitation of armaments or the permanent
regulation of the affairs of China and
the Pacific, it is clear that they will speedily
become seed beds of troublesome misunderstanding
and divergent interpretation unless
some sort of permanent body is created in each
case, with very wide powers intrusted to it by
the treaty making authorities of all the countries
concerned to interpret, defend and apply
the provisions of the agreement. Such permanent
<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>commissions seem to me to be dictated by
the practical logic of the situation. Quite apart
from the later conferences that President Harding
has promised, a standing Naval Armament
Commission and a Pacific Commission, with
very considerable powers to fix things, seems to
be a necessary outcome of the First Washington
Conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>But these two commissions will not cover all
the ground involved. This conference cannot
leave European disarmament and the European
situation with its present ragged and raw
ends. Nothing has been more remarkable, nothing
deserves closer study by the thoughtful
Americans, than the fluctuations of the British
delegation at this conference with regard to a
Pacific settlement. I see that able writer upon
Chinese affairs, Dr. John Dewey, comments
upon these changes of front and hints at some
profound disingenuousness on the part of the
British. But the reasons for these fluctuations
lie on the surface of things. They are to be
found in the European situation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Britain, secure in Europe, unthreatened on
<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>her Mediterranean routes, can play the part of
a strong supporter of American ideals in China.
She seems, indeed, willing and anxious to do
so—in spite of her past. But threatened in Europe,
she can do nothing of the sort. She cannot
extend an arm to help shield China while a
knife is held at her throat. So the Pacific is entangled
with the Mediterranean and the coasts
of France, and it becomes plain that a Peace
Commission for Europe is a third necessary
consequence of this conference, if this conference
is to count as a success.</p>
<p class='c007'>Suppose now that this present conference
produces the first two commissions I have
sketched and gives way to a second conference,
with an ampler representation of the European
powers, which will direct its attention mainly to
the reassurance and disarmament of France
and Germany and Britain, a second conference
whose findings may be finally embodied in this
third commission I have suggested; and suppose,
further, that an International Debt and
Currency Conference presently gets to effective
work, surely we may claim that the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>promised Association of Nations is well on its
way towards crystallization.</p>
<p class='c007'>Simply and naturally, step by step, the President
of the United States will have become the
official summoner of a rudimentary World Parliament.
By the time that stage is reached a
series of important questions of detailed organization
will have arisen. Each executive commission,
as the successive conference brings
these commissions into being, will require in its
several spheres agents, officials, a secretariat,
a home for its archives, a budget. These conferences
cannot go on meeting without the development
of such a living and continuing body
of world administration through the commissions
they must needs create. Presumably that
body of commissions will grow up mainly in and
about Washington. If it does, it will be the
most amazing addition to Congress conceivable;
it will be the voluntary and gradual aggregation
of a sort of loose World Empire round the
monument of George Washington.</p>
<p class='c007'>But I do not see that all these commissions
and Parliaments need sit in Washington or that
<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>it is desirable that they should. A world commission
for land disarmament might function
in Paris or Rome, a world commission for
finance in New York or London. And meanwhile,
at Geneva or in Vienna, to which place
there is some project of removal, the League of
Nations, that first concrete realization of the
American spirit, will be going on in its own
rather cramped, rather too strictly defined lines.</p>
<p class='c007'>It also will have thrown out world organizations
in connection with health, with such world
interests as the white slave traffic, and so forth.
It will be conducting European arbitrations and
it will be providing boundary commissions and
the like. And somewhere there will also be a
sort of World Supreme Court getting to work
upon judicial international differences.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now this, I submit, is the way that world
unity is likely to arise out of our dreams into
reality, and this partial, dispersed, experimenting
way of growth is perhaps the only way in
which it can come about. It is not so splendid
and impressive a vision as that of some World
Parliament, some perfected League, suddenly
<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>flashing into being and assuming the leadership
of the world. It will not be set up like a pavilion
but it will grow like a tree. But it is a
reality and it comes. The Association of Nations
grows before our eyes.</p>
<p class='c007'>And meanwhile there is an immense task before
teachers and writers, before parents and
talkers and all who instruct and make and
change opinion, and that is the task of building
up a new spirit in the hearts of men and a new
dream in their minds, the spirit of fellowship to
all men, the dream of a great world released
forever from the obsession of warfare and international
struggle; a great world of steadily
developing unity in which all races and all kinds
of men will be free to make their distinctive contributions
to the gathering achievements of
the race.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>
<h2 id='XX' class='c005'>XX<br/> FRANCE AND ENGLAND—THE PLAIN FACTS OF THE CASE</h2></div>
<p class='c006'>If we are to have any fundamental improvements
in the present relations of nations, if we
are to achieve that change of heart which is
needed as the fundamental thing for the establishment
of a world peace, then we must look
the facts of international friction squarely in
the face. It is no good pretending there is no
jar when there is a jar. This business of the
world peace effort, of which the Washington
Conference is now the centre, is not to smooth
over international difficulties; it is to expose,
examine, diagnose and cure them.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now here is this Franco-British clash, a plain
quarrel and one very disturbing to the American
audience. The Americans generally don’t
like this quarrel. They are torn between a very
strong traditional affection for the French and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>a kind of liking for at least one or two congenial
things about the British. They would like
to hear no more of it, therefore. They just
simply want peace. But there the quarrel is.
Was it an avoidable quarrel? Or was it inevitable?
Perhaps it is something very fundamental
to the European situation. Perhaps if we
analyze it and probe right down to the final
causes of it we may learn something worth
while for the aims and ends of the Washington
Conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now, let us get a firm hold upon one very important
fact, indeed. This clash is a clash between
the present French Government and the
present British Government, but it is not a
clash between all the French and all the British.
It is not an outbreak of national antipathy or
any horrible, irreconcilable thing of that sort.
There are elements in France strongly opposed
to the French Government upon the issues
raised in this dispute. There is a section of the
English press fantastically on the “French”
side and bitterly opposed even to the public
criticism of the public speeches of the French
<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Premier in English. The party politics of both
France and Britain and, what is worse, those
bitter animosities that centre upon political
personalities have got into this dispute.</p>
<p class='c007'>It may help to clear the issue if we disregard
the attitude of the two Governments in naming
the sides to the dispute, and if instead
of speaking of the “French” or the “British”
sides we speak of the “Keep-Germany-down”
and the “Give-Germany-a-chance” sides, or better,
if we call them the “Insisters,” who insist
upon the uttermost farthing of repayment
and penitence from Germany, and the “Believers,”
who don’t. For it is upon Germany
that the whole dispute turns.</p>
<p class='c007'>There is a very powerful “Insister” party in
Great Britain; there is a growing “Believer”
party in France. And while France has been
steadily “Insister” since the armistice, Britain
and the British Government have changed
round from “Insister” to “Believer” in the
last year or so. This change has produced extraordinary
strains and recriminations between
French and British political groups and individuals,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>as such changes of front must always do.
Such disputes often make far more noise than
deep and vital national misunderstandings, and
it is well that the intelligent observer, and particularly
the American observer, should distinguish
the note of the disconcerted party man
in a rage from the note of genuine patriotic
anger.</p>
<p class='c007'>The beginnings of the present trouble are to
be found in the Versailles Conference. There
the only “Relievers” seem to have been the
American representatives. Those were the days
of the British Khaki election, when “Hang the
Kaiser” and “Make the Germans Pay!” were
the slogans that carried Mr. Lloyd George to
power. For about four months the dispute
went on between moderation and overwhelming
demands. America stood alone for moderation.
The British insisted upon the uttermost farthing,
at least as strenuously as the French, and it
was Gen. Smuts, of all people, who added the
last straw to the intolerable burden of indebtedness
that was then piled upon vanquished and
ruined Germany. And both America and Britain
<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>were parties to the arrangements that give
France the power, the Shylock right, of carving
into Germany and disintegrating her more
and more if Germany fail to keep up with the
impossible payments that were then fixed upon
her.</p>
<p class='c007'>The position of the French Government in
this business is therefore a perfectly legal and
logical one. France can adhere, as M. Briand
says she will, to the Treaty of Versailles, she
can flout and disregard any disposition of the
Washington Conference to qualify or revise
that treaty, and the British Government, in a
hopelessly embarrassed and illogical position,
can appeal only to the hard logic of reality.</p>
<p class='c007'>Britain is much more dependent upon her
overseas trade than France, and so the British
have earlier realized the enormous injury that
the social and economic breakdown of Russia
has done and the still more enormous injury
that the breaking up of Central European civilization
will do.</p>
<p class='c007'>“You are quite within your rights,” these
newly converted “Relievers” say to the obdurate
<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>“Insisters,” “but you will wreck all
Europe.”</p>
<p class='c007'>That idea that the possible destruction of
civilization has not yet entered so many minds
in France as it has in Britain. Germany is
nearer to France than to Britain, and the fear
of a renascent and vindictive Germany is
greater in France than in Britain. In the
French mind, the possibility of a German invasion
for revenge twenty years hence still
overshadows the possibility of an economic
breakdown in a year or two years’ time. The
British are nearer the breakdown and further
from the Germans. That is the reality of this
Franco-British clash.</p>
<p class='c007'>Upon that reality bad temper, party feeling,
personal spites, irrational prejudices, are building
up a great mass of nasty, quarrelsome matter.
And the French Government and the
French nationalist majority are pressing on to
naval and military preparations that distinctly
threaten Britain. It is no good pretending that
they do not do so when they do. The French
submarines are aimed at Britain.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>Empty civilities between France and Britain
are of no value in a case of this sort. Both
countries are being worried by their infernal
politicians and both are in a state of financial
distress and raw nerves. It is not a time when
deliberation and clear reasoning are easy. But
when we get down to the fundamentals of the
case we find that the antagonism comes out to
these two propositions that are not necessarily
irreconcilable:</p>
<p class='c008'>(I) <i>That Germany, for the good of the
whole world, must not be destroyed further,
but, instead, assisted to keep upon her feet
(“Relievers”), and</i></p>
<p class='c008'>(II) <i>That Germany must nevermore become
a danger to France (“Insisters”)</i>.</p>
<p class='c007'>And these two propositions are completely
reconcilable, and this particular clash can be
entirely cured and ended by one thing and by
one thing only, a binding alliance, watched and
sustained by a standing commission of France,
Germany, Britain, America, and possibly Italy
and Spain, to guarantee France and Germany
from further invasions and internal interference,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>if France follows the dictates of her better
nature and the advice of her wiser citizens,
foregoes her impossible claims and lets up on
Germany from now on.</p>
<p class='c007'><i>And from no country can the initiative of
such an alliance come more effectively than
from the United States of America, the universal
creditor, who can bring home to France, as
no other power can, the beauty and desirability
of financial mercifulness.</i></p>
<p class='c007'>I submit that these are the broad lines, the
elements, the A B C of the present situation
and that there is nothing whatever between
France and Britain that is not entirely secondary
and subordinate to this issue between Insistence
and Relief.</p>
<p class='c007'>And moreover the issue between France in
general and Britain in general is an issue that
is going on in parallel forms all over the world.
Old Japan <i>insists</i> upon the Versailles treaty;
young Japan would relieve China,—how much
is not yet clear. The American scene is a
conflict between those who insist fiercely
upon the British debt and those who would devise
<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>relieving conditions. It is nowhere a
struggle between peoples and races, it is everywhere
a struggle between logic and reason, between
the stipulated thing, the traditional thing
and the humane and helpful thing, between old
ways of thinking and new, between the letter
and the spirit. Old Shylock was the supreme insister,
and since Portia was the triumphant reliever,
we may reasonably look to the woman
voter and the women’s organizations of Britain
and America for a particular impetus towards
relief. And the sooner relief comes the better,
for once Shylock’s knife has cut down sufficiently
to the living flesh, the cause of the reliever
and of civilization will have been lost
forever.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>
<h2 id='XXI' class='c005'>XXI<br/> A REMINDER ABOUT WAR</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, December 5.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>An examination of the situation that has
arisen in Europe between France, England and
Germany brings us out to exactly the same
conclusion as an examination of the Pacific
situation. There is no other alternative than
this: Either to fight it out and establish the
definite ascendancy of some one power or to
form an alliance based on an explicit settlement,
an alliance, indeed, sustaining a common
executive commission to watch and maintain
the observance of that settlement. There is no
way out of war but an organized peace. Washington
illuminates that point. We must be prepared
to see an Association of Nations in conference
growing into an organic system of
world controls for world affairs and the keeping
<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>of the world’s peace, or we must be prepared
for—a continuation of war. So it is
worth considering what that continuation of
war will be like. If you will not organize peace
through some such association, then organize
for war, for certainly war will come again to
you, or to your children.</p>
<p class='c007'>And for reasons set out in my earlier papers,
reasons amply confirmed by the experiences of
the Washington gathering, a mere limitation of
armaments can be little more than a strategic
truce. It may indeed even cut out expensive
items and so cheapen and facilitate war.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let me note here in passing that the case for
some Association of Nations to discuss and control
the common interests of mankind rests on a
wider basis than the mere prevention of war;
the economic and social divisions and discords
of mankind provide, perhaps, in the long run, a
stronger and more conclusive argument for human
unity than the mere war evil, but in this
paper I will narrow the issue down to war, simply,
and ask the reader to consider the probable
nature of war in the future if the development
<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>of warfare is not checked by deliberate human
effort.</p>
<p class='c007'>And I will not deal with the ill-equipped cut-throat
war that has been going on, and, thanks
to the divisions and rivalries of France and
Britain, is likely still to go on in Eastern Europe
for some time to come; the wars of the
little, self-determined nations that the Treaty
of Versailles set loose upon each other; the
raids of Poland into Ukrainia, and of Roumania
into Hungary; and of Serbia into Albania;
the old-fashioned game enlivened by
rape and robbery that was brought to its highest
perfection long ago in the Thirty Years’
War. These are not so much wars as spasms
of energy, phases of accelerated destruction, in
the rotting body of East European civilization.</p>
<p class='c007'>But I mean the sort of war that will come if
presently France attacks England, or if America
and Japan start in for a good, long, mutually
destructive struggle. You may say that war
between France and England is unthinkable,
but so far from that being the case, certain
worthy souls in France have been thinking
<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>about it hard. Hard but not intelligently. They
do not understand the moral impossibility of
Britain fighting America, they have never heard
of Canada, they have never examined the text of
the Anglo-Japanese Alliance, and so they dream
of a wonderful time when America will be fighting
England and Japan, and when France, with
magnificent gestures and with submarines and
Senegalese at last gloriously justified, will
“come to her aid.” So France will divide and
rule and clamber to dizzy destinies. Blushing
and embarrassed American statesmen have already
had to listen, I guess, to some insidious
whispers. Even among our distresses there is
something amusing in the thought of this hot
breath of Old World diplomacy on the fresh
American cheek. I do not say that these are
the thoughts and acts of France, or of any
great section of the French people, but they are
certainly the thoughts and proceedings of a
noisy Nationalist minority in France which is
at present in a position of dangerous ascendancy
there.</p>
<p class='c007'>Still, apart from the fact that the British will
<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>always refuse to fight America, there does seem
to be no real reason why, in the absence of a
developing peace alliance to prevent it, either
of the other two matches I have cited should
not be played. In the long run, you cannot
avoid fighting if you avoid comprehensive alliances
and standing arrangements for the settlement
of differences with the people you may
otherwise fight.</p>
<p class='c007'>So let us try and imagine a war between a
pair of these four powers, five or ten years
ahead. They have avoided any entangling alliances,
or agreements, or settlements, kept their
freedom of action and are thoroughly—<i>prepared</i>.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us not fall into the trap of supposing that
these wars will follow the lines of the Great
War of 1914–18 and that we shall have a rapid
line-up of great entrenched armies, with
massed parks of artillery behind them, tank attacks
and all the rest of it. That sort of war
is already out of fashion, and the fact that
these wars that we are considering will be overseas
wars puts any possibility of such a dead
<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>lock of land armies out of the case. The combatants
will have to set about getting at each
other in quite other fashions.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us recall the maxim that the object of all
fighting is to produce a state of mind in the adversary,
a state of mind conducive to a discontinuance
of the struggle and to submission and
acquiescence to the will of the victor. Old-time
wars aimed simply at the small antagonist
army and at the antagonist Government, but in
these democratic days the will for peace or war
has descended among the people and diffused
itself among them, and it is the state of mind
of the whole enemy population that has become
the objective in war. The old idea of an invading
army marching on a capital, gives place,
therefore, to a new conception of an attack
through propaganda, through operations designed
to produce acute economic distress, and
through the air, upon the enemy population.</p>
<p class='c007'>I will take the latter branch first. Few people
have any clear ideas at present of the possibilities
of air warfare. The closing years of the
Great War gave the world only a very slight
<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>experience of what aerial offensives can be.
Always, air operations were subsidiary to the
vast surface engagements of the European belligerents;
they were scouting, irritating, raiding
operations; there were neither the funds
nor the energy available to work them out thoroughly.
In these possible overseas wars we are
considering, the land armies and the big guns
will not be the main factors and the air and sea
forces will. The powers we have considered
will therefore push their air equipment on a
quite different scale; they will be bound to deliver
their chief blows with it; we may certainly
reckon on the biggest long-range airplanes possible,
on the largest bombs and the deadliest
contents for them. We may certainly reckon
that, within three or four hours of a declaration
of war between France and England, huge
bombs of high explosive, or poison gas, or incendiary
stuff, will have got through the always
ineffectual barrage and be livening up the
streets of Paris and London. Because it is the
peculiarity of air warfare that there are no
<i>fronts</i> and no effectual parries. You bomb the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>other fellow almost anywhere, and similarly he
bombs you.</p>
<p class='c007'>Many people seem to think that America and
Japan are too far from each other for this sort
of thing, but I believe there is nothing insurmountable
in these distances for an air offensive.
It will be a question of days instead of
hours, that is all, before the babies of Tokio or
San Francisco get their whiffs of the last thing
in gas. The job will be a little more elaborate;
it will involve getting the air material to a convenient
distance from the desired objective by
means of a submersible cruiser; that is all the
difference.</p>
<p class='c007'>All the fleets in the world could hot prevent
a properly prepared Japan from pouncing upon
some unprotected point of the California or
Mexican coast, setting up a temporary air base
there, and getting to work over a radius of a
thousand miles. She might even keep an air
base at sea. And it would be equally easy for
America to do likewise to Japan. The citizen
of Los Angeles, as he blew to pieces, or coughed
up his lungs and choked to death, or was
<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>crushed under the falling, burning buildings,
could at least console himself by the thought
that America was so thoroughly <i>prepared</i> that
his fellow man in Tokio was certainly getting
it worse, and that he blew to pieces on the
soundest American lines unentangled by any
alliances with decadent Old World powers.
And an air war between America and Japan
need not be confined to the Pacific Slope. I
do not see anything to prevent Japan, if she
wanted to do so, with the aid of a venial neutral
or so, getting around into the Atlantic to New
York and testing the stability of the great
buildings downtown with a few five-ton bombs.
The submarine would certainly be able to prevent
any armies landing on either side of the
Pacific to stop the preparation and launching
of such expeditions.</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not know how American populations
would stand repeated bombing. In the late war
there was not a single intrusion of air warfare
into American home life. The hum of the
Gotha and the long crescendo of the barrage as
the thing gets near were not in the list of familiar
<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>American war sounds. Some of the European
populations subjected to that kind of
thing got very badly “rattled.” And yet, as I
have noted, the whole force of the combatants
was not in the air operations in Europe. One
result in nearly every country was an outbreak
of spy mania; everybody with a foreign name
or a foreign look in England, for example, was
suspected of “signalling.” There was much
mental trouble; London possesses now a considerable
number of air raid lunatics and air
raid defective children, and these are only the
extreme instances of a widespread overstrain.
As the war went on, air stress interwoven with
the acute stresses produced in public life by the
development of propaganda. Public life in
France, Germany and England got more and
more crazy about propaganda; there was a fear
of insidious whispering mischief afoot, more
like the fear of witchcraft than anything else;
until at last it became dangerous and ineffective
to make any utterance at all except the
most ferocious threats and accusations against
the enemy. And a kind of paralysis of suspicion
<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>even affected the adoption of inventions.
All this mental and moral confusion and deterioration
is bound to happen in any highly
organized community that goes into a well prepared
war again. The only difference will be
that it will all be larger, and intenser, and bitterer,
and worse. And I will not even attempt
to elaborate the consequences of the economic
attack by submarines, upon shipping, and by
raids of airplane fleets, assisted possibly by
spies and traitors, upon the bridges, factories,
depots, grain stores, ports and so forth, of the
combatant countries.</p>
<p class='c007'>If such things are not practicable across the
Pacific now they will be practicable in ten
years’ time.</p>
<p class='c007'>But my subject at Washington is peace, and
not war. I think it was Nevinson’s recent account
of the new things in poison gas that set
my imagination wandering into these possibilities
of the Great Alternative to entangling
treaties and difficult settlements. I will return
to certain neglected problems of the Peace Conference
in my next article.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>
<h2 id='XXII' class='c005'>XXII<br/> SOME STIFLED VOICES</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, December 6.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>I do not think my outline sketch of the Washington
Conference will be complete if I do not
give an account of certain figures and groups
in this simmering Washington gathering who
have no official standing whatever and who are
here in the unpopular role of qualifications and
complications of the simpler conception of the
Washington issues. They are not conspicuous
absentees as are Germany and Russia. They
come upon the scene but they come rather like
that young woman with the baby who stands
reproachfully at the church door watching the
wedding in the melodramatic picture. They
are full of reproaches—and intimations of
troubles yet in store.</p>
<p class='c007'>The other evening, for example, I found myself
dining with a comfortably housed Corean
<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>delegation and listening to the tale of a nation
overwhelmed.</p>
<p class='c007'>Corea is as much of a nation as—Ireland.
She had so recent an independence that she has
treaties with the United States recognizing and
promising to respect her independence. Yet
she is now gripped, held down and treated as
Posen was in the days of Prussian possession.
She is being “assimilated” by Japan. “What
is to be done about us?” my hosts asked.</p>
<p class='c007'>One fellow guest thought nothing could be
done because the Corean vote in the United
States is not strong enough to affect an election.</p>
<p class='c007'>Amid the tumult of voices here one hears
ever and again an appeal for something to be
done for Corea. Such appeals are addressed
chiefly to American public opinion, but it is
also felt to be worth while to let Britain know,
at least to the extent of letting me in on this
occasion. I was introduced to an editor of a
Corean paper which had recently been suppressed,
and I listened to an account, an amazing
account, of the freedom of the press as it is
understood in Corea under Japanese rule.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>Yet it sounded very familiar to me. Indeed,
I had listened to much the same story of suppressions,
rather worse suppressions, the night
before. Then I had been the host of two
friends of mine, Mr. Houssain and Mr. Sapre,
who have had extensive experiences of suppression
in India. They are both here in much the
same spirit as the Coreans.</p>
<p class='c007'>Whenever I talk to Mr. Houssain we always
get to a sort of polite quarrel in which he treats
me more and more like the Indian Government
in its defense, and I become more and more like
the British ascendancy. I adopt, almost inadvertently,
as much as is adoptable of the manner
and tone of the late Lord Cromer and say:
“Yes, yes. But are you <i>ripe</i> for self-government?”
These gentlemen say frankly that the
British rule in India has displayed so much
stupidity in such cases as the Amritsar massacre,
and the recent suffocation of the Moplah
prisoners, and that its complete suppression of
any frank public discussion of Indian affairs in
India is so intolerable, that it is becoming unendurable.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>Everybody is talking of insurrection in India
now; nobody talked of it three years ago.
These have been three years of stupid “firmness.”
Now that that dinner party is past and
gone, I can confess that I think Mr. Houssain’s
argument that under British rule India has no
chance of getting politically educated, because
she is prevented from airing her ideas, and that
if her discontent is incoherent and disorderly it
is because of the complete suppression, completer
now than ever before, of discussion, is a
very strong argument indeed.</p>
<p class='c007'>India and Britain cannot talk together about
their common future if India remains gagged
and without ever a chance of learning to talk.
If a break comes in India it is likely to be a bad
and hopeless one, because of her lack of
worked-out political conceptions, due to her
long mental restraint, while all the rest of the
world from Corea to Peru has been trying over
political self-expression.</p>
<p class='c007'>But it is interesting and perhaps not quite so
pathetically hopeless as it seems at the first
glance to find these two men in this city, side
<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>by side with the Coreans, trying to get “something
done about it” at the Washington assembly.
And a day or so ago I had a call from another
unofficial delegate, a Syrian Moslem who
wanted to talk over the education of his people,
also fretting beneath the wide surfaces of the
Treaty of Versailles, with the ambition to manage
the affairs of Syria for themselves.</p>
<p class='c007'>And as another case of the stifled voice here
are the representatives of the Cantonese Chinese
Government, who made a scene the other
day when the Peking representatives went into
secret session with the Japanese. There was
an assembly of hostile Chinese shouting
“Traitor!” and things—apparently very disagreeable
things—in Chinese. Here again
there is a clamor for attention that gets short
drift from the official conference.</p>
<p class='c007'>And, lest these stifled outcries should fill the
American reader with self-righteousness, I will
note in passing that the entrance to the second
plenary conference was besieged by an array
of banners reminding us that that evidently
most gentle and worthy man, Mr. Debs, is still
<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>in prison for saying his honest thought about
conscription, and also that I have received, I
suppose, over twenty letters about an unfortunate
young Englishman, a minor poet named
Mr. Charles Ashleigh, who seems to have come
into America looking like a person of advanced
views, to have done some publicity work for the
I. W. W., and to have been caught in a gale of
indiscriminate suppression and given a sentence
of ten years for nothing at all. The offense
of Mr. Debs and the alleged offense of
Mr. Ashleigh, I may note further, were a premature
craving for universal peace which might
have weakened the will for war.</p>
<p class='c007'>All these suppressions of opinion strike me
as black sins against civilization, which can
only maintain itself and grow and flourish
through the free expression and discussion of
ideas. The temptation to ride off from the
main business of the conference upon some
Quixotic championship of Corea or India or Mr.
Ashleigh is therefore very considerable. But
when we consider that all these particular injustices
are incidents in that general disorder
<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>which permits the aggression of nation upon
nation and which blinds justice with cruel passion
and urgent necessities of war, these cases
appear in a different light.</p>
<p class='c007'>Corea and the suppressed and imprisoned Indian
Liberals and Mr. Ashleigh are like people
hit casually in a great combat, and the immediate
work of the ordinary combatant is
surely not to specialize upon these special cases
but to go on with the general fight for world
peace which will render the atmosphere that
created these particular wrongs impossible.
Japan is attempting to crush and assimilate
Corea because Japan wants to be bigger and
stronger, and she wants to be bigger and
stronger because of the fear of war and humiliation.
Britain holds down India and is reluctant
to loose her hold on Ireland for the same
cause; if she relax, some one else may seize and
use. America also crushes out the anti-conscriptionist
because otherwise he may embarrass
the conduct of the next war.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the present conference the liberal forces
of the world may be able to establish a precedent
<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>that will at once reflect upon the position
of both Corea and India, and to open such a
prospect of peace as will make the release of
Messrs. Debs and Ashleigh inevitable. But
that can only be if we stick to the main business
of the conference and do not fuss things
up at present with too much focusing upon
Corea or India or the case of Mr. Debs.</p>
<p class='c007'>The precedent that may be established
through the conference is the liberation of
China, when China is militarily impotent and
politically disordered, not only from fresh foreign
aggression but from existing foreign domination.
The establishment of such a precedent
is a thing of supreme importance to all men. If
the conference does not get so far as that—so
far as to establish the principle that an Asiatic
people has a right to control its own destinies
and to protection while it adjusts these destinies,
in spite of the fact that it cannot as an
efficient power defend that right—it will have
made a very wide step indeed not only toward
world peace but toward a general liberation of
Asiatic peoples held in tutelage.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>It is so important to mankind that that step
should be made that I grudge any diversion of
energy to minor injustices, however glaring, or
any complication of the issue whatever. So far
as the conference goes, I am convinced that
“Stick to the freedom of China” is the watchword
for all liberal thinkers. By the extent to
which China is liberated and secured the conference
will have to be judged. Even the vast
problem of India cannot overshadow that issue.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>
<h2 id='XXIII' class='c005'>XXIII<br/> INDIA, THE BRITISH EMPIRE AND THE ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Dec. 7.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>It is difficult to think of any subject more
completely out of the agenda of the Washington
Conference than the future of India. But
none demands our attention more urgently, if
we are to build up anything like a working conception
of an Association of Nations.</p>
<p class='c007'>Some days ago Senator Johnson declared he
had received assurances from President Harding
that no further steps toward a definite
organization of an Association of Nations were
to be taken for the present; but these assurances
will not hinder the drift of thoughts and
events toward such a developing system of understandings
as must at last, in fact if not in
name, constitute a World Association. Indeed,
the less we try to fix such a thing at present,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>and the more we think it out, the more probable
and safe is its coming.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let the President go on, therefore, taking no
steps directly toward his Association but proceeding,
as he must do very soon, with some
sort of international conference upon the economic
disorders of the world, and also with the
creation of some arrangement, permanent understanding
or whatever other name may be
given to that commission which is inevitable
if the peace of the Pacific is to be made secure.
Let us who are dealers in the flimsier preparatory
stuff of ideas and public opinion get on
with our discussion of the wider stabilizing understanding
that looms behind.</p>
<p class='c007'>I have already said that from every country
world peace and universal prosperity will
demand a price. The price America will need
to pay if she is to impose her conception of a
universal peace upon the world is a great intellectual
effort—an effort of sympathy, an abandonment
of some venerated traditions. And in
addition she must nerve herself to what may
seem at first very great financial generosities.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>France must pay by laying aside an ancient
and cherished quarrel, her glorious and tragic
militarism and the last vestige of her imperial
ambition. The thought of predominance and
the thought of revenge must be the German sacrifice.
And Britain also must pay in an altered
attitude to those wide “possessions” of hers
inhabited by alien peoples that have hitherto
constituted the bulk of her empire.</p>
<p class='c007'>The destiny of all the English speaking democracies
that have risen now from being British
colonies to semi-independent states seems fairly
clear. They will go on to nationhood; their
links to Great Britain, continually less formal
and legal and more and more strongly sympathetic,
will be supplemented by their attraction
toward America, due to affinity and a common
character. All the mischief makers in the
world cannot, I think, prevent the Dutch-English
of South Africa, the English-French of
Canada, the English-French of Australia, the
English-Scotch of New Zealand, the Americans,
this new emancipated Ireland and Britain, being
drawn together at last by all their common
<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>habits of thought and speech, and even by the
mellowed memories of their past conflicts, into
a conscious brotherhood of independent but co-operative
nations.</p>
<p class='c007'>The day has come for the Irish to recognize
that the future is of more value than the past.
Even without any other states, this girdle of
English speaking states about the globe could
be of a great predominant association. Within
this English speaking circle of peoples a whole
series of experiments in separation, independent
action, readjustment, co-operation and federation
have been made in the last century and
a half, and are still going on, of the utmost significance
in the problem of human association.</p>
<p class='c007'>No other series of communities have had
such experiences. No other communities have
so much to give mankind in these matters. The
German coalescences have been marred by old
methods of force, methods which have usually
failed in the English cases. Spain and Latin
America are at least half a century behind the
English speaking world in the arts and experience
of political co-operation.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>But when we turn to India we turn to something
absolutely outside the English speaking
world girdle.</p>
<p class='c007'>One of the many manifest faults of that
most premature project the League of Nations
was the fiction that brought in India as a self-governing
nation, as if she were the same sort
of thing as these self-governing Western states.
It was indeed a most amazing assumption.
India is not a nation, or anything like a nation.
India is a confused variety of states, languages
and races, and so far from being self-governing,
her peoples are under an amount of political
repression which is now perhaps greater
there than anywhere else in the world.</p>
<p class='c007'>Politically she is a profound mystery. We
do not know what the political thoughts of these
peoples are, nor indeed whether they have in
the mass any political concepts at all parallel to
those of the Western civilizations. The Indian
representative at the Washington Conference,
Mr. Srinivastra Sastri, is obviously a British
nominee; he is not so much a representative as
a specimen Indian gentleman. We do not know
<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>what national forces there are behind him, or
indeed if there is any collective will behind him
at all. But it would be hard to substitute for
him anything very much more representative.</p>
<p class='c007'>What constituency is there, what Electoral
College, to send any one? India is not in fact
so constituted as to send a real representative
to a conference or an Association of Nations at
the present time. She is a thing of a different
kind, a different sort of human accumulation.
She belongs to a different order of creature
from the English speaking and European states
and from Japan. She is as little fitted to deal
on equal terms with them as a jungle deer, let
us say, is to join a conference of the larger
Cetacea in the North Polar seas.</p>
<p class='c007'>India is far less able to play an effective and
genuine part as a member of an Association of
Nations even than China. She has no real democratic
institutions and she may never develop
them in forms familiar to European and American
minds. We American and English are too
apt to suppose that our own democratic
methods, our voting and elections and debates
<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>and press campaigns and parliamentary methods,
which have grown up through long ages to
suit our peculiar idiosyncracies, are necessarily
adaptable to all the world. In India they may
prove altogether misfitting.</p>
<p class='c007'>India, were she given freedom of self-government,
under the stimulus of modern appliances
and modern thought, would probably induce
an entirely different series of institutions
from those of Europe, institutions perhaps
equally conducive to freedom and development
but different in kind. And China also, with
untrammelled initiatives, may invent methods
of freedom and co-operation at once dissimilar
and parallel to Western institutions.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the mention of China brings us back to
the possibility of applying the precedent of
China to India. The discussions and perplexities
of the last two or three years which have
culminated in the Washington Conference have
slowly worked out and made clear the possibility
of a new method in Asia. This is the
method of concerted abstinence and withdrawal,
the idea of a binding agreement of all
<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>the nations interested in China and tempted
to make aggressions upon China to come
out of and to keep out of that country while
it consolidated itself and develops upon its own
lines.</p>
<p class='c007'>This new method, which has had its first
trial at the Washington Conference, is a complete
reversal of the method of dealing with
politically confused or impotent countries
and regions adopted at Versailles. It is an
altogether more civilized and more hopeful
method.</p>
<p class='c007'>Versailles and the League of Nations were
ridden by the idea of mandates. All over the
world where disorder or weakness reigned a
single mandatory power was to go in, making
vague promises of good behavior, to rule and
exploit that country. It was the thinnest,
cheapest camouflage for annexation; it was a
hopeless attempt to continue the worst territory-seizing
traditions of the nineteenth century
while seeming to abandon them. It was
Pecksniff imperialism. So we had the snatching
of Syria, of Mesopotamia, and so forth.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>But any soundly constituted League or Association
of Nations should render that sort of
thing unnecessary and inexcusable.</p>
<p class='c007'>The reason lying at the base of the British
occupation of India, of the Japanese occupation
of Corea, of the French in Indo-China, and so
forth, is a perfectly sound reason so long as
there is no Association of Nations, and it is an
entirely worthless one when there is such an
association—it is that some other power may
otherwise come into the occupied and dominated
country and use it for purposes of offense.
The case of the British in India, that
they have kept an imperial peace for all the
peoples of that land, that they warded off the
Afghan raiders who devastated India in the
early eighteenth century and afterward the
long arm of Russia, is a very good one indeed.
The British have little cause to be ashamed of
their past in India and many things to be proud
of. But they have very good cause, indeed, for
being ashamed of their disregard of any Indian
future. They have sat tight and turned peace
into paralysis. They have not educated enough
<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>or released enough. Always the excuse for suppression
has been that fear of the rival.</p>
<p class='c007'>Well, the whole purpose of an Association
of Nations is to eliminate that fear of a rival
and all that that fear entails in war possibilities.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Asiatic “empires” over alien peoples,
these “possessions” of other people’s lands
and lives, have played their part in the world’s
development. They have become tyrannies and
exasperations and tawdry grounds for rivalry.
A real Association of Nations can have no place
for “possessions,” “mandates” or “subject
peoples” within its scheme.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>
<h2 id='XXIV' class='c005'>XXIV<br/> THE OTHER END OF PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE—THE SIEVE FOR GOOD INTENTIONS</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Dec. 9.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>I went to hear the President address Congress
on its reassembling on Tuesday. He
spoke to a joint session of the Senate and
House of Representatives held, as is customary,
in the chamber of Representatives because
it is the larger of the two chambers.</p>
<p class='c007'>Hitherto my observations have centred upon
the Continental Building and the Pan-American
Building, up by the White House, and they
have concerned the good intentions and great
projects that glow and expand like great iridescent
bubbles about the conference that is going
on in this region.</p>
<p class='c007'>But the conference, whatever freedom it has
<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>to think and discuss, has no power to act. Until
the Senate by a two-thirds majority has indorsed
the recommendations of the President,
the United States cannot be committed to any
engagement with the outside world. This is a
fact that needs to be written in large letters as
a perpetual reminder in the editorial rooms and
diplomatic offices of all those Europeans who
write about or deal with the foreign relations
of the United States. For the Constitution of
the United States is as carelessly read over
there as the Anglo-Japanese alliance has been
read here, and it is as dangerously misconceived.
Through that first disastrous year of
the peace Europe imagined that the President
was the owner rather than the leader of the
United States.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was with great interest and curiosity,
therefore, that I went down to this assembly
at the Capitol to see the President dealing with
his Legislature. Here was the place not of suggestions
but of decisions. What goes through
here is accomplished and done—subject only to
one thing, the recognition by the Supreme
<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>Court, if it is challenged, that the thing is constitutional.</p>
<p class='c007'>I went down with—what shall I say?—some
prejudiced expectations. The Americans resemble
the English very closely in one particular—they
abuse their own institutions continually.
Prohibition and the police—but these are
outside my scope! I have heard scarcely a
good word for Congress since I landed here,
and the Senate, by the unanimous testimony of
the conversationalists of the United States,
combines the ignoble with the diabolical in a
peculiarly revolting mixture. Even individual
Senators have admitted as much—with a sinister
pride.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is exactly how we talk about Parliament in
London—though with more justice. But this
sort of talk soaks into the innocent from
abroad, and, though one takes none of it seriously,
the whole of it produces an effect. I had
the feeling that I was going to see a gathering
of wreckers, a barrier, perhaps an insurmountable
barrier, in the way to the realization of
any dream of America taking her place as the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>leading power in the world, as the first embodiment
of the New Thing in international affairs.</p>
<p class='c007'>It puts all this sort of feeling right to see
these two bodies in their proper home and to
talk to these creatures of legend, the Representatives
and the Senators. One perceives they
are not a malignant sub-species of mankind;
one discovers a concourse of men very interested
about and unexpectedly open-minded
upon foreign policy. They are critical but not
hostile to the new projects and ideas. One
realizes that Congress is not a blank barrier
but a sieve, and probably a very necessary
sieve, for the new international impulse in
America.</p>
<p class='c007'>The ceremonial of the gathering was simple
and with the dignity of simplicity. The big
galleries for visitors, which always impress the
British observer by their size, were full of visitors
after their kind, ladies predominating,
and particularly full was the press gallery,
which overhangs the Speaker and the Presidential
chair. Some faint vestige of a sound
religious upbringing had reminded me that the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>first are sometimes last and the last first; I had
fallen into the tail of the procession of my fellow
newspaper men from their special room
to the House of Representatives, and so I
found myself with the overflow of the journalists,
not with everything under my chin but
very conveniently seated on the floor of the
House behind the Representatives, and feeling
much more like a Congressman than I could
otherwise have done.</p>
<p class='c007'>Away to the right were the members of the
Cabinet—the British visitor always has to
remind himself that they cannot be either
Representatives or Senators. Presently the
ninety-odd Senators came in by the central
door, two by two, and were distributed upon
the seats in front of their hosts; the Representatives.</p>
<p class='c007'>There was applause, and I saw Sir Auckland
Geddes, with that large, bare smile of his, and
the rest of the British delegation entering from
behind the Chair, for the delegations had also
been invited to come down from the unrealities
of the conference and had been assigned the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>front row of seats. Other delegations followed
and seated themselves. At last came a hush
and the clapping of hands, and the President
entered and went to his place, looking extremely
like a headmaster coming in to address
the school assembly at the beginning of the
term. He is more like George Washington in
appearance, I perceive, than any intervening
President.</p>
<p class='c007'>He read his address in that effective voice of
his which seems to get everywhere without an
effort. I listened attentively to every sentence
of it, although I knew that upstairs there would
be a printed copy of it for me as soon as the
delivery was over. Yet, although I was listening
closely, I also found I was thinking a great
deal about this most potent gathering, for potent
it is, which has been raised up now to a position
of quite cardinal importance in human
affairs.</p>
<p class='c007'>President Harding is on what are nowadays
for a President exceptionally good terms with
Congress. He means to keep so. In his address
he reiterated his point that even the full
<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>constitutional powers of the President are too
great and that he has no intention to use them,
much less to strain them. Nevertheless, or
even in consequence of that, he is very manifestly
the leader of his Legislature. The atmosphere
was non-contentious. He was not
like a party leader speaking to his supporters
and the opposition. He was much more like
America soliloquizing. His address was a statement
of intentions.</p>
<p class='c007'>I think the President feels that officially he is
not so much the elect of America as the voice of
America, and instead of wanting to make that
voice say characteristic and epoch-making
things, he tries to get as close as he can to the
national thought and will. What President
Harding says today America will do tomorrow.
One human and amusing thing he did—he was
careful to drag in that much-disputed word of
his, “normalcy,” which he has resolved, apparently,
shall oust out “normality” from current
English.</p>
<p class='c007'>And from the point of view of those who
are concerned about the dark troubles of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>world outside America it was, I think, a very
hopeful address. It reinforced the impression
I had already received of President Harding as
of a man feeling his way carefully but steadily
towards great ends. America’s growing recognition
of her “inescapable relationship to world
finance and trade” came early and his little lecture
on the need to give and take in foreign
trade was a lecture that is being repeated in
every main street in America.</p>
<p class='c007'>He spoke of Russia and returned to that
topic. “We do not forget the tradition of Russian
friendship” was a good sentence that some
countries in Europe may well mark. The growing
belief in America of the possibility of going
into Russia through the agency of the American
Relief Administration and of getting to
dealing with the revived co-operative organizations
of Russia is very notable. And though
there was no mention of the Association of Nations
as such, there were allusions to the
“world hope centered upon this capital city”
and to the universal desire for permanent
peace.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>And while I listened I was also thinking of
all these men immediately before me, between
four and five hundred men, including the ninety-six
Senators, with whom rested the power of
decision upon the role America will play in the
world. I have met and talked now with a number
of them, and particularly with quite a fair
sample of the Senatorial body. And I think
now that it is going to be a much better body
for international purposes than my reading
about it before I came to Washington has led
me to suppose.</p>
<p class='c007'>We hear too much in Europe of the rule of
“jobs” and “interests” in Washington. No
doubt that sort of thing goes on here, as in
every Legislature, but it has to be borne in
mind that it has very little bearing upon the international
situation. It is not a matter affecting
the world generally. I doubt if there is
nearly as much business and financial intrigue
in the lobbies of Washington as in the lobbies
of Westminster; but, anyhow, what there is
here is essentially a domestic question. Both
Representatives and Senators approach international
<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>questions as comparatively free—if
rather inexperienced—men.</p>
<p class='c007'>Probably the only strong permanent force
hitherto in international affairs here has been
the anti-British vote, based on the Irish hate
of Britain. If the Irish settlement weakens or
abolishes that, Congress will deal with the
world’s affairs without any perceptible bias at
all. The average Senator is a prosperous, intelligent,
American-thinking man, elected to the
Senate upon political grounds that have no
bearing whatever upon international affairs.
He is an amateur in matters international.</p>
<p class='c007'>A bitter political issue at home may make
him do any old thing with international affairs,
and that was the situation during the last years
of President Wilson. Poor, war-battered Europe
became a pawn in a constitutional struggle.
But the Harding regime is to be one of
co-operation with the Senate, and the dignity
of the Senate is restored. This very various
assembly of vigorous-minded Americans, for
that and other reasons, is getting to grips now
with international questions with all the freshness
<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>and vigor of good amateurs, with a detached
disinterestedness, a growing sense of responsibility
and the old peace-enforcing traditions
of America strong in it.</p>
<p class='c007'>If only it does not delay things too long; I
doubt if those who desire to see the peace of
the world organized and secure are likely to
have any quarrel with the Senate of the United
States. The worst evil I fear from the American
Senate, now that I have seen something of
it individually and collectively, is the impartial
leisureliness of the detached in its dealings
with international affairs.</p>
<p class='c007'>The President finished his discourse and the
stir of dispersal began. I had assisted at
America reviewing her position in the world. I
thought the occasion simple and fine and dignified.
I found myself leaving the Capitol in a
mood of quite unanticipated respect.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>
<h2 id='XXV' class='c005'>XXV<br/> AFRICA AND THE ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Dec. 9.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>In a previous paper I wrote of certain
“stifled voices” at Washington. There is yet
another stifled voice here that I have heard, and
to speak of it opens up another great group of
questions that stand in the way to any effectual
organization of world peace through an Association
of Nations. Until we get some provisional
decision about this set of issues the
Association of Nations remains a project in
the air.</p>
<p class='c007'>This stifled voice of which I am now writing
is the voice of the colored people. As a novelist—a
novelist in my spare time—and as a man
very curious by nature, about human reactions,
the peculiar situations created by “color” in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>America have always appealed to me. I do not
understand why American fiction does not treat
of them more frequently. It is the educated,
highly intelligent colored people who get my interest
and sympathy. I cannot get up any race
feeling about them.</p>
<p class='c007'>I am particularly proud to have known
Booker T. Washington and to know Mr. Dubois,
and this time, in spite of a great pressure of
engagements, I was able to spend two hours
last Sunday listening to the proceedings of the
Washington Correspondence Club, an organization
which battles by letter and interview and
appeal against the harsh exclusions from theatres,
schools, meetings, restaurants, libraries
and the like, that prevail here.</p>
<p class='c007'>I will not discuss here the rights and wrongs
of a bar that cuts off most of the intellectual
necessities and conveniences of life from many
people who would pass as refined and cultivated
whites in any European country. I mention
this gathering merely to note a very interesting
topic upon which I was called to account
thereat.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>Once or twice in these papers—I do not know
if the reader has noted it—I have mentioned
the French training of Senegalese troops and
the objection felt by other European peoples to
their extensive employment in Europe. I was
asked at the Correspondence Club whether the
objections I had made to this were not “fostering
race prejudice,” and some interesting exchanges
followed.</p>
<p class='c007'>I was inclined to argue that the importation
of African negroes into Europe for military
purposes was as objectionable as their importation
to America for economic services, but some
of my hosts, some of the younger men, did not
see it in that light. They are warmed toward
the French by the notable absence of racial exclusiveness
in France, and they see the ideals
of that epoch-making book, “<span lang="ca" xml:lang="ca">La France
Negre</span>,” from an entirely different angle. Why
not a black France as big or bigger than white
France and a new people who have learned military
discipline, military service and united
action from Europe?</p>
<p class='c007'>“Why not an African Napoleon presently?”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>said the young man, a little wanting, I thought,
in that abject meekness which is the American
ideal of colored behavior.</p>
<p class='c007'>He was imagining, I suppose, something happening
in Africa rather after the fashion of the
emancipation of Hayti and of great African
armies pushing their former rulers back to the
sea. But Col. Taylor has recently suggested
another possibility, namely, that of France finding
herself in the grip of a black Pretorian
Guard. It is a just, conceivable fancy—a Pretorian
Guard, French-speaking and ultra-patriotic,
keeping French Socialists and pacifists and
Bolsheviks in their proper place.</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not believe very much in either of these
possibilities nor even in the third possibility of
European powers fighting each other with black
armies in Africa, but I do perceive that dreams
of a world peace will remain very insubstantial
dreams, indeed, until we can work out a scheme
or at least general principles of action for the
treatment of Africa between the Sahara and
the Zambesi River, a scheme that will give some
sort of a quietus to the jealousies and hostilities
<span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>evoked by the economic and political exploitations
of annexed and mandatory territories
upon nationalist and competitive lines in this
region of the earth.</p>
<p class='c007'>For it seems to be the fact that tropical and
sub-tropical Africa has another function in the
world than to be the home of the great family
of negro peoples. Africa is economically necessary
to European civilization as the chief
source of vegetable oils and fats and various
other products of no great value to the native
population. European civilization can scarcely
get along without these natural resources of
Africa.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now here we are up against a problem entirely
different from the problem that arises in
the case of India, Indo-China and China, which
is the problem of a politically powerless but
essentially civilized population which can be
trusted to modernize itself and come into line
with the existing efficient powers if only it is
protected from oppressive and disintegrating
forces while it adjusts itself.</p>
<p class='c007'>Africa is quite incapable of anything of the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>sort. Negro Africa is mainly still in a state of
tribal barbarism; in the latter half of the nineteenth
century its peoples were in a condition
of deepening disorder and misery due to the
spread of European diseases and to the raiding
of the Arab and native adventurers who had
obtained possession of modern firearms. The
small village communities of tropical Africa
were quite unable to stand up against the brigand
enterprises of mere bands of ruffians
armed with rifles.</p>
<p class='c007'>The scramble for Africa on the part of the
European great powers toward the close of the
nineteenth century—a scramble largely dictated
by economic appetites—did a little to mitigate
the miseries and destruction in progress by
establishing a sort of order through large areas
of Africa, a sort of order that in some regions
was scarcely less cruel than the disorders it replaced.
But if continuing access to the resources
of Africa is to be maintained, and if a
return to the Arab raider and general chaos
and massacres is to be avoided, it is clear that
in some form the control of the central parts of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>Africa by the modern civilized world must continue.</p>
<p class='c007'>But we must be clear upon one point. If that
control is to be maintained, as at present it is
maintained by various European powers acting
independently of one another and competing
against one another, in the not very remote future
Central Africa is bound to become a cause
of war. Central Africa was one of the great
prizes before the German imagination in 1914,
and it is now held in a state of unstable equilibrium
by the chief European victors in the
Great War.</p>
<p class='c007'>As they recuperate the African danger will
increase. Africa, next after Eastern Europe
and the Near East, is likely to become in the
course of a dozen years or so the chief danger
region of the world.</p>
<p class='c007'>It behooves all those who are dreaming of an
organized world peace through an Association
of Nations to keep this African rock ahead in
mind and to think out the possible method of
linking this great region with the rest of the
world in a universal peace scheme.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>I submit that it is not premature for those
who are concerned with the future of our race
to consider the necessity of three chief things:</p>
<p class='c007'>(1) The complete abandonment and prohibition
now of the enlistment and military use of
the African native population.</p>
<p class='c007'>(2) The application of the principle of the
“open door” and equal trading opportunities
for all comers in the regions between the Sahara
and the Zambesi.</p>
<p class='c007'>(3) A more organized care of the native
African population by a tightening up of the
existing restrictions upon the arms and drink
trades and the development of some sort of
elementary education throughout Africa that
will give these very various and largely still
untried peoples a chance of showing what latent
abilities they have for self-government and participation
in the general human common weal.</p>
<p class='c007'>For my own part, it seems to me that any
real “League of Nations,” any effective “Association
of Nations,” must necessarily supersede
the existing “empires” and imperial systems
and take over their alien “possessions”
<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>and that one commission embodying the collective
will of all the efficient civilized nations of
the world is the only practicable form of security
for all those parts of Africa incapable or
not yet capable of self-government.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
<h2 id='XXVI' class='c005'>XXVI<br/> THE FOURTH PLENARY SESSION</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Dec. 12.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>The reader will have seen verbatim reports
of the speeches at the fourth plenary session of
the Washington Conference and he will know
already what decisions were handed out to us
from the more or less secret session that prepared
them for us.</p>
<p class='c007'>There has been a good deal of discussion here
about the secret sessions and a certain indignation
at their secrecy that I do not share. It is a
matter of decency rather than concealment that
men speaking various languages, representing
complicated interests and feeling their way toward
understandings, should not be exposed to
embarrassing observation and comment until
they have properly hammered out what they
have to say. It is far better to digest conclusions
under cover and to present the agreed-upon conclusion.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>This is no offense against democracy,
no conspiracy against publicity. The mischief
of secrecy lies in secret treaties and secret
understandings and not in protected interchanges.
There is no sound objection to secret
bargaining in committee provided that finally
the public is informed of the agreement arrived
at and <i>of all the considerations in the
bargain</i>.</p>
<p class='c007'>The conclusions announced are important
enough in themselves; but to all who care for
the peace of the world they are far more important
in the vista of possibilities they open
up. Certain notable precedents are established.
The four Root resolutions do put very clearly
those ideals of withdrawal and abstinence
which must become the universal rule of conduct
between efficient and politically confused
or enfeebled states if the peace of the world is
to be preserved. That is the new way in international
politics. <i>It is the beginning of the end
of all Asiatic imperialisms.</i></p>
<p class='c007'>And, following upon its assent to those resolutions,
the conference voted upon certain special
<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>applications of them. The abolitions of the
extra territorial grievance, the right of China
as a neutral power to escape the fate of Belgium
and the right of China to be informed on
the article of any treaty affecting her were
established as far as a resolution of the conference
could establish them.</p>
<p class='c007'>And then came Senator Lodge. For the
fourth plenary session “featured” Senator
Lodge just as previous ones had “featured”
Secretary Hughes, Mr. Balfour and M. Briand.
Fifteen years ago I came to Washington and
Senator Lodge showed me a collection of prehistoric
objects from Central America and
talked very delightfully about them. Fifteen
years have changed Washington very greatly
but they have not changed Senator Lodge.</p>
<p class='c007'>He seems perhaps just a little slenderer and
neater than before, but that may be a change in
my own standards, and it was entirely in character
with my former impressions of him that
in putting the four-power treaty before the conference
he should indulge himself and his
hearers in a vision of the realities of the Pacific,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>the multitudinous interests of its innumerable
islands, its infinite variety of races,
customs, climates and atmospheres.</p>
<p class='c007'>It was a most curious and attractive phase of
the always-interesting conference to have this
gray-headed, cultivated gentleman breaking
through all the abstract jargon of diplomacy
and militarism, all the talk of powers, radii of
action, fortifications, spheres of influence, and
so forth, in his attempt to make us realize the
physical loveliness and intellectual charm of
this enormous area of the world’s surface that
the four-power treaty may perhaps save now
and forevermore from the fear and horrors of
war.</p>
<p class='c007'>The proposed four-power treaty which thus
starts upon its uncertain but hopeful journey
toward ratification by the Senates, Legislatures
and Governments of the world is essentially
a departure from the normal tradition of
the treaties of the nineteenth century. It is the
first attempt to realize—what shall I call it?—the
American way or the new way in international
affairs. Its distinctive feature is the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>participation of two possible antagonists,
America and Japan. Instead of a war they
make a treaty and call in Britain and France to
assist. It is a treaty for peace and not against
an antagonist.</p>
<p class='c007'>I think that the difference between “treaties
for” and “treaties against” is one that needs
to be stressed. The Anglo-Japanese treaty was
a “treaty against,” a treaty against first Russia,
then Germany and then against some
vaguely conceived assailant. It is a great thing
to have Japan and England cordially immolating
that treaty now that this four-power treaty
of the new spirit may be born.</p>
<p class='c007'>After Senator Lodge came M. Viviani with a
very fine, if guarded, speech. M. Viviani is a
great speaker but he is not merely eloquent,
and I find people here saying little about his
wonderful voice or his overtones and undertones
or his romantic charm but much about the
subtle things he said. In a gathering that is
tense with attention one is apt, perhaps, to
transfer one’s own thoughts and expectations to
the gathering as a whole, but it seems to me
<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>that when M. Viviani rose to welcome this great
beginning on the Pacific, we were all thinking:
“And how much further and to what other regions
of the world are you prepared to extend
this spirit and method of this Pacific bond?
There is another rather threadbare ‘treaty
against’ or at least an ‘understanding against,’
known as the Anglo-French entente. Is the time
due yet for the merger of that also in another
and greater bond of peace?”</p>
<p class='c007'>I do not know how far the question that was in
his mind was in the mind of the meeting, but I
think that M. Viviani made it very plain that it
was in the background of his own mind. His
speech was designed to bring the simplicity, the
easiness of the Pacific problem into sharp contrast
with the tortured complexity of the Atlantic—the
Afro-European problem. He spoke
of the freedom of the Pacific from long established
hate traditions. He reminded us of the
twenty centuries of war and trampled frontiers
and outrages and counter-outrages that had left
Europe and North Africa scarred and festering.</p>
<p class='c007'>He conjured up no bogies; he had nothing to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>say about those 7,000,000 phantom Germans
ready to extract their hidden rifles from 7,000,000
mattresses and haylofts and rush upon
France; but he reminded the conference,
gravely and wisely, of the relative complexity
of the European problem, of the new untried
nationalities that had been liberated, of the vast
heritage of tradition and suspicion that had to
be overcome. He addressed not only the conference
but the impatient liberal aspirations of
the world. “I ask you for forbearance,” he
said, and repeated that—“I ask for forbearance.”</p>
<p class='c007'>Now that was a great speech, and M. Viviani
is manifestly the sort of Frenchman with whom
the new spirit can deal. “Forbearance” might
well serve now as the watchword of Europe.
And I wish that Mr. Balfour could have shown
a fuller recognition of what M. Viviani had
said. Mr. Balfour had been so fine on several
occasions at this conference that I felt it is a
little ungracious to him to confess, as I must do,
that twice in this day of the fourth plenary session,
once in the conference and also in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>evening when he replied for the Allies at the
Gridiron Club, he seemed to be missing an opportunity—the
opportunity of holding out a
hand of friendship to liberal France.</p>
<p class='c007'>For the reactionary France, for the France
of submarines and Senegalese and inflated army
and navy estimates, neither Britain nor America
nor any other part of the world has any use,
and the more often we say that and the more
distinctly we say it the better for every one;
but toward a France that can teach and practice
forbearance and come into great associations
for the common welfare of mankind we
ought to hold out both hands. Most of the bitterness
that has been directed towards France
of late is not the bitterness of any natural
hatred; it is the bitterness of acute disappointment
that France, the generous leader of freedom
upon both the American and European
Continents, no longer leads, seems to care no
longer for either freedom or generosity. And
twice I have seen opportunities lost for an
appropriate gesture of reconciliation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Sooner or later France and England have to
<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>say to each other: “We have been sore and sick
and exasperated and suspicious and narrow.
Let us take a lesson from this American plan
and set about discussing an Atlantic treaty, an
Afro-European treaty, worthy to put beside
this Pacific treaty.”</p>
<p class='c007'>And since this has to be said, it was a pity
that Mr. Balfour could not take up M. Viviani’s
half lead and begin to say it at the fourth plenary
session of the Washington Conference.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>
<h2 id='XXVII' class='c005'>XXVII<br/> ABOUT THE WAR DEBTS</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Dec. 13.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>In the official proceedings of the Washington
Conference the war debts are never mentioned.
It is an improper subject.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the talks and discussions and the journalistic
writings round and about the Washington
Conference the war debts are perpetually debated.
The nature of the discussion is so curious
and interesting, it throws so strong a light
upon the difficulties that impede our path to any
settlement of the world’s affairs upon the sound
democratic basis of a world-wide will, that some
brief analysis of it is necessary if this outline
of the peace situation is to be complete.</p>
<p class='c007'>In private talk almost universally, in the
weekly and monthly publications that are here
called “highbrow,” I find a very general agreement
that the bulk of these war debts and war
<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>preparation debts as between Russia and
France, and between the European allies and
Britain, and between Britain and America, and
the bulk of the indemnity and reparation debt
of Germany to the Allies, cannot be paid and
ought not to be paid, and that the sooner that
this legend of indebtedness is swept out of
men’s imaginations the sooner we shall get on
to the work of world reconstruction.</p>
<p class='c007'>Only one of these debts is even remotely payable
and that is the British debt to America.
But with regard to that debt the situation rises
to a high level of absurdity. The British authorities—it
is an open secret—have been offering
to begin the liquidation of their debt now.
They cannot pay in gold, because most of the
gold in the world is already sleeping uselessly
in American vaults; but they offer what gold
they have and, in addition, they are willing to
get their factories to work and supply manufactured
goods to the American creditor—clothes,
boots, automobiles, ships, agricultural
and other machinery, crockery, and so on, and
so on.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>Nothing could be fairer. Britain is full of
unemployed—they must be fed anyhow—and if
America insists upon her industries being
buried under a pyramid of gold and manufactured
articles, the British bankers and manufacturers
believe they can, with an effort, manage
the job and pull through. The exchange
may take some strange flights and dives in the
process, the British system may collapse even as
the German system seems to be collapsing, but
it is a strained situation anyhow. The British
think the effort worth trying and the risk worth
taking. And so behind the scenes it is Washington
rather than London that wants at
present to hold up the payment of the British
debt.</p>
<p class='c007'>Only one other of the outstanding debts looks
at all payable at the present time, and that is so
much of the reparation debts of Germany to
France as can be paid in kind, in building material
and manufactured goods not produced in
France. The idea of any other European debt
payments in full is just nonsense. The gold is
not there and the stuff is not there, and there is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>no ability to produce anything like sufficient
stuff under present conditions.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now the interesting thing about the situation
here is that the understanding people in America
do not seem to be explaining this very simple
situation as frankly as they might do to the
mass of American people or at least that this
explanation has not got through to the American
people. There is a widespread conviction,
which is sedulously sustained by the less intelligent
or less scrupulous organs of the American
press, that the wicked old European countries,
and particularly Britain, that arch deceiver, are
trying very meanly and cunningly to evade the
payment of a righteous obligation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Every effort to present the financial and economic
disorder of the world as a world task in
which the prosperous and fortunate American
people may reasonably play a leading, intelligent
and helpful part is misrepresented in this
fashion. There is a vast vague clamor for repayment—aimed
at Britain. Dealers in the old
Irish hate business and the German hate business,
now a little out of their original stock of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>grievances, join with shrill but syndicated Hindus
in warning the simple citizen against counsels
of financial sanity as though they were insidious
propaganda. Until at last an Englishman
is sorely tempted to an exasperated,
“Well, <i>take</i> your debt!”—which does no justice
to the patience and intelligence of either England
or America.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us be clear upon one point. So far as the
British debt goes, the Americans can have it if
they prefer to take that line. The British here
in Washington and the British writers here are
here because the Americans invited them to
come to discuss the world situation and the possibilities
of world peace. They are not here to
beg. The time is not likely to arrive when one
English speaking community will beg from another.
It certainly has not arrived now.</p>
<p class='c007'>However, I am an obstinate believer in the
common sense and good will of the American
people, and I do not believe that a press campaign,
designed to make a great people behave
after the fashion of some hysterical back-street
Oriental usurer who has struck a bad debt, is
<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>likely to do anything but recoil severely on the
heads of those who have set it going. And I
am not a believer in that sort of “tact” which
would avoid reminding the American public of
the circumstances under which these war debts
were incurred.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Russian debt to France was spent largely
upon war and war preparations while Russia
was the ally and helper of France; the war
debts of the European Allies to Britain and
America and the British debt to America were
spent upon war material. All these debts are
for efforts spent upon a common cause. Each
country spent according to its resources, as
good allies should. Russia gave life and blood—and
blood. She gave 4,000,000 men; she
smashed up her own social fabric. France and
Britain gave the lives of men beyond the million
mark. Also they gave much material, an
enormous industrial effort. So also did Italy,
according to her power.</p>
<p class='c007'>The British developed a vast production of
munitions as the war went on, using great supplies
of material from America, for which they
<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>paid high prices and on which great profits
were made in America. At last America joined
the war, with her enormous reserves and
strength, and gave not only great stores of material
but the lives of between 50,000 and 75,000
men. And so, altogether, America and the Allied
Powers, giving their lives and substance as
they could, saved civilization from imperialism.</p>
<p class='c007'>The British do not grudge the contribution
they have made and all that they have still to
contribute for their share in that colossal victory,
but some of us English here are growing a
little irritated at being dunned as defaulters
when we are not going to default, and at having
our attempts to work in co-operation with the
Americans for the rehabilitation of a strained
and collapsing civilization explained as the interested
approaches of a cadging poor relation.</p>
<p class='c007'>I wish that Americans would think of the
Europeans more frequently as people like themselves.
The boys who came to Europe saw the
European armies in ranks like their own, good
stuff and kindred stuff. They were their comrades
in arms; they fought and died beside
<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>them. They saw countries and a common life
very like the American country life; they discovered
that the French and British and
Italians were also “just folk.”</p>
<p class='c007'>But these American papers of the hostile
sort write of France or Britain as if they were
wicked old spiders. They write of Britain as
a monster with a crown and an eyeglass and
such like concomitants loathsome to all sound
democratic instincts. They write of the “designs”
of France and Italy and Britain as if
these horrid monsters were all playing a fearsome
game with each other for the soul and
body of America. It is easy enough then to
clamor for repayments of war debts. It is easy
then to excite people by a clamor for a war
bonus for the veterans of the Great War to be
saddled upon the European debtor.</p>
<p class='c007'>But let me remind the American soldier that
the real European debtor, the fellow on whom it
will fall, the fellow who will have to toil and
pay and want, if you can realize that dream
of pitiless exaction, is no legendary monster
France or Britain; it is that other fellow over
<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>there you fought beside, it is the wounded man
in blue or khaki you passed by as you went
into action, it is the man who smiled his courage
at you as you blundered against him in the
din and confusion of battle.</p>
<p class='c007'>If you listen to these stay-at-home patriots
and these exotic advisers of yours, it is he who
will pay, he and his wife and his child; they
will all pay in toil and privation and worry
and stunted lives. It is they who will pay—but
you will not receive. You too will pay in
disorganized business, in restricted production,
in underemployment. You will get nothing else
out of it except whatever satisfaction you may
feel in having made those other fellows over
there in Europe pay—and pay bitterly.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>
<h2 id='XXVIII' class='c005'>XXVIII<br/> THE FOUNDATION STONE AND THE BUILDING</h2></div>
<div class='lg-container-r c002'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>Washington, Dec. 14.</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>Beginning with the fourth plenary session of
the Washington Conference, the registration of
“results” in the Pacific, in disarmament, in
China, has begun. They are good results, assembled
on a basis of broad principles, that may
sustain at last an organized permanent peace
for the whole world. If there is one thing to be
noted more than another about the work that
has led up to this settlement it is the adaptability,
the intelligent and sympathetic understanding
shown by Japan in these transactions.
The Japanese seem to be the most flexible
minded of peoples. They win my respect more
and more.</p>
<p class='c007'>In the days of imperialistic competition they
stiffened to a conscientious selfishness and a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>splendid fighting energy. Now that a new
spirit of discussion, compromise and the desire
for brotherhood spreads about the world, they
catch the new note and they sound it with obvious
sincerity and good will. No people has
been under such keen and suspicious observation
here as the Japanese. The idea of them
as of a people insanely patriotic, patriotically
subtle and treacherous, mysterious and mentally
inaccessible has been largely dispelled. I
myself have tried that view over in my mind
and dismissed it, and multitudes of the commonplace
men have gone through the same experience
here. Our Western world, I am convinced,
can work with the Japanese and understand
and trust them.</p>
<p class='c007'>It will be for other and abler pens to record
the detailed working out of the results of this
great conference, this new experiment in human
reasonableness, as far as it affects Shantung
and Yap and Hongkong and Port Arthur
and so forth. My time in Washington is drawing
to an end, and I will confine myself now
rather to that broader and vaguer question in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>which I am more interested—the question of
what lies behind and beyond this most successful
and hopeful beginning in open international
co-operation.</p>
<p class='c007'>Great and important as the conference is, the
growth of a real and understandable project for
the steady, systematic development of an effective
international world peace, which has been
going on in men’s minds here and in the world
generally in the last two months is a much
greater thing. It is a quite amazing mental
growth; something very quiet and simple and
yet astonishing, like a clear crystallization out of
a turbid solution. Before the conference gathered,
civilized people throughout the world were,
I think, quite confused about how the peace of
the world could ever be organized and rather
hopeless about its being done.</p>
<p class='c007'>Now I think there is a widespread and
spreading unanimity that there is a way, a
practicable way and a hopeful way, by successive
conferences, by widening peace agreements,
by the establishment of permanent joint
commissions, by systematic education and the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>sedulous cultivation of confidence, along which
humanity may struggle and will struggle out of
its present miseries and dangers toward the
dawn of a new life.</p>
<p class='c007'>The next conferences that are indicated will
gather in a mood of hopefulness and experience
that will be the most precious legacy of the
present conference. One that must follow very
soon must deal with the economic rehabilitation
of Europe. Here, it seems to me, America,
Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia at
least must meet. And soon. In the Christmas
mood, in the phase of relief that radiates from
Washington and Ireland now, we must not let
our elation blind us to the fact that, for all the
light that breaks in upon us, we are not yet out
of the woods. Millions are starving today,
great masses of men degenerate physically and
morally in unemployment, European industrialism
crawls and staggers still.</p>
<p class='c007'>We have laid the foundations of a new era,
but the building has scarcely begun. And in
addition to the world economic conference there
is also need of another conference to face the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>still more difficult task of military disarmament
and the re-examination of the factors of conflict
in the Afro-European area. Personally, I
want to see America in that conference also, because
I do recognize that the freshness of mind,
the deliberate diplomatic inexperience of America,
is a factor of priceless value in these discussions.
I would like to see that conference also
held in an American atmosphere and before an
American audience—if only for the sake of Europe.
And if America can be interested in
Kwangtung, I don’t see why America should
not also be interested in Silesia, or Cilicia, or
Senegal, or the Congo, which are all very much
nearer.</p>
<p class='c007'>The appetite for conferences, the belief in
conferences, will grow with what it feeds upon.
One sees these gatherings, with their accessory
commissions, permanent secretariats and increasing
world services, becoming a customary
and necessary peace control of the earth.</p>
<p class='c007'>And the peace control, growing in this natural
fashion, will consist always and solely of
the efficient and willing nations of the world.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>There will be no forced conclusions and no premature
admission of incompetent and feeble
peoples. The pedantry that would give every
sovereign power, however little or rotten, a
vote, a nice, saleable vote, in the management
of the world’s affairs will play no part in this
evolution.</p>
<p class='c007'>The Association of Nations will be a growing
brotherhood of strong and healthy and understanding
peoples, bound only by a bond of self-denial
and mutual restraint toward the weaker
folk of the earth. The co-operation of the English
speaking peoples, and particularly the
American will for peace, must needs play a
very conspicuous part in the crystallization of
this Association, and so it is inevitable that a
certain sort of international “expert” will be
screaming that the world is threatened by an
Anglo-American imperialism. It may be worth
while to say a word or so to dispel this idea.</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us bear in mind that the Washington
Conference, whose results may be the cornerstone
of the organized peace of the world, is a
conference of withdrawal and abstinence, self-restraint
<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>and mutual restraint, with regard to
China and the Pacific; its key idea is the cessation
of aggressions upon weaker or less advantageously
circumstanced people. If America
and her kindred nations are most active in
pressing for such results, it is not that they are
moved by any thoughts of world predominance
but by liberal ideas that are the monopoly of no
race and people. It is their fortunate lot to
have been most accessible to such ideas and to
be able now to play the leading, most powerful
part in establishing them in the world. But
these ideas have a broader basis and claim a
wider allegiance than merely that of the English
speaking peoples.</p>
<p class='c007'>Liberalism, the idea of great nations of free
citizens held together by bonds of mutual confidence,
roots very wide and deep in humanity.
It derives from the great traditions of the
Greek and Roman Republics and from the traditions
of freedom of the Scandinavian and
Teutonic peoples. The America of today did
not grow from American seed. Let America
bear that in mind. The American idea is the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>embodiment particularly of the liberal thought
of England and France in the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries. France cannot destroy
the greatness of her past or the greatness of
her future by a phase of momentary folly with
her submarines and Senegalese, her Polish ally
and all the rest of it.</p>
<p class='c007'>All peoples have such lapses. A few years
ago Britain was disgusting with her jingoistic
imperialism. Let us forget our lapses and get
back to our more enduring selves. Latin America,
quite as much as English speaking America,
belongs to that great tradition of Franco-British
liberalism. Liberal Germany in 1848 and again
today struggles to take its fitting place among
the emancipated peoples, as Italy did half a
century ago. These are the peoples who can
best understand now and help now. They are
all in our system of ideas; they can be brought
together into one purpose.</p>
<p class='c007'>It is natural and necessary that the peoples
most saturated in that great tradition of European
liberalism should be the first full members
of the coming Association and should be
<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>prepared to lead the rest of the world toward
the new order. All peoples are not equally prepared.
It is not a question of ascendancy; it is
a question of those who are able doing the task
that they alone are prepared to perform.</p>
<p class='c007'>When I think of an Association of Nations I
think, therefore, of a sort of club or brotherhood,
not of every state in the world but of the
peoples who speak English, French, German,
Spanish, Italian and Japanese, as the big brotherhood
of the world, with such states as Holland
and Norway and Bohemia, and so forth,
great in quality if not great in power and entirely
sympathetic by training and tradition, associated
with them in a great bond for two
ends; for peace among themselves and for restraint
and patience toward the rest of mankind.
I think of such a brotherhood as the brain
and backbone of the organized peace of the
world, and I cannot see how it is possible to
take in the other peoples of the world as helpers
until they respond to the same ideals.</p>
<p class='c007'>I think first of a recovered Russia and then
of a unified and educated China and a freed and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>reconstructed India and of many other states
which can claim to be of a civilized quality, such
as Egypt, gradually winning their way from a
non-participating to a participating level. The
relationship of China to Japan in a developing
Association of Nations will be something rather
analogous to the relationship of a Territory to
a State in the Constitution of the United States
of America.</p>
<p class='c007'>Unless there is a strong, well organized collective
mentality in a nation or state, I do not
see how there can be anything but a sham representation
of it upon an Association of
Nations, nor how it can be anything but a responsibility
and weakness to such an Association.</p>
<p class='c007'>And outside the system of participating
states, and non-participating states, there are
great regions of the earth—tropical Africa is
the most typical case—which must necessarily
have a sort of order imposed upon them from
without and for which a joint control by interested
associated nations is probably the best
method of government at the present time.</p>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>That, I think, is the vision of the political
future of mankind that is opening out before
us; a great system of associated states, locked
and interlocked together by fourfold and sixfold
and tenfold treaties, open treaties, of peace
and co-operation, ruling jointly the still barbaric
regions of the earth and pledged to respect
and to keep and at last to welcome to their
own ranks the now politically enfeebled regions
of old civilization. Such an Association must
necessarily supersede the “empires” of the
nineteenth century and put an end forever to
the imperialistic idea. Of such an Association
the fourfold treaty may be the foundation
stone. And within the security of such an edifice
of peace mankind will be able to go on to
achievements such as we at present can
scarcely imagine.</p>
<div class='chapter'>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>
<h2 id='XXIX' class='c005'>XXIX<br/> WHAT A STABLY ORGANIZED WORLD PEACE MEANS FOR MANKIND</h2></div>
<p class='c006'>I have now come to the last paper I shall
write about the Washington Conference. I
have tried to give the reader some idea of the
nature of that gathering and a broad view of
the issues involved. I have tried to prevent
the sharp discussions of the foreground, the
dramatic moments and eloquent passages, from
blinding us to the dark and darkening background
of Old World affairs. I have tried to
show that even the horrors of war are not the
whole or the main disaster which results from
human disunion and disorder in the presence
of increasing mechanical power. I have
stressed the theme of economic and social dissolution.
Necessarily, I have had to write
much of dangers impending and miseries which
gather and increase, and of hates, suspicions
<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>and failures to comprehend. And on the other
hand, when one has turned to the possibilities
and methods of escape from the present conflicts
and apprehensions, necessarily one has
been very largely in the thin and unattractive
atmosphere of unrealized projects. I have
written of the defects of the League of Nations
scheme, its premature explicitness, its
thinly theoretical and imitative forms, its frequent
mere camouflage, as in the mandatory
system, of existing wrongs, and I have brought
into contrast with it this newer and I think
more natural and hopeful project of successive
Conferences, throwing off Committees, embodying
their results in treaties and Standing
Commissions, and growing at last not so much
into a World Parliament, which I perceive more
and more clearly is an improbable dream, as
into a living, growing, organic network of
World Government.</p>
<p class='c007'>But now in conclusion I will ask the reader
to turn his mind from this necessary discussion
of political devices and administrative
contrivances, these bleak inventions that may
<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>form the ladder of escape from the divisions
and bitterness of the present time, and to join
in an attempt to realize what the world may
become if men do struggle through these tiresome
and perplexing problems to a working
solution, if our race really does get from these
wearisome yet hopeful wranglings and dealings
to an organized world peace, to a disarmed
world, to a steady reduction of racial and national
antipathies and distrusts, to a growing
confidence in the permanence of peace and the
prevalence of good will throughout our planet,
to a comprehensive system of world controls of
the common interests of mankind. Suppose
that after these present darknesses of famine
and almost universal insecurity, these confused
and often conflicting efforts we are making;
suppose that in ten, or twenty, or thirty years
we shall begin to realize that the thing is, after
all, getting done, that we are indeed pushing
through, moving towards the light, that human
affairs are on the up-grade again and on new
and greater and safer lines; let us suppose that
and then let us ask what sort of world it will
<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>be for our kind that we shall be moving
towards?</p>
<p class='c007'>Let us go back to one fundamental fact in the
present break-up in human affairs. That
break-up is not a result of debility; <i>it is a result
of ill-regulated power</i>. It is important to
bear that in mind. Disproportionate development
of energy and overstrain are the immediate
causes of our present troubles; the scale of
modern economic enterprise has outgrown the
little boundaries of the European States;
science and invention have made war so monstrously
destructive and disintegrative that
victory is swallowed up in disaster; we are in
a world of little nations wielding world-wide
powers to the general destruction. And it follows
that if, after all, we do struggle out of
our old-fashioned and now altogether disastrous
rivalries and hatreds before they destroy
us, we shall still have all this science and power,
which are things that seem now to increase by a
sort of inner necessity, on our hands. So that
getting through to an organized world peace
does not mean simply avoiding death and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>destruction and getting back to “as you were.”
It means getting hold of power by the right
end instead of the wrong end and going right
ahead. We are not struggling simply to escape,
we are struggling for the opportunity to
achieve.</p>
<p class='c007'>Personally, I do not think I would have bothered
to come to Washington or to interest myself
in this peace business, and to work and
blunder and feel incompetent and be worried
and distressed here, if it meant working for
just peace, flat, empty, simple peace. I do not
see why the killing of a few score millions of
human beings a few years before they would
naturally and ingloriously die, or the smashing
up of a lot of ordinary, rather ugly, rather uncomfortable
towns, or, if it comes to that sort
of thing, the complete depopulation of the
earth, or the prospect of being killed myself
presently by a bomb or a shot or a pestilence,
should move me to any great exertions. Why
bother to exchange suffering for flatness? The
worst, least endurable of miseries is boredom.
One must die somewhere; few deaths are as
<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>painful as a first-class toothache or as depressing
as a severe fit of indigestion; you can suffer
more on a comfortable death bed than on a
battlefield; and meanwhile, there is a very good
chance of sunshine and snatched happiness
here or there. But what does stir me is my
invincible belief that the life I lead and the human
life about me are not anything like the
good thing that could be and might be. I am
not so much frightened and distressed by these
wars and national clashes and all the rest of
this silly flag-wagging, bragging, shoving business
as bored and irritated by these things. I
have had some vision of what science and education
can do for life and I am haunted by the
fine uses that might be made of men and of
our splendid possibilities. I do not think of
war as a tragic necessity but as a blood-stained
mess. When I think of my Europe now, I do
not feel like a weakling whose world has been
invaded by stupendous and cruel powers; I
feel like a man whose promising garden has
been invaded by hogs. There is the pacificism
of love, the pacificism of pity, the pacificism of
<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>commercialism, but also there is the pacificism
of utter contempt. This is not a doomed world
we live in or anything so tragically dignified;
it is a world idiotically spoilt.</p>
<p class='c007'>Do any of us fully realize the promise of that
garden, the promise that can still be rescued
from the trampling dullness of old animosities
and rivalries which is wrecking it? Given
unity of purpose throughout the world, given
a surcease of mutual thwarting and destruction,
do we realize what science has made possible
now and here for mankind?</p>
<p class='c007'>I shall not indulge in any imaginative anticipations
of things still undiscovered in the scientific
realm, I will only suppose that things
already known and tested are systematically
used all over the world, that the good knowledge
we have already stored in our laboratories
and libraries is really applied with some thoroughness
and with some community of purpose
to the needs and enlargement of life.</p>
<p class='c007'>And first let us deal with the commoner material
aspects of life in which there have been
great changes and improvements in recent times
<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>and in which, therefore, it is easiest to imagine
still further betterment, given only an
assuagement of strife and blind struggle and
a spreading out of generosity and the feeling
of community from international to social
affairs.</p>
<p class='c007'>Take transport, that very fundamental social
concern. It is ripe for great advances. There
is all the labor needed in the world, all the skill
and knowledge needed, and all the material
needed, for these advances. There is everything
needed but peace and the recognition of a
common purpose. At present, there are railways
only over a part of the inhabited world;
there are vast areas of Asia and Africa and
South America with no railway nor road communication
at all and with enormous natural
resources scarcely tapped, in consequence.
Roads are as yet not nearly so widespread as
railways, abundant good roads are founded indeed
only in Western Europe and the better
developed regions of the United States; there
are a few good main roads in such countries as
India, South Africa, and so forth. And in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>many parts of Europe now, and especially in
Russia roads and railways are going out of use.
Large parts of the world are still only to be
reached by a specially equipped expedition;
they are as inaccessible to ordinary travelling
people as the other side of the moon. And if
you will probe into the reasons why road and
rail transport fails to develop and is even over
wide areas undergoing degradation, you will
come in nearly every case upon a political bar,
a national or an imperial rivalry. These are
the things that close half our world to us and
may presently close most of the world to us.
And consider even the railroads and roads we
have; even those of America or Britain, how
poor and uncomfortable they are in comparison
with what we know they might be.</p>
<p class='c007'>And then take housing. I have been motoring
about a little in Maryland and Virginia and
I am astounded at the many miserable wood
houses I see, hovels rather than houses, the
abodes very often of white men. I am
astounded at the wretched fences about the ill-kept
patches of cultivation and by the extreme
<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>illiteracy of many of the poorer folk, white as
well as colored, with whom I have had a chance
of talking. I have to remind myself that I am
in what is now the greatest, richest, most powerful
country in the world. But with this country
now as with every country, army, navy,
contentious service, war debt charges and the
rest of the legacy of past wars consume the national
revenue. America is not spending a
tithe of what she ought to be spending upon
schools, upon the maintenance of a housing
standard and upon roads and transport. She
improves in all these things, but at no great
pace, because of the disunion of the world and
the threat of war. England and France, which
were once far ahead of her in these respects of
housing, transport and popular education, are
now on the whole declining, through the excessive
fiscal burthens they are under to pay for
the late war and prepare for fresh ones. But
I ask you to think what would happen to a
world from which that burthen of preparedness
was lifted. The first result of that relief would
be a diversion of the huge maintenance allowance
<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>of the war-God to just these starved and
neglected things.</p>
<p class='c007'>Stanch that waste throughout the earth, and
the saved wealth and energy will begin at once
to flow in the direction of better houses, towards
a steady increase in the order and graciousness
of our unkempt and slovenly countrysides,
to making better roads throughout the
globe, until the globe is accessible, and to a
huge enrichment and invigoration of education.</p>
<p class='c007'>How fair and lovely such countries as France
and Germany and Italy might be today if the
dark threat of war that keeps them so gaunt
and poverty-struck could be lifted from them.
Think of the abundant and various loveliness
of France and the wit and charm of its varied
peoples, now turned sour by the toil and
trouble, the fears and bitter suspicions the
threat of further war holds over them. Think
of France, fearless and at last showing the
world what France can do and be. And Italy
at last Italy, and Japan, Japan. Think of the
green hills of Virginia, covered with stately
homes and cheerful houses. Think of a world in
<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>which travel is once more free and in which
every country in absolute security has been able
to resume its own peace-time development of
its architecture, its music and all its arts in its
own atmosphere upon the foundations of its
own past. Because world unity does not mean
uniformity; it means security to be different.
It is war that forces all men into the same
khaki and iron-clad moulds.</p>
<p class='c007'>But all this recovery of the visible idiosyncracies
of nations, all this confident activity and
progressive enrichment which will inevitably
ensue upon the diversion of human attention
from war and death and conflict and mutual
thwarting to peace and development, will be but
the outer indication of much profounder
changes. Relieved of our war burthens, it will
be possible to take hold of education as educationists
have been longing to do for many
years.</p>
<p class='c007'>They tell us now that every one could be educated
up to sixteen or seventeen and that
most people may be kept learning and growing
mentally all their lives, that no country in the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>world has enough schools, or properly
equipped schools, nor enough properly educated
teachers in the schools we have. The supply
of university resources is still more meager.
There is hardly anyone alive who has not a sense
of things that he could know but cannot attain
and of powers he can never develop. The number
of fully educated and properly nurtured
people in the world, people who can be said to
have come reasonably near to realizing their
full birth possibilities, is almost infinitesimal.
The rest of mankind are either physically or
mentally stunted, or both. This insolvent, slovenly
old world has begotten them, and starved
them. Our lives, in strength, in realized capacity,
in achievement and happiness are perhaps
20% or 30% of what they ought to be. But
if only we could sweep aside these everlasting
contentions, these hates and disputes that
waste our earth, and get to work upon this educational
proposition as a big business man gets
to work upon a mineral deposit or the development
of an invention, instead of a 20% result
we might clamber to an 80% or a 90% result
<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>in educated efficiency. I ask you to go through
the crowded streets of a town and note the
many under-grown and ill-grown, the under-sized,
the ill-behaved; to note the appeals to
childish, prejudiced and misshapen minds in
the shop windows, in the advertisements, in the
newspaper headlines at the street corners, and
then to try and think of what might be there
even now in the place of that street and that
crowd.</p>
<p class='c007'>The wealth and energy were there to make
schools and give physical and mental training
to all these people, and they have gone to burst
shells and smash up the work of men, the organizing
power has been wasted upon barren
disputes; the science was there and it has been
cramped and misused; even the will was there,
but it was not organized to effective application.
And scarcely a man in the crowd who
begets a child, or a woman who bears one, but
will dream of its growing to something better
than the thwarted hope it will become.</p>
<p class='c007'>Have you ever examined an aeroplane or a
submarine, and realized the thousand beautiful
<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>adjustments and devices that have produced
its wonderful perfection? Have you ever
looked at a street corner loafer and thought of
the ten thousand opportunities that have been
cast away of saving him from what he has become?</p>
<p class='c007'>When we follow this line of thought, it becomes
clear that our first vision of a world-wide
net of fine roads, great steady trains on
renewed and broader tracks, long distance
aeroplane flights of the securest sort, splendid
and beautiful towns, a parklike countryside,
studded with delightful homes, was merely the
scene and frame for a population of well-grown,
well-trained, fully adult human beings. All the
world will be accessible to them, mountains to
climb, deserts to be alone in, tropics to explore
in wonder, beautiful places for rest. And they
will be healthy, and happy in the way that only
health makes possible. For surely it is no news
to any one that a score of horrible tints and diseases
that weaken and cripple us, a number of
infections, a multitude of ill-nourished and under-nourished
states of body, can be completely
<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>controlled and banished from life, they and all
the misery they entail—given only a common
effort, given only human co-operation instead
of discussion. The largest visible material
harvest of peace is the least harvest of peace.
The great harvest will be health and human
vigor.</p>
<p class='c007'>And happiness! Think of the mornings that
will some day come, when men will wake to
read in the papers of something better than the
great 5–5–3 wrangle, of the starvation and disorder
of half the world, of the stupid sexual
crimes and greedy dishonesties committed by
the adults with the undeveloped intelligence of
vicious children, of suggestions of horrible
plots and designs against our threadbare security,
of the dreary necessity for “preparedness.”
Think of a morning when the newspaper
has mainly <i>good</i> news, of things discovered,
of fine things done; think of the common
day of a common citizen in a world where debt
is no longer a universal burthen, where there is
constant progress and no retrogression, where
it is the normal thing to walk out of a beautiful
<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>house into a clean and splendid street, to pass
and meet happy and interesting adults instead
of aged children obsessed by neglected spites
and jealousies and mean anxieties, to go to
some honorable occupation that helps the world
forward to a still greater and finer life. You
may say that a world may be prosperous and
men and women healthy and free and yet there
will still be spites and jealousies and all the
bitterness of disputation, but that is no more
true than that there will still be toothache. A
mind educated and cared for, quite as well as a
body, can be healed and kept clean and sweet
and free from these maddening humiliations
and suppressions that now fester in so many
souls. There is no real necessity about either
physical or mental miserableness in human life.
Given, that is, a sufficient release of human
energy to bring a proper care within the reach
of all. And consider the quality of interest in
such a world. Think of the mental quality of
a world in which each day the thought and research
of a great host of intelligences turns
more and more the opaque and confused riddles
<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>of yesteryear into transparent lucidity. Think
of the forces of personal and national idiosyncracy,
of patriotic and racial assertion, seeking
and finding their expression not in vile mutual
thwarting and a brutish destructiveness, but in
the distinctive architecture of cities, in the cultivated
and intensified beauty of the countryside,
in a hundred forms of art, in costume and
custom. Think of the freedom, the abundance,
the harmonious differences of such a world!</p>
<p class='c007'>This is not idle prophecy, this is no dream.
Such a world is ours today—if we could but turn
the minds of men to realize that it is here for
the having. These things can be done, this finer
world is within reach. I can write that as confidently
today as I wrote in 1900 that men could
fly. But whether we are to stop this foolery of
international struggle, this moral and mental
childishness of patriotic aggressions, this continual
bloodshed and squalor, and start out for
a world of adult sanity in ten years, or in
twenty years, or a hundred years, or never, is
more than I can say. In Washington, I have
met and seen hopes that seemed invincible, and
<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>stupidities and habits and prejudices that
seemed insurmountable; I have lived for six
weeks in a tangled conflict of great phrases,
mean ends, inspiration, illogicality, forgetfulness,
flashes of greatness and flashes of grossness.
I am no moral accountant to cast a balance
and estimate a date. My moods have
fluctuated between hope and despair.</p>
<p class='c007'>But I know that I believe so firmly in this
great World at Peace that lies so close to our
own, ready to come into being as our wills turn
towards it, that I must needs go about this
present world of disorder and darkness like an
exile doing such feeble things as I can towards
the world of my desire, now hopefully, now bitterly,
as the moods may happen, until I die.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c003' /></div>
<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>¶ Mr. WELLS has also written the following
novels:<SPAN name='end'></SPAN></p>
<div class='lg-container-l c009'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>LOVE AND MR. LEWISHAM</div>
<div class='line'>KIPPS</div>
<div class='line'>MR. POLLY</div>
<div class='line'>THE WHEELS OF CHANCE</div>
<div class='line'>THE NEW MACHIAVELLI</div>
<div class='line'>ANN VERONICA</div>
<div class='line'>TONO BUNGAY</div>
<div class='line'>MARRIAGE</div>
<div class='line'>BEALBY</div>
<div class='line'>THE PASSIONATE FRIENDS</div>
<div class='line'>THE WIFE OF SIR ISAAC HARMON</div>
<div class='line'>THE RESEARCH MAGNIFICENT</div>
<div class='line'>MR. BRITLING SEES IT THROUGH</div>
<div class='line'>THE SOUL OF A BISHOP</div>
<div class='line'>JOAN AND PETER</div>
<div class='line'>THE UNDYING FIRE</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>¶ The following fantastic and imaginative
romances:</p>
<div class='lg-container-l c009'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>THE WAR OF THE WORLDS</div>
<div class='line'>THE TIME MACHINE</div>
<div class='line'>THE WONDERFUL VISIT</div>
<div class='line'>THE ISLAND OF DR. MOREAU</div>
<div class='line'>THE SEA LADY</div>
<div class='line'>THE SLEEPER AWAKES</div>
<div class='line'>THE FOOD OF THE GODS</div>
<div class='line'>THE WAR IN THE AIR</div>
<div class='line'>THE FIRST MEN IN THE MOON</div>
<div class='line'>IN THE DAYS OF THE COMET</div>
<div class='line'>THE WORLD SET FREE</div>
</div>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>And numerous Short Stories now collected in One Volume under the title of</div>
<div class='line'>THE COUNTRY OF THE BLIND</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c010'>¶ A Series of books on Social, Religious,
and Political questions:</p>
<div class='lg-container-l c009'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>ANTICIPATIONS (1900)</div>
<div class='line'>MANKIND IN THE MAKING</div>
<div class='line'>FIRST AND LAST THINGS</div>
<div class='line'>NEW WORLDS FOR OLD</div>
<div class='line'>A MODERN UTOPIA</div>
<div class='line'>THE FUTURE IN AMERICA</div>
<div class='line'>AN ENGLISHMAN LOOKS AT THE WORLD</div>
<div class='line'>WHAT IS COMING?</div>
<div class='line'>WAR AND THE FUTURE</div>
<div class='line'>IN THE FOURTH YEAR</div>
<div class='line'>GOD THE INVISIBLE KING</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p class='c007'>¶ And two little books about children’s
play, called:</p>
<div class='lg-container-l c009'>
<div class='linegroup'>
<div class='group'>
<div class='line'>FLOOR GAMES and LITTLE WARS</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c003' /></div>
<div class='tnotes'>
<div class='chapter'>
<h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2></div>
<ol class='ol_1 c002'>
<li>Added table of <SPAN href='#CONTENTS'>Contents</SPAN>.
</li>
<li>Moved ads from before the title <SPAN href='#title'>page</SPAN> to the <SPAN href='#end'>end</SPAN>.
</li>
<li>Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
</li>
<li>Retained anachronistic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
</li>
</ol></div>
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