ENDING WITH A SORT OF CHALLENGE
I could go on now and tell of
battles, copiously. In the memory of the one
skirmish I have given I do but taste blood. I
would like to go on, to a large, thick book.
It would be an agreeable task. Since I am the
chief inventor and practiser (so far) of Little Wars,
there has fallen to me a disproportionate share of
victories. But let me not boast. For the
present, I have done all that I meant to do in this
matter. It is for you, dear reader, now to get
a floor, a friend, some soldiers and some guns, and
show by a grovelling devotion your appreciation of
this noble and beautiful gift of a limitless game
that I have given you.
And if I might for a moment trumpet!
How much better is this amiable miniature than the
Real Thing! Here is a homeopathic remedy for the
imaginative strategist. Here is the premeditation,
the thrill, the strain of accumulating victory or
disaster and no smashed nor sanguinary
bodies, no shattered fine buildings nor devastated
country sides, no petty cruelties, none of that awful
universal boredom and embitterment, that tiresome
delay or stoppage or embarrassment of every gracious,
bold, sweet, and charming thing, that we who are old
enough to remember a real modern war know to be the
reality of belligerence. This world is for ample
living; we want security and freedom; all of us in
every country, except a few dull-witted, energetic
bores, want to see the manhood of the world at something
better than apeing the little lead toys our children
buy in boxes. We want fine things made for mankind splendid
cities, open ways, more knowledge and power, and more
and more and more and so I offer my game,
for a particular as well as a general end; and let
us put this prancing monarch and that silly scare-monger,
and these excitable “patriots,” and those
adventurers, and all the practitioners of Welt
Politik, into one vast Temple of War, with cork
carpets everywhere, and plenty of little trees and
little houses to knock down, and cities and fortresses,
and unlimited soldiers tons, cellars-full and
let them lead their own lives there away from us.
My game is just as good as their game,
and saner by reason of its size. Here is War,
done down to rational proportions, and yet out of the
way of mankind, even as our fathers turned human sacrifices
into the eating of little images and symbolic mouthfuls.
For my own part, I am prepared. I have
nearly five hundred men, more than a score of guns,
and I twirl my moustache and hurl defiance eastward
from my home in Essex across the narrow seas.
Not only eastward. I would conclude this little
discourse with one other disconcerting and exasperating
sentence for the admirers and practitioners of Big
War. I have never yet met in little battle any
military gentleman, any captain, major, colonel, general,
or eminent commander, who did not presently get into
difficulties and confusions among even the elementary
rules of the Battle. You have only to play at
Little Wars three or four times to realise just what
a blundering thing Great War must be.
Great War is at present, I am convinced,
not only the most expensive game in the universe,
but it is a game out of all proportion. Not only
are the masses of men and material and suffering and
inconvenience too monstrously big for reason, but the
available heads we have for it, are too small.
That, I think, is the most pacific realisation conceivable,
and Little War brings you to it as nothing else but
Great War can do.