1
What man may lay bare the soul of
England as it was stirred during those days of July
when suddenly, without any previous warning, loud
enough to reach the ears of the mass of people, there
came the menace of a great, bloody war, threatening
all that had seemed so safe and so certain in our
daily life? England suffered in those summer
days a shock which thrilled to its heart and brain
with an enormous emotion such as a man who has been
careless of truth and virtue experiences at a “Revivalist”
meeting or at a Catholic mission when some passionate
preacher breaks the hard crust of his carelessness
and convinces him that death and the judgment are
very near, and that all the rottenness of his being
will be tested in the furnace of a spiritual agony.
He goes back to his home feeling a changed man in
a changed world. The very ticking of the clock
on the mantelpiece of his sitting-room speaks to him
with a portentous, voice, like the thunder-strokes
of fate. Death is coming closer to him at every
tick. His little home, his household goods, the
daily routine of his toil for the worldly rewards
of life, his paltry jealousies of next-door neighbours
are dwarfed to insignificance. They no longer
matter, for the judgment of God is at hand. The
smugness of his self-complacency, his life-long hypocrisy
in the shirking of truth, are broken up. He feels
naked, and afraid, clinging only to the hope that
he may yet have time to build up a new character,
to acquire new spiritual strength, and to do some of
the things he has left undone if only he
had his time over again! before the enemy
comes to grips with him in a final bout.
That, with less simplicity and self-consciousness,
was the spirit of England in those few swift days
which followed the Austrian ultimatum to Serbia, and
Germany’s challenge to France and Russia.
At least in some such way one might express the mentality
of the governing, official, political, and so-called
intellectual classes of the nation who could read
between the lines of diplomatic dispatches, and saw,
clearly enough, the shadow of Death creeping across
the fields of Europe and heard the muffled beating
of his drum.
Some of our public men and politicians
must have spent tortured days and nights in those
last days of July. They, too, like the sinner
at the mission service, must have seen the judgment
of God approaching them. Of what, avail now were
their worldly ambitions and their jealousies?
They too had been smug in their self-complacency,
hypocrites, shirkers of truth and stirrers up of strife,
careless of consequences. If only they could have
their time over again! Great God! was this war
with Germany an unavoidable horror, or, if the worst
came, was there still time to cleanse the nation of
its rottenness, to close up its divisions and to be
ready for the frightful conflict?
2
All things were changed in England
in a day or two. The things that had mattered
no longer mattered. The Arming of Ulster and the
Nationalists, Votes for Women, Easier Divorce, the
Craze for Night Clubs had any of these
questions any meaning now? A truce was called
by the men who had been inflaming the people’s
passion to the point of civil war. The differences
of political parties seemed futile and idiotic now
that the nation itself might be put to the uttermost
test of endurance by the greatest military power in
Europe. In fear, as well as with a nobler desire
to rise out of the slough of the old folly of life,
the leaders of the nation abandoned then-feuds.
Out of the past voices called to them. Their
blood thrilled to old sentiments and old traditions
which had seemed to belong to the lumber-room of history,
with the moth-eaten garments of their ancestors.
There were no longer Liberals or Conservatives or
Socialists, but only Englishmen, Scotsmen, Irishmen
and Welshmen, with the old instincts of race and with
the old fighting qualities which in the past they had
used against each other. Before the common menace
they closed up their ranks.
3
Yet there was no blood-lust in England,
during those days of July. None of the old Jingo
spirit which had inflamed great crowds before the
Boer War was visible now or found expression.
Among people of thoughtfulness there was a kind of
dazed incredibility that this war would really happen,
and at the back of this unbelief a tragic foreboding
and a kind of shame a foreboding that secret
forces were at work for war, utterly beyond the control
of European democracies who desired to live in peace,
and a shame that civilization itself, all the ideals
and intellectual activities and democratic progress
of modern Europe, would be thrust back into the primitive
barbarities of war, with its wholesale, senseless
slaughter, its bayonet slashings and disembowellings “heroic
charges” as they are called by the journalists and
its gospel of hatred. So humanity was still beastlike,
as twenty centuries ago, and the message of Christianity
was still unheard? Socialistic theories, Hague
conventions, the progress of intelligence in modern
democracy had failed utterly, and once again, if this
war came upon the world, not by the will of simple
peoples, but by the international intrigues of European
diplomats, the pride of a military caste and the greed
of political tradesmen, the fields of Europe would
be drenched with the blood of our best manhood and
Death would make an unnatural harvesting. Could
nothing stop this bloody business?
4
I think the Middle Classes in England the
plain men and women who do not belong to intellectual
cliques or professional politics were stupefied
by the swift development of the international “situation,”
as it was called in the newspapers, before the actual
declarations of war which followed with a series of
thunder-claps heralding a universal tempest.
Was it true then that Germany had a deadly enmity against
us, and warlike ambitions which would make a shambles
of Europe? Or was it still only newspaper talk,
to provide sensations for the breakfast table?
How could they tell, these plain, ignorant men who
had always wanted straightforward facts?
For years the newspaper press of England
had been divided over Germany’s ambitions, precisely
as, according to their political colour, they had
been divided over Tariff Reform or Home Rule for Ireland.
The Liberal Press had jeered at the hair-raising fears
of the Conservative Press, and the latter had answered
the jeers by more ferocious attacks upon German diplomacy
and by more determined efforts to make bad blood between
the two nations. The Liberal Press had dwelt
lovingly upon the brotherly sentiment of the German
people for their English cousins. The Conservative
Press had searched out the inflammatory speeches of
the war lords and the junker politicians. It
had seemed to the man in the street a controversy
as remote from the actual interests of his own life as
remote from the suburban garden in which he grew his
roses or from the golf links on which he spent his
Saturday afternoons as a discussion on the canals
of Mars. Now and again, in moments of political
excitement, he had taken sides and adopted newspaper
phrases as his own, declaring with an enormous gravity
which he did not really feel that “The German
Fleet was a deliberate menace to our naval supremacy,”
or joining in the chorus of “We want eight and
we won’t wait,” or expressing his utter
contempt for “all this militarism,” and
his belief in the “international solidarity”
of the new democracy. But there never entered
his inmost convictions that the day might come during
his own lifetime when he a citizen of Suburbia might
have to fight for his own hearthside and suffer the
intolerable horrors of war while the roses in his
garden were trampled down in mud and blood, and while
his own house came clattering down like a pack of
cards the family photographs, the children’s
toys, the piano which he had bought on the hire system,
all the household gods which he worshipped, mixed
up in a heap of ruin as afterwards at Scarborough
and Hartlepool, Ipswich, and Southend.
If such a thing were possible, why
had the nation been duped by its Government?
Why had we been lulled into a false sense of security
without a plain statement of facts which would have
taught us to prepare for the great ordeal? The
Government ought to have known and told the truth.
If this war came the manhood of the nation would be
unready and untrained. We should have to scramble
an army together, when perhaps it would be too late.
The middle classes of England tried
to comfort themselves even at the eleventh hour by
incredulity.
“Impossible!” they cried.
“The thing is unbelievable. It is only a
newspaper scare!”
But as the hours passed the shadow
of war crept closer, and touched the soul of Europe.
5
In Fleet Street, which is connected
with the wires of the world, there was a feverish
activity. Walls and tables were placarded with
maps. Photographs, gazetteers, time tables, cablegrams
littered the rooms of editors and news editors.
There was a procession of literary adventurers up
the steps of those buildings in the Street of Adventure all
those men who get lost somewhere between one war and
another and come out with claims of ancient service
on the battlefields of Europe when the smell of blood
is scented from afar; and scores of new men of sporting
instincts and jaunty confidence, eager to be “in
the middle of things,” willing to go out on any
terms so long as they could see “a bit of fun,”
ready to take all risks. Special correspondents,
press photographers, the youngest reporters on the
staff, sub-editors emerging from little dark rooms
with a new excitement in eyes that had grown tired
with proof correcting, passed each other on the stairs
and asked for their Chance. It was a chance of
seeing the greatest drama in life with real properties,
real corpses, real blood, real horrors with a devilish
thrill in them. It was not to be missed by any
self-respecting journalist to whom all life is a stage
play which he describes and criticises from a free
seat in the front of the house.
Yet in those newspaper offices in
Fleet Street there was no real certainty. Even
the foreign editors who are supposed to have an inside
knowledge of international politics were not definite
in their assertions. Interminable discussions
took place over their maps and cablegrams. “War
is certain.” “There will be no war
as far as England is concerned.” “Sir
Edward Grey will arrange an international conference.”
“Germany is bluffing. She will climb down
at the eleventh hour. How can she risk a war
with France, Russia, and England?” “England
will stand out.” “But our honour?
What about our understanding with France?”
There was a profound ignorance at
the back of all these opinions, assertions, discussions.
Fleet Street, in spite of the dogmatism of its leading
articles, did not know the truth and had never searched
for it with a sincerity which would lead now to a
certain conviction. All its thousands of articles
on the subject of our relations with Germany had been
but a clash of individual opinions coloured by the
traditional policy of each paper, by the prejudice
of the writers and by the influence of party interests.
The brain of Fleet Street was but a more intense and
a more vibrant counterpart of the national psychology,
which in these hours of enormous crisis was bewildered
by doubt and, in spite of all its activity, incredulous
of the tremendous possibility that in a few days England
might be engaged in the greatest war since the Napoleonic
era, fighting for her life.
6
On my own lips there was the same
incredulity when I said good-bye. It was on July
29, and England had not yet picked up the gauntlet
which Germany had flung into the face of European peace.
“I shall be back in a few days.
Armageddon is still a long way off. The idea
of it is too ridiculous and too damnable!”
I lay awake on the night before I
left England with the credentials of a war correspondent
on a roving commission, and there came into my head
a vision of the hideous thing which was being hatched
in the council chambers of Europe, even as the little
clock ticked on my bedroom mantelpiece. I thrust
back this vision of blood by old arguments, old phrases
which had become the rag-tags of political writers.
War with Germany? A war in which
half the nations of Europe would be flung against
each other in a deadly struggle millions
against millions of men belonging to the peoples of
the highest civilization? No, it was inconceivable
and impossible. Why should England make war upon
Germany or Germany upon England? We were alike
in blood and character, bound to each other by a thousand
ties of tradition and knowledge and trade and friendship.
All the best intellect of Germany was friendly to
us.
7
In Hamburg two years ago I had listened
to speeches about all that, obviously sincere, emotional
in their protestations of racial comradeship.
That young poet who had become my friend, who had
taken me home to his house in the country and whose
beautiful wife had plucked roses for me in her garden,
and said in her pretty English, “I send my best
love with them to England” was he
a liar when he spoke fine and stirring words about
the German admiration for English literature and life,
and when it was late in the evening and
we had drunk some wine he passed his arm
through mine and said, “If ever there were to
be a war between our two countries I and all my friends
in Hamburg would weep at the crime and the tragedy.”
On that trip to Hamburg we were banqueted
like kings, we English journalists, and the tables
were garlanded with flowers in our honour, and a thousand
compliments were paid to us with the friendliest courtesy.
Were they all liars, these smiling Germans who had
clinked glasses with us?
Only a few weeks before this black
shadow of war had loomed up with its deadly menace
a great party of German editors had returned our visit
and once again I had listened to speeches about the
blood-brotherhood of the two nations, a little bored
by the stale phrases, but glad to sit between these
friendly Germans whom I had met in their own country.
We clinked glasses again, sang “God Save the
King” and the “Wacht am Rhein,”
compared the character of German and English literature,
of German and English women, clasped hands, and said,
“Auf wiedersehen!” Were we all
liars in that room, and did any of the men there know
that when words of friendship were on their lips there
was hatred in their hearts and in each country a stealthy
preparation for great massacres of men? Did any
of, those German editors hear afar off the thunderstrokes
of the Krupp guns which even then were being tested
for the war with France and England? I believe
now that some of them must have known.
8
Perhaps I ought to have known, too,
remembering the tour which I had made in Germany two
years before.
It was after the Agadir incident,
and I had been sent to Germany by my newspaper on
a dovelike mission of peace, to gather sentiments
of good will to England from prominent public men who
might desire out of their intellectual friendship
to us to pour oil on the troubled waters which had
been profoundly stirred by our challenge to Germany’s
foreign policy. I had a sheaf of introductions,
which I presented in Berlin and Leipzig, Frankfort
and Dusseldorf, and other German towns.
The first man to whom I addressed
myself with amiable intent was a distinguished democrat
who knew half the members of the House of Commons
and could slap Liberal politicians on the back with
more familiarity than I should dare to show.
He had spent both time and trouble in organizing friendly
visits between the working men and municipalities
of both countries. But he was a little restrained
and awkward in his manners when I handed him my letter
of introduction. Presently he left the room for
a few minutes and I saw on his desk a German newspaper
with a leading article signed by his name. I read
it and was amazed to find that it was a violent attack
upon England, demanding unforgetfulness and unforgiveness
of the affront which we had put upon Germany in the
Morocco crisis. When the man came back I ventured
to question him about this article, and he declared
that his old friendship for England had undergone a
change. He could give me no expression of good
will.
I could get no expression of good
will from any public man in Germany. I remember
an angry interview with an ecclesiastic in Berlin,
a personal friend of the Kaiser, though for many years
an ardent admirer of England.
He paced up and down the room with
noiseless footsteps on a soft carpet.
“It is no time for bland words!”
he said. “England has insulted us.
Such acts are not to be tolerated by a great nation
like ours. There is only one answer to them,
and it is the answer of the sword!”
I ventured to speak of Christian influences
which should hold men back from the brutality of war.
“Surely the Church must always
preach the gospel of peace? Otherwise it is false
to the spirit of Christ.”
He believed that I intended to insult
him, and in a little while he rang the bell for my
dismissal.
Even Edward Bernstein, the great leader
of the Social Democrats, could give me no consoling
words for my paper.
“The spirit of nationality,”
he said and I have a note of his words “is
stronger than abstract ideals. Let England make
no mistake. If war were declared to-morrow the
Social Democrats would march as one man in defence
of the Fatherland. . . . And you must admit that
England, or rather the English Foreign Office, has
put rather a severe strain upon our pride and patience!”
My mission was a failure. I came
back without any expressions of good will from public
men and with an uneasy sense of dangerous fires smouldering
beneath the political life of Germany fires
of hate not easily quenched by friendly or sentimental
articles in the English Liberal Press. And yet
among the ordinary people in railway trains and restaurants,
beer-halls and hotels, I had found no hostility to
me as an Englishman. Rather they had gone out
of their way to be friendly. Some of the university
students of Leipzig had taken me to a public dance,
expressed their admiration for English sports, and
asked my opinion about the merits of various English
boxers of whom I had to confess great ignorance.
They were good friendly fellows and I liked them.
In various towns of Germany I found myself admiring
the cheerful, bustling gemutlichkeit of the people,
the splendid organization of their civic life, their
industry and national spirit. Walking among them
sometimes, I used to ponder over the possibility of
that unvermeidliche krieg that “unavoidable
war” which was being discussed in all the newspapers.
Did these people want war with England or with anyone?
The laughter of the clerks and shop-girls swarming
down the Friedrichstrasse, the peaceful enjoyment
of the middle-class crowds of husbands and wives,
lovers and sweethearts, steaming in the heat of brilliantly
lighted beer-halls seemed to make my question preposterous.
The spirit of the German people was essentially peaceful
and democratic. Surely the weight of all this
middle-class common sense would save them from any
criminal adventures proposed by a military caste rattling
its sabre on state occasions? So I came back
with a conflict of ideas....
9
A little bald-headed man came into
London about two years ago, and his arrival was noted
in a newspaper paragraph. It appeared that he
was a great statistician. He had been appointed
by the Governments of Canada and the United States
jointly to prepare a “statistical survey of
Europe,” whatever that may mean. I was sent
down to call upon him somewhere in the Temple, and
I was to get him to talk about his statistics.
But after my introduction he shut
the door carefully and, with an air of anxious inquiry
through his gold-rimmed spectacles, asked a strange
question:
“Are you an honest young man and a good patriot?”
I could produce no credentials for
honesty or patriotism, but hoped that I might not
fail in either.
“I suppose you have come to
talk to me about my statistics,” he said.
I admitted that this was my mission.
“They are unimportant,”
he said, “compared with what I have to tell
you. I am going to talk to you about Germany.
The English people ought to know what I have learnt
during a year’s experience in that country,
where I have lived all the time in the company of public
officials. Sir, it seems to me that the English
people do not know that the entire genius of intellectual
Germany is directed to a war against England.
It dominates their thoughts and dreams, and the whole
activity of their national intelligence.”
For an hour the little bald-headed
man spoke to me of all he had heard and learnt of
Germany’s enmity to England during twelve months
in official circles. He desired to give this information
to an English newspaper of standing and authority.
He thought the English people had a right to know.
I went back to my office more disturbed
than I cared to admit even to myself. There had
been a kind of terror in the voice of the little man
who had found time for other interests besides his
“statistical survey of Europe.” It
seemed that he believed himself in the possession of
an enormous and terrible secret threatening the destiny
of our Empire. Yet nobody would believe him when
he told it, however fervently. My editor would
not believe him, and none of his words were published,
in my paper or any other. But sometimes I used
to remember him and wonder whether perhaps in all
such warnings that came to us there were not a horrible
truth which one day, when brutally revealed, would
make a mockery of all those men in England who pooh-poohed
the peril, and of the idealists who believed that
friendly relations with Germany could be secured by
friendly words. Meanwhile the Foreign Office
did not reveal its secrets or give any clear guidance
to the people as to perils or policy to
the people who would pay in blood for ignorance.
10
When I stood on the deck of the Channel
boat in Dover Harbour looking back on England, whose
white cliffs gleamed faintly through the darkness,
a sense of tragic certainty came to me that a summons
of war would come to England, asking for her manhood.
Perhaps it would come to-night. The second mate
of the boat came to the side of the steamer and stared
across the inky waters, on which there were shifting
pathways of white radiance, as the searchlights of
distant warships swept the sea.
“God!” he said, in a low voice.
“Do you think it will come to-night?”
I asked, in the same tone of voice. We spoke
as though our words were dangerous.
“It’s likely. The
German fleet won’t wait for any declaration,
I should say, if they thought they could catch us
napping. But they won’t. I fancy we’re
ready for them here, anyhow!”
He jerked his thumb at some dark masses
looming through the darkness in the harbour, caught
here and there by a glint of metal reflected in the
water. They were cruisers and submarines nosing
towards the harbour mouth.
“There’s a crowd of ’em!”
said the second mate, “and they stretch across
the Channel. . . . The Reserve men have been called
out taken off the trams in Dover to-night.
But the public has not yet woken up to the meaning
of it.”
He stared out to sea again, and it
was some minutes before he spoke again.
“Queer, isn’t it?
They’ll all sleep in their beds to-night as though
nothing out of the way were happening. And yet,
in a few hours, maybe, there’ll be Hell!
That’s what it’s going to be Hell
and damnation, if I know anything about war!”
“What’s that?” I asked, pointing
to the harbour bar.
From each side of the harbour two
searchlights made a straight beam of light, and in
the glare of it there passed along the surface of the
sea, as it seemed, a golden serpent with shining scales.
“Sea-gulls,” said the
mate. “Scared, I expect, by all these lights.
They know something’s in the wind. Perhaps
they can smell blood!”
He spoke with a laugh, but it had a strange sound.
11
In the saloon were about a dozen men,
drinking at the bar. They were noisy and had
already drunk too much. By their accent it was
easy to guess that they came from Manchester, and
by their knapsacks, which contained all their baggage,
it was obvious that they were on a short trip to Paris.
A man from Cook’s promised them a “good
time!” There were plenty of pretty girls in
Paris. They slapped him on the back and called
him “old chap!”
A quiet gentleman seated opposite
to me on a leather lounge I met him afterwards
at the British Embassy in Paris caught my
eye and smiled.
“They don’t seem to worry
about the international situation. Perhaps it
will be easier to get to Paris than to get back again!”
“And now drinks all round, lads!”
said one of the trippers.
On deck there were voices singing.
It was the hymn of the Marseillaise. I went up
towards the sound and found a party of young Frenchmen
standing aft, waving farewells to England, as the syren
hooted, above a rattle of chains and the crash of the
gangway which dropped to the quayside. They had
been called back to their country to defend its soil
and, unlike the Englishmen drinking themselves fuddled,
were intoxicated by a patriotic excitement.
“Vive l’Angleterre!”
An answer came back from the quayside:
“Vive la France!”
It was to this shout that we warped
away from the jetty and made for the open sea.
A yacht with white sails all agleam as it crossed the
bar of a searchlight so that it seemed like a fairy
ship in the vision of a dream, crept into the harbour
and then fluttered into the darkness below the Admiralty
pier.
“That’s a queer kind of
craft to meet to-night!” I said to the second
mate. “What is she doing?”
“I’d like to know.
She’s got a German skipper and crew. Spies
all of them, I guess. But nobody seems to bother.”
There were spies watching our own
boat as we went across the Channel, but they were
on English vessels. Searchlights from many warships
turned their rays upon us, staring at us from stem
to stern, following us with a far-flung vigilance,
transmuting the base metal of our funnel and brasswork
into shining silver and burnished gold. As I
stared back into the blinding rays I felt that the
eyes of the warships could look into my very soul,
and I walked to the other side of the boat as though
abashed by this scrutiny. I looked back to the
shore, with its winking lights and looming cliffs,
and wished I could see by some kind of searchlight
into the soul of England on this night of fate.
Beyond the cliffs of Dover, in the profound darkness
of the night, England seemed asleep. Did not
her people hear the beating of Death’s war drums
across the fields of Europe, growing louder and louder,
so that on a cross-Channel boat I heard it booming
in my ears, louder than the wind?