<h3> CHAPTER XXXI <br/><br/> LORD KITCHENER—PERSONAL TRAITS AND INCIDENTS </h3>
<p>It does not appear that Lord Kitchener's refusal
to accept the Mediterranean post to which
he was assigned has impaired his popularity or
diminished the general confidence in him. Possibly
even official confidence survives, in a degree.
The tone of the Prime Minister's replies to
questions about the refusal may denote resentment but
hardly censure. So I think I may still venture to
reprint sundry personal reminiscences which were
written before this collision between the great
soldier and the Prime Minister—or was it the
War Minister?—had occurred.</p>
<p>"The greatest chief-of-staff living," said the
Germans of Lord Kitchener; possibly with a
reservation in favour of themselves. They would
not go beyond that limited panegyric. The
remark was made by a German officer, high in
rank, not long after the Boer war, and it was
Paardeberg which rankled in his German mind
and would not suffer him to award to the English
general a great power of leadership in the field.
But I believe German opinion on that battle has
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P293"></SPAN>293}</span>
since undergone revision. Whether it has or not
Lord Kitchener's military renown can easily take
care of itself; nor is it his soldiership which I am
going to discuss. I happen to have met him now
and then, and what else I have to say about him is
personal. I hope not too personal.</p>
<p>It was on a journey from London to Alderbrook,
Mr. Ralli's beautiful place in Sussex, that I first
saw Lord Kitchener. We were a week-end party
and went down together in a saloon carriage. The
figure which next to Lord Kitchener's stands out
clearest is the late Lord Glenesk's still in the vigour
of his versatile powers and accomplishments and
attractions. The occasion was the more
interesting because Lord Kitchener had then lately
returned from Egypt, and from that victorious
campaign which he, and he alone, had planned and
carried through from beginning to end in strict
fulfilment of the scheme framed before the actual
preparations for it had been begun. This also
might induce our German military friends to
reconsider that chief-of-staff opinion above quoted.</p>
<p>It was known that this second hero of Khartoum—Gordon
being the first—was to travel by this
train. It was an express, and there was no stop
before Guildford. But consider the enthusiasm
of the British people when they have a real hero.
The stations through which the train thundered at
forty miles an hour were crowded with people.
They could not get so much as a glimpse of their
idol, but they stood and cheered and waved their
hats to the train and the invisible hero-traveller.
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P294"></SPAN>294}</span></p>
<p>When we reached Guildford six or seven thousand
people thronged that station. They hurrahed for
"Kitchener," and as the cries for "Kitchener"
met with no response, they were raised again and
again. Lord Kitchener sat in a corner, buried in a
rough grey overcoat, silent and bored. He had
no taste for "ovations" and triumphal greetings.
Lord Glenesk told him he really must show
himself and acknowledge these salutations. So Lord
Kitchener rose, with an ill grace, walked to one
of the open doors of the saloon, raised his hand
with a swift military jerk to his bowler, and
retreated. The tumult increased but he would not
show himself a second time. The cheers rolled on
without effect. The idol would not be idolized.
It was not ill-temper but indifference. He was
in mufti and it was the soldier the multitude
demanded to see. In truth, Lord Kitchener's
appearance at the moment was not military.
It was remarked by his fellow-passengers that
he showed to little advantage in his grey clothes,
none too well fitting. When evening came he
was another man, just as unmistakably the soldier
as if in full uniform.</p>
<p>He was at that time brooding over his Gordon
College scheme for Khartoum. He wanted
£100,000, and he doubted whether he should get
it. In vain his friends urged him to make his
appeal.</p>
<p>"No," said Lord Kitchener, "nothing less
than £100,000 will be of any use. It is a large
sum. I should not like to fail, and if they gave
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P295"></SPAN>295}</span>
me only part of the amount I should have to
return it."</p>
<p>He was told that his name would be enough.
It was the psychological moment. Delay would
only injure his chances. Lord Glenesk offered
him £1000 across the dinner table, and other sums
were offered there and then, and the support of
two powerful newspapers was promised. Still he
hesitated, and still he repeated, "I should not
like to fail." At last one of the company said:</p>
<p>"Well, Lord Kitchener, if you had doubted
about your campaign as you do about this you
would never have got to Khartoum."</p>
<p>His face hardened and his reply was characteristic
of the man:</p>
<p>"Perhaps not; but then I could depend on
myself and now I have to depend on the British
public."</p>
<p>But he did ask for the money and got all and
more than all he wanted with no difficulty
whatever. It appeared that the British public also
was to be depended on.</p>
<p>The United States Government was at this
time in some perplexity about the Philippines,
where matters were not going well. Lord Kitchener
asked what we were going to do about it and
how we meant to govern the 1200 islands. He
seemed to think they were giving us more trouble
than they ought. I explained that the business of
annexing territory on the other side of the globe
was a new one to us, that down to within a few
years the American Republic was self-contained,
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P296"></SPAN>296}</span>
that we had therefore no machinery for the
purpose, no civil or military servants intended or
trained for distant duties, no traditions, no
experience of any kind, and no men. Whoever went
to the Philippines had to learn his business from
the beginning, and the business was a very
difficult one.</p>
<p>Lord Kitchener listened to all this, thought a
moment, looked across the table, and said: "I
should like to govern them for you." And
although it was not said seriously and could not
be, it was evident that Lord Kitchener would very
well have liked to take over a job of that kind
had it been possible. His mind turned readily
to executive, administrative, and creative work.
The task of reducing eight or nine millions of
Filipinos and other races to order was one for
which he was fitted.</p>
<p>Not long after that, an American who had
already once been Civil Governor of the Philippines
for a short time resumed that post and held it for
two years. He won the confidence of the people.
Out of chaos he brought order. He set up an
administrative system. He treated the natives
justly. He brought them to co-operate with their
rulers. When he left, he left behind him a
Government incomparably better than the islands had
ever known. Life, liberty, property, all civil and
personal rights, were protected. Progress had
begun. Trade and commerce had begun to
flourish and have continued to flourish so far as
tariff conditions permit. Loyalty, a sentiment
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P297"></SPAN>297}</span>
never before known, though a plant of slow growth,
prevails. Rebellions are at an end. The name
of the American who accomplished all this, or
laid the foundations of it all within two years,
is Taft. He is now President of the United
States.</p>
<p>The last time I saw Lord Kitchener was at a
house in one of the Southern counties, in 1902.
He was then on his way to take up the
commandership-in-chief of India. He drove over to luncheon
from another house some sixteen miles away.
Luncheon, usually at 1 o'clock, had been put off
till 1.30 because of the distance he and his friends
had to drive; a great concession. But the roads
were heavy and they arrived just before 2. Lord
Kitchener said to me as we were going in: "Look
at me. I really cannot sit down to lunch in all
this dirt." I suggested that he should come to
my room. He did, and after spending ten minutes
on his toilet emerged looking not much less
the South African campaigner than when he began.</p>
<p>He said: "You don't seem to approve."</p>
<p>"Oh, I was only wondering what you had been
doing for ten minutes. But late as we are there
is one thing you must see."</p>
<p>And I took him to the hall where stand those
two figures in damascened armour inlaid with
gold, Anne de Montmorenci and the Constable
de Bourbon, whom a Herbert of the sixteenth
century had taken prisoners. They woke the
soldier in this dusty traveller.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P298"></SPAN>298}</span></p>
<p>"If I were a Frenchman I think I should try
to get them back."</p>
<p>"It has been tried. One of their descendants
offered £20,000 for the pair, but you see they are
still here."</p>
<p>We found the rest of the company at table, where
a place next his hostess was waiting for him. If
you had seen Lord Kitchener for the first time you
would have felt that his toilet did not much
matter. The man's personality was the thing. There
are many men who produce an impression of power,
but with this man it was military power. You could
not take him for anything but a soldier. Not at
all the soldier as he presents himself to the
youthful imagination. He was not in uniform; no
English soldier ever is except on duty or on
occasions of ceremony. But it is possible to be a
soldier without gold lace or gilt buttons, and to
appear to be. The carriage of his head, rising out
of square shoulders, announced him a soldier; so
did his pale grey-blue, steel-blue eyes, and the
air of command; a quite unconscious air for the
simplicity of his bearing was as remarkable as
anything about him. It has been said he is not a
natural leader of men, not a man whom other men
follow in the field just because they cannot help it;
that he does not "inspire" his soldiers. I doubt
it; but even were it so he is a man whose orders
other men must obey when they are sent. His
pale steel-blue eyes have in them the hard light
of the desert. I believe, in fact, the light of the
desert, which we consider a poetic thing, injured
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P299"></SPAN>299}</span>
his eyes. But there is in them that far-off look
as of one whose sight has ranged over great spaces
for great intervals of time. The races of
South-eastern Europe and of Central Asia have it.
There has been seen in London a beautiful girl
who has it; gazing out, from the graceful movement
of the waltz, on a distant horizon much beyond
the walls of a ballroom.</p>
<p>Yet as Lord Kitchener sits there talking at
luncheon the hardness of the face softens. The
merciless eyes grow kindly and human; you may
forget, if you like, the frontal attack at
Paardeberg and the corpse-strewn plains of Omdurman,
and remember only that an English gentleman who
has made a study of the science of war sits there,
devoting himself to the entertainment of two
English ladies. It is a picture which has a charm
of its own. And it is a Kitchener of whom you
hear none too often. That is why you hear of
him in these social circumstances from me. Most
men have a human side to them. Even "K."
has, and sometimes allows it to be seen.</p>
<p>He had a human side when he departed without
leave from the Military Academy at Woolwich
to take a look for himself at what was going on
near the French frontier in July or August 1870,
when the Prussians were giving their French
neighbours a lesson in the art of war that
seemed to young Kitchener a lesson likely to be
more profitable than those of Woolwich; so he
went. It was a grave breach of discipline. I
never heard how the matter was settled but it
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P300"></SPAN>300}</span>
did not keep Kitchener out of the army for he
entered the Royal Engineers the next year. But
I imagine we all like him the better for such an
adventure.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap32"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P301"></SPAN>301}</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />