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<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<p>For the student of history who is able to place himself within the stream
of evolution the really important events of today are not taking place on
the battle lines, but behind them. The key-note of the new era has been
struck in Russia. And as I write these words, after the Italian retreat, a
second revolution seems possible. For three years one has thought
inevitably of 1789, and of the ensuing world conflict out of which issued
the beginnings of democracy. History does not repeat itself, yet evolution
is fairly consistent. While our attention has been focused on the military
drama enacted before our eyes and recorded in the newspapers, another
drama, unpremeditated but of vastly greater significance, is unfolding
itself behind the stage. Never in the history of the world were generals
and admirals, statesmen and politicians so sensitive to or concerned about
public opinion as they are today. From a military point of view the
situation of the Allies at the present writing is far from reassuring.
Germany and her associates have the advantage of interior lines, of a
single dominating and purposeful leadership, while our five big nations,
democracies or semi-democracies, are stretched in a huge ring with
precarious connections on land, with the submarine alert on the sea. Much
of their territory is occupied. They did not seek the war; they still lack
co-ordination and leadership in waging it. In some of these countries, at
least, politicians and statesmen are so absorbed by administrative duties,
by national rather than international problems, by the effort to sustain
themselves, that they have little time for allied strategy. Governments
rise and fall, familiar names and reputations are juggled about like
numbered balls in a shaker, come to the top to be submerged again in a new
'emeute'. There are conferences and conferences without end. Meanwhile a
social ferment is at work, in Russia conspicuously, in Italy a little less
so, in Germany and Austria undoubtedly, in France and England, and even in
our own country—once of the most radical in the world, now become
the most conservative.</p>
<p>What form will the social revolution take? Will it be unbridled, unguided;
will it run through a long period of anarchy before the fermentation begun
shall have been completed, or shall it be handled, in all the nations
concerned, by leaders who understand and sympathize with the evolutionary
trend, who are capable of controlling it, of taking the necessary
international steps of co-operation in order that it may become secure and
mutually beneficial to all? This is an age of co-operation, and in this at
least, if not in other matters, the United States of America is in an
ideal position to assume the leadership.</p>
<p>To a certain extent, one is not prepared to say how far, the military and
social crises are interdependent. And undoubtedly the military problem
rests on the suppression of the submarine. If Germany continues to destroy
shipping on the seas, if we are not able to supply our new armies and the
Allied nations with food and other things, the increasing social ferment
will paralyze the military operations of the Entente. The result of a
German victory under such circumstances is impossible to predict; but the
chances are certainly not worth running. In a sense, therefore, in a great
sense, the situation is "up" to us in more ways than one, not only to
supply wise democratic leadership but to contribute material aid and
brains in suppressing the submarine, and to build ships enough to keep
Britain, France, and Italy from starving. We are looked upon by all the
Allies, and I believe justly, as being a disinterested nation, free from
the age-long jealousies of Europe. And we can do much in bringing together
and making more purposeful the various elements represented by the nations
to whose aid we have come.</p>
<p>I had not intended in these early papers to comment, but to confine myself
to such of my experiences abroad as might prove interesting and somewhat
illuminating. So much I cannot refrain from saying.</p>
<p>It is a pleasure to praise where praise is due, and too much cannot be
said of the personnel of our naval service—something of which I can
speak from intimate personal experience. In these days, in that part of
London near the Admiralty, you may chance to run across a tall, erect, and
broad-shouldered man in blue uniform with three stars on his collar,
striding rapidly along the sidewalk, and sometimes, in his haste, cutting
across a street. People smile at him—costermongers, clerks, and
shoppers—and whisper among themselves, "There goes the American
admiral!" and he invariably smiles back at them, especially at the
children. He is an admiral, every inch a seaman, commanding a devoted
loyalty from his staff and from the young men who are scouring the seas
with our destroyers. In France as well as in England the name Sims is a
household word, and if he chose he might be feted every day of the week.
He does not choose. He spends long hours instead in the quarters devoted
to his administration in Grosvenor Gardens, or in travelling in France and
Ireland supervising the growing forces under his command.</p>
<p>It may not be out of place to relate a characteristic story of Admiral
Sims, whose career in our service, whose notable contributions to naval
gunnery are too well known to need repetition. Several years ago, on a
memorable trip to England, he was designated by the admiral of the fleet
to be present at a banquet given our sailors in the Guildhall. Of course
the lord mayor called upon him for a speech, but Commander Sims insisted
that a bluejacket should make the address. "What, a bluejacket!" exclaimed
the lord mayor in astonishment. "Do bluejackets make speeches in your
country?" "Certainly they do," said Sims. "Now there's a fine-looking man
over there, a quartermaster on my ship. Let's call on him and see what he
has to say." The quartermaster, duly summoned, rose with aplomb and
delivered himself of a speech that made the hall ring, that formed the
subject of a puzzled and amazed comment by the newspapers of the British
Capital. Nor was it ever divulged that Commander Sims had foreseen the
occasion and had picked out the impressive quartermaster to make a
reputation for oratory for the enlisted force.</p>
<p>As a matter of fact, it is no exaggeration to add that there were and are
other non-commissioned officers and enlisted men in the service who could
have acquitted themselves equally well. One has only to attend some of
their theatrical performances to be assured of it.</p>
<p>But to the European mind our bluejacket is still something of an anomaly.
He is a credit to our public schools, a fruit of our system of universal
education. And he belongs to a service in which are reconciled,
paradoxically, democracy and discipline. One moment you may hear a
bluejacket talking to an officer as man to man, and the next you will see
him salute and obey an order implicitly.</p>
<p>On a wet and smoky night I went from the London streets into the
brightness and warmth of that refuge for American soldiers and sailors,
the "Eagle Hut," as the Y. M. C. A. is called. The place was full, as
usual, but my glance was at once attracted by three strapping,
intelligent-looking men in sailor blouses playing pool in a corner. "I
simply can't get used to the fact that people like that are ordinary
sailors," said the lady in charge to me as we leaned against the
soda-fountain. "They're a continual pride and delight to us Americans here—always
so willing to help when there's anything to be done, and so interesting to
talk to." When I suggested that her ideas of the navy must have been
derived from Pinafore she laughed. "I can't imagine using a
cat-o'-nine-tails on them!" she exclaimed—and neither could I. I
heard many similar comments. They are indubitably American, these sailors,
youngsters with the stamp of our environment on their features, keen and
self-reliant. I am not speaking now only of those who have enlisted since
the war, but of those others, largely from the small towns and villages of
our Middle West, who in the past dozen years or so have been recruited by
an interesting and scientific system which is the result of the genius of
our naval recruiting officers. In the files at Washington may be seen,
carefully tabulated, the several reasons for their enlisting. Some have
"friends in the service"; others wish to "perfect themselves in a trade,"
to "complete their education" or "see the world"—our adventurous
spirit. And they are seeing it. They are also engaged in the most exciting
and adventurous sport—with the exception of aerial warfare ever
devised or developed—that of hunting down in all weathers over the
wide spaces of the Atlantic those modern sea monsters that prey upon the
Allied shipping. For the superdreadnought is reposing behind the nets, the
battle-cruiser ignominiously laying mines; and for the present at least,
until some wizard shall invent a more effective method of annihilation,
victory over Germany depends primarily on the airplane and the destroyer.
At three o'clock one morning I stood on the crowded deck of an Irish
mail-boat watching the full moon riding over Holyhead Mountain and
shimmering on the Irish Sea. A few hours later, in the early light, I saw
the green hills of Killarney against a washed and clearing sky, the
mud-flats beside the railway shining like purple enamel. All the forenoon,
in the train, I travelled through a country bathed in translucent colours,
a country of green pastures dotted over with white sheep, of banked hedges
and perfect trees, of shadowy blue hills in the high distance. It reminded
one of nothing so much as a stained-glass-window depicting some delectable
land of plenty and peace. And it was Ireland! When at length I arrived at
the station of the port for which I was bound, and which the censor does
not permit me to name, I caught sight of the figure of our Admiral on the
platform; and the fact that I was in Ireland and not in Emmanuel's Land
was brought home to me by the jolting drive we took on an "outside car,"
the admiral perched precariously over one wheel and I over the other.
Winding up the hill by narrow roads, we reached the gates of the Admiralty
House.</p>
<p>The house sits, as it were, in the emperor's seat of the amphitheatre of
the town, overlooking the panorama of a perfect harbour. A ring of emerald
hills is broken by a little gap to seaward, and in the centre is a
miniature emerald isle. The ships lying at anchor seemed like children's
boats in a pond. To the right, where a river empties in, were scattered
groups of queer, rakish craft, each with four slanting pipes and a tiny
flag floating from her halyards; a flag—as the binoculars revealed—of
crimson bars and stars on a field of blue. These were our American
destroyers. And in the midst of them, swinging to the tide, were the big
"mother ships" we have sent over to nurse them when, after many days and
nights of hazardous work at sea, they have brought their flock of
transports and merchantmen safely to port. This "mothering" by
repair-ships which are merely huge machine-shops afloat—this trick
of keeping destroyers tuned up and constantly ready for service has
inspired much favourable comment from our allies in the British service.
It is an instance of our national adaptability, learned from an experience
on long coasts where navy-yards are not too handy. Few landsmen understand
how delicate an instrument the destroyer is.</p>
<p>A service so hazardous, demanding as it does such qualities as the ability
to make instantaneous decisions and powers of mental and physical
endurance, a service so irresistibly attractive to the young and
adventurous, produces a type of officer quite unmistakable. The day I
arrived in London from France, seeking a characteristically English meal,
I went to Simpson's in the Strand, where I found myself seated by the side
of two very junior officers of the British navy. It appeared that they
were celebrating what was left of a precious leave. At a neighbouring
table they spied two of our officers, almost equally youthful. "Let's have
'em over," suggested one of the Britishers; and they were "had" over; he
raised his glass. "Here's how—as you say in America!" he exclaimed.
"You destroyer chaps are certainly top hole." And then he added, with a
blush, "I say, I hope you don't think I'm cheeking you!"</p>
<p>I saw them afloat, I saw them coming ashore in that Irish port, these
young destroyer captains, after five wakeful nights at sea,
weather-bitten, clear-eyed, trained down to the last ounce. One, with whom
I had played golf on the New England hills, carried his clubs in his hand
and invited me to have a game with him. Another, who apologized for not
being dressed at noon on Sunday—he had made the harbour at three
that morning!—was taking his racquet out of its case, preparing to
spend the afternoon on the hospitable courts of Admiralty House with a
fellow captain and two British officers. He was ashamed of his late
rising, but when it was suggested that some sleep was necessary he
explained that, on the trip just ended, it wasn't only the submarines that
kept him awake. "When these craft get jumping about in a seaway you can't
sleep even if you want to." He who has had experience with them knows the
truth of this remark. Incidentally, though he did not mention it, this
young captain was one of three who had been recommended by the British
admiral to his government for the Distinguished Service Order. The
captain's report, which I read, is terse, and needs to be visualized.
There is simply a statement of the latitude and longitude, the time of
day, the fact that the wave of a periscope was sighted at 1,500 yards by
the quartermaster first class on duty; general quarters rung, the
executive officer signals full speed ahead, the commanding officer takes
charge and manoeuvres for position—and then something happens which
the censor may be fussy about mentioning. At any rate, oil and other
things rise to the surface of the sea, and the Germans are minus another
submarine. The chief machinist's mate, however, comes in for special
mention. It seems that he ignored the ladder and literally fell down the
hatch, dislocating his shoulder but getting the throttle wide open within
five seconds!</p>
<p>In this town, facing the sea, is a street lined with quaint houses painted
in yellows and browns and greens, and under each house the kind of a shop
that brings back to the middleaged delectable memories of extreme youth
and nickels to spend. Up and down that street on a bright Saturday
afternoon may be seen our Middle-Western jackies chumming with the British
sailors and Tommies, or flirting with the Irish girls, or gazing through
the little panes of the show-windows, whose enterprising proprietors have
imported from the States a popular brand of chewing-gum to make us feel
more at home. In one of these shops, where I went to choose a picture
post-card, I caught sight of an artistic display of a delicacy I had
thought long obsolete—the everlasting gum-drop. But when I produced
a shilling the shopkeeper shook his head. "Sure, every day the sailors are
wanting to buy them of me, but it's for ornament I'm keeping them," he
said. "There's no more to be had till the war will be over. Eight years
they're here now, and you wouldn't get a tooth in them, sir!" So I
wandered out again, joined the admiral, and inspected the Bluejackets'
Club by the water's edge. Nothing one sees, perhaps, is so eloquent of the
change that has taken place in the life and fabric of our navy. If you are
an enlisted man, here in this commodious group of buildings you can get a
good shore meal and entertain your friends among the Allies, you may sleep
in a real bed, instead of a hammock, you may play pool, or see a
moving-picture show, or witness a vaudeville worthy of professionals, like
that recently given in honour of the visit of the admiral of our Atlantic
fleet. A band of thirty pieces furnished the music, and in the opinion of
the jackies one feature alone was lacking to make the entertainment a
complete success—the new drop-curtain had failed to arrive from
London. I happened to be present when this curtain was first unrolled, and
beheld spread out before me a most realistic presentation of "little old
New York," seen from the North River, towering against blue American
skies. And though I have never been overfond of New York, that curtain in
that place gave me a sensation!</p>
<p>Such is the life of our officers and sailors in these strange times that
have descended upon us. Five to eight days of vigilance, of hardship and
danger—in short, of war—and then three days of relaxation and
enjoyment in clubs, on golf-courses and tennis-courts, barring the time it
takes to clean ship and paint. There need be no fear that the war will be
neglected. It is eminently safe to declare that our service will be true
to its traditions.</p>
<p>III</p>
<p>"Dogged does it" ought to be added to "Dieu et mon droit" and other
devices of England. On a day when I was lunching with Mr. Lloyd George in
the dining-room at 10 Downing Street that looks out over the Horse Guards'
Parade, the present premier, with a characteristic gesture, flung out his
hand toward the portrait of a young man in the panel over the mantel. It
was of the younger Pitt, who had taken his meals and drunk his port in
this very room in that other great war a hundred years ago. The news of
Austerlitz, brought to him during his illness, is said to have killed him.
But England, undismayed, fought on for a decade, and won. Mr. Lloyd
George, in spite of burdens even heavier than Pitt's, happily retains his
health; and his is the indomitable spirit characteristic of the new
Britain as well as of the old. For it is a new Britain one sees. Mr. Lloyd
George is prime minister of a transformed Britain, a Britain modernized
and democratized. Like the Englishman who, when he first witnessed a
performance of "Uncle Tom's Cabin," cried out, "How very unlike the home
life of our dear Queen!" the American who lunches in Downing Street is
inclined to exclaim: "How different from Lord North and Palmerston!" We
have, I fear, been too long accustomed to interpret Britain in terms of
these two ministers and of what they represented to us of the rule of a
George the Third or of an inimical aristocracy. Three out of the five men
who form the war cabinet of an empire are of what would once have been
termed an "humble origin." One was, if I am not mistaken, born in Nova
Scotia. General Smuts, unofficially associated with this council, not many
years ago was in arms against Britain in South Africa, and the prime
minister himself is the son of a Welsh tailor. A situation that should
mollify the most exacting and implacable of our anti-British democrats!</p>
<p>I listened to many speeches and explanations of the prejudice that existed
in the mind of the dyed-in-the-wool American against England, and the
reason most frequently given was the "school-book" reason; our histories
kept the feeling alive. Now; there is no doubt that the histories out of
which we were taught made what psychologists would call "action patterns,"
or "complexes," in our brains, just as the school-books have made similar
complexes in the brains of German children and prepared them for this war.
But, after all, there was a certain animus behind the histories. Boiled
down, the sentiment was one against the rule of a hereditary aristocracy,
and our forefathers had it long before the separation took place. The
Middle-Western farmer has no prejudice against France, because France is a
republic. The French are lovable, and worthy of all the sympathy and
affection we can give them. But Britain is still nominally a monarchy; and
our patriot thinks of its people very much as the cowboy used to regard
citizens of New York. They all lived on Fifth Avenue. For the cowboy, the
residents of the dreary side streets simply did not exist. We have been
wont to think of all the British as aristocrats, while they have returned
the compliment by visualizing all Americans as plutocrats—despite
the fact that one-tenth of our population is said to own nine-tenths of
all our wealth!</p>
<p>But the war will change that, is already changing it.</p>
<p>'Tout comprendre c'est tout pardonner'. We have been soaked in the same
common law, literature, and traditions of liberty—or of chaos, as
one likes. Whether we all be of British origin or not, it is the mind that
makes the true patriot; and there is no American so dead as not to feel a
thrill when he first sets foot on British soil. Our school-teachers felt
it when they began to travel some twenty years ago, and the thousands of
our soldiers who pass through on their way to France are feeling it today,
and writing home about it. Our soldiers and sailors are being cared for
and entertained in England just as they would be cared for and entertained
at home. So are their officers. Not long ago one of the finest town houses
in London was donated by the owner for an American officers' club, the
funds were raised by contributions from British officers, and the club was
inaugurated by the King and Queen—and Admiral Sims. Hospitality and
good-will have gone much further than this. Any one who knows London will
understand the sacredness of those private squares, surrounded by
proprietary residences, where every tree and every blade of grass has been
jealously guarded from intrusion for a century or more. And of all these
squares that of St. James's is perhaps the most exclusive, and yet it is
precisely in St. James's there is to be built the first of those hotels
designed primarily for the benefit of American officers, where they can
get a good room for five shillings a night and breakfast at a reasonable
price. One has only to sample the war-time prices of certain hostelries to
appreciate the value of this.</p>
<p>On the first of four unforgettable days during which I was a guest behind
the British lines in France the officer who was my guide stopped the motor
in the street of an old village, beside a courtyard surrounded by ancient
barns.</p>
<p>"There are some of your Americans," he remarked.</p>
<p>I had recognized them, not by their uniforms but by their type. Despite
their costumes, which were negligible, they were eloquent of college
campuses in every one of our eight and forty States, lean, thin-hipped,
alert. The persistent rains had ceased, a dazzling sunlight made that
beautiful countryside as bright as a coloured picture post-card, but a
riotous cold gale was blowing; yet all wore cotton trousers that left
their knees as bare as Highlanders' kilts. Above these some had an
sweaters, others brown khaki tunics, from which I gathered that they
belonged to the officers' training corps. They were drawn up on two lines
facing each other with fixed bayonets, a grim look on their faces that
would certainly have put any Hun to flight. Between the files stood an
unmistakable gipling sergeant with a crimson face and a bristling little
chestnut moustache, talking like a machine gun.</p>
<p>"Now, then, not too lidylike!—there's a Bosch in front of you! Run
'im through! Now, then!"</p>
<p>The lines surged forward, out went the bayonets, first the long thrust and
then the short, and then a man's gun was seized and by a swift backward
twist of the arm he was made helpless.</p>
<p>"Do you feel it?" asked the officer, as he turned to me. I did. "Up and
down your spine," he added, and I nodded. "Those chaps will do," he said.
He had been through that terrible battle of the Somme, and he knew. So had
the sergeant.</p>
<p>Presently came a resting-spell. One of the squad approached me, whom I
recognized as a young man I had met in the Harvard Union.</p>
<p>"If you write about this," he said, "just tell our people that we're going
to take that sergeant home with us when the war's over. He's too good to
lose."</p>
<p>IV</p>
<p>It is trite to observe that democracies are organized—if, indeed,
they are organized at all—not for war but for peace. And nowhere is
this fact more apparent than in Britain. Even while the war is in progress
has that internal democratic process of evolution been going on, presaging
profound changes in the social fabric. And these changes must be dealt
with by statesmen, must be guided with one hand while the war is being
prosecuted with the other. The task is colossal. In no previous war have
the British given more striking proof of their inherent quality of
doggedness. Greatness, as Confucius said, does not consist in never
falling, but in rising every time you fall. The British speak with
appalling frankness of their blunders. They are fighting, indeed, for the
privilege of making blunders—since out of blunders arise new truths
and discoveries not contemplated in German philosophy.</p>
<p>America must now contribute what Britain and France, with all their
energies and resources and determination, have hitherto been unable to
contribute. It must not be men, money, and material alone, but some
quality that America has had in herself during her century and a half of
independent self-realization. Mr. Chesterton, in writing about the
American Revolution, observes that the real case for the colonists is that
they felt that they could be something which England would not help them
to be. It is, in fact, the only case for separation. What may be called
the English tradition of democracy, which we inherit, grows through
conflicts and differences, through experiments and failures and successes,
toward an intellectualized unity,—experiments by states, experiments
by individuals, a widely spread development, and new contributions to the
whole.</p>
<p>Democracy has arrived at the stage when it is ceasing to be national and
selfish.</p>
<p>It must be said of England, in her treatment of her colonies subsequent to
our Revolution, that she took this greatest of all her national blunders
to heart. As a result, Canada and Australia and New Zealand have sent
their sons across the seas to fight for an empire that refrains from
coercion; while, thanks to the policy of the British Liberals—which
was the expression of the sentiment of the British nation—we have
the spectacle today of a Botha and a Smuts fighting under the Union Jack.</p>
<p>And how about Ireland? England has blundered there, and she admits it
freely. They exist in England who cry out for the coercion of Ireland, and
who at times have almost had their way. But to do this, of course, would
be a surrender to the German contentions, an acknowledgment of the wisdom
of the German methods against which she is protesting with all her might.
Democracy, apparently, must blunder on until that question too, is solved.</p>
<p>V</p>
<p>Many of those picturesque features of the older England, that stir us by
their beauty and by the sense of stability and permanence they convey,
will no doubt disappear or be transformed. I am thinking of the great
estates, some of which date from Norman times; I am thinking of the
aristocracy, which we Americans repudiated in order to set up a plutocracy
instead. Let us hope that what is fine in it will be preserved, for there
is much. By the theory of the British constitution—that unwritten
but very real document—in return for honours, emoluments, and
titles, the burden of government has hitherto been thrown on a class. Nor
can it be said that they have been untrue to their responsibility. That
class developed a tradition and held fast to it; and they had a foreign
policy that guided England through centuries of greatness. Democracy too
must have a foreign policy, a tradition of service; a trained if not
hereditary group to guide it through troubled waters. Even in an
intelligent community there must be leadership. And, if the world will no
longer tolerate the old theories, a tribute may at least be paid to those
who from conviction upheld them; who ruled, perhaps in affluence, yet were
also willing to toil and, if need be, to die for the privilege.</p>
<p>One Saturday afternoon, after watching for a while the boys playing fives
and football and romping over the green lawns at Eton, on my way to the
head master's rooms I paused in one of the ancient quads. My eye had been
caught by a long column of names posted there, printed in heavy black
letters. 'Etona non, immemora'! Every week many new names are added to
those columns. On the walls of the chapel and in other quads and passages
may be found tablets and inscriptions in memory of those who have died for
England and the empire in by-gone wars. I am told that the proportion of
Etonians of killed to wounded is greater than that of any other public
school—which is saying a great deal. They go back across the channel
and back again until their names appear on the last and highest honour
list of the school and nation.</p>
<p>In one of the hospitals I visited lay a wounded giant who had once been a
truckman in a little town in Kent. Incidentally, in common with his
neighbours, he had taken no interest in the war, which had seemed as
remote to him as though he had lived in North Dakota. One day a Zeppelin
dropped a bomb on that village, whereupon the able-bodied males enlisted
to a man, and he with them. A subaltern in his company was an Eton boy.
"We just couldn't think of 'im as an orficer, sir; in the camps 'e used to
play with us like a child. And then we went to France. And one night when
we was wet to the skin and the Boschs was droppin' shell all around us we
got the word. It was him leaped over the top first of all, shouting back
at us to come on. He tumbled right back and died in my arms, 'e did, as I
was climbin' up after 'im. I shan't ever forget 'im."</p>
<p>As you travel about in these days you become conscious, among the people
you meet, of a certain bewilderment. A static world and a static order are
dissolving; and in England that order was so static as to make the present
spectacle the more surprising. Signs of the disintegration of the old
social strata were not lacking, indeed, in the earlier years of the
twentieth century, when labour members and north-country radicals began to
invade parliament; but the cataclysm of this war has accelerated the
process. In the muddy trenches of Flanders and France a new comradeship
has sprung up between officers and Tommies, while time-honoured precedent
has been broken by the necessity of giving thousands of commissions to men
of merit who do not belong to the "officer caste." At the Haymarket
Theatre I saw a fashionable audience wildly applaud a play in which the
local tailor becomes a major-general and returns home to marry the
daughter of the lord of a mayor whose clothes he used to cut before the
war.</p>
<p>"The age of great adventure," were the words used by Mr. H. G. Wells to
describe this epoch as we discussed it. And a large proportion of the
descendants of those who have governed England for centuries are
apparently imbued with the spirit of this adventure, even though it may
spell the end of their exclusive rule. As significant of the social
mingling of elements which in the past never exchanged ideas or points of
view I shall describe a week-end party at a large country house of Liberal
complexion; on the Thames. I have reason to believe it fairly typical. The
owner of this estate holds an important position in the Foreign Office,
and the hostess has, by her wit and intelligent grasp of affairs, made an
enviable place for herself. On her right, at luncheon on Sunday, was a
labour leader, the head of one of the most powerful unions in Britain, and
next him sat a member of one of the oldest of England's titled families.
The two were on terms of Christian names. The group included two or three
women, a sculptor and an educator, another Foreign Office official who has
made a reputation since the beginning of the war, and finally an employer
of labour, the chairman of the biggest shipbuilding company in England.</p>
<p>That a company presenting such a variety of interests should have been
brought together in the frescoed dining-room of that particular house is
noteworthy.</p>
<p>The thing could happen nowhere save in the England of today. At first the
talk was general, ranging over a number of subjects from that of the
personality of certain politicians to the conduct of the war and the
disturbing problem raised by the "conscientious objector"; little by
little, however, the rest of us became silent, to listen to a debate which
had begun between the labour leader and the ship-builder on the "labour
question." It is not my purpose here to record what they said. Needless to
add that they did not wholly agree, but they were much nearer to agreement
than one would have thought possible. What was interesting was the
open-mindedness with which, on both sides, the argument was conducted, and
the fact that it could seriously take place then and there. For the
subject of it had long been the supreme problem in the lives of both these
men, their feelings concerning it must at times have been tinged with
bitterness, yet they spoke with courtesy and restraint, and though each
maintained his contentions he was quick to acknowledge a point made by the
other. As one listened one was led to hope that a happier day is perhaps
at hand when such things as "complexes" and convictions will disappear.</p>
<p>The types of these two were in striking contrast. The labour leader was
stocky, chestnut-coloured, vital, possessing the bulldog quality of the
British self-made man combined with a natural wit, sharpened in the arena,
that often startled the company into an appreciative laughter. The
ship-builder, on the other hand, was one of those spare and hard
Englishmen whom no amount of business cares will induce to neglect the
exercise of his body, the obligation at all times to keep "fit";
square-rigged, as it were, with a lean face and a wide moustache
accentuating a square chin. Occasionally a gleam of humour, a ray of
idealism, lighted his practical grey eyes. Each of these two had managed
rather marvellously to triumph over early training by self-education: the
labour leader, who had had his first lessons in life from injustices and
hard knocks; and the ship-builder, who had overcome the handicap of the
public-school tradition and of Manchester economics.</p>
<p>"Yes, titles and fortunes must go," remarked our hostess with a smile as
she rose from the table and led the way out on the sunny, stone-flagged
terrace. Below us was a wide parterre whose flower-beds, laid out by a
celebrated landscape-gardener in the days of the Stuarts, were filled with
vegetables. The day was like our New England Indian summerthough the trees
were still heavy with leaves—and a gossamer-blue veil of haze
stained the hills between which the shining river ran. If the social
revolution, or evolution, takes place, one wonders what will become of
this long-cherished beauty.</p>
<p>I venture to dwell upon one more experience of that week-end party. The
Friday evening of my arrival I was met at the station, not by a limousine
with a chauffeur and footman, but by a young woman with a taxicab—one
of the many reminders that a war is going on. London had been reeking in a
green-yellow fog, but here the mist was white, and through it I caught
glimpses of the silhouettes of stately trees in a park, and presently saw
the great house with its clock-tower looming up before me. A fire was
crackling in the hall, and before it my hostess was conversing amusedly
with a well-known sculptor—a sculptor typical of these renaissance
times, large, full-blooded, with vigorous opinions on all sorts of
matters.</p>
<p>"A lecturer is coming down from London to talk to the wounded in the
amusement-hall of the hospital," our hostess informed us. "And you both
must come and speak too."</p>
<p>The three of us got into the only motor of which the establishment now
boasts, a little runabout using a minimum of "petrol," and she guided us
rapidly by devious roads through the fog until a blur of light proclaimed
the presence of a building, one of some score or more built on the
golf-course by the British Government. I have not space hereto describe
that hospital, which is one of the best in England; but it must be
observed that its excellence and the happiness of its inmates are almost
wholly due to the efforts of the lady who now conducted us across the
stage of the amusement-hall, where all the convalescents who could walk or
who could be rolled thither in chairs were gathered. The lecturer had not
arrived. But the lady of the manor seated herself at the speaker's table,
singling out Scotch wits in the audience—for whom she was more than
a match—while the sculptor and I looked on and grinned and resisted
her blandishments to make speeches. When at last the lecturer came he sat
down informally on the table with one foot hanging in the air and grinned,
too, at her bantering but complimentary introduction. It was then I
discovered for the first time that he was one of the best educational
experts of that interesting branch of the British Government, the
Department of Reconstruction, whose business it is to teach the
convalescents the elements of social and political science. This was not
to be a lecture, he told them, but a debate in which every man must take a
part. And his first startling question was this:</p>
<p>"Why should Mr. Lloyd George, instead of getting five thousand pounds a
year for his services as prime minister, receive any more than a common
labourer?"</p>
<p>The question was a poser. The speaker folded his hands and beamed down at
them; he seemed fairly to radiate benignity.</p>
<p>"Now we mustn't be afraid of him, just because he seems to be
intelligent," declared our hostess. This sally was greeted with spasmodic
laughter. Her eyes flitted from bench to bench, yet met nothing save
averted glances. "Jock! Where are you, Jock? Why don't you speak up?—you've
never been downed before."</p>
<p>More laughter, and craning of necks for the Jocks. This appeared to be her
generic name for the vita. But the Jocks remained obdurately modest. The
prolonged silence did not seem in the least painful to the lecturer, who
thrust his hand in his pocket and continued to beam. He had learned how to
wait. And at last his patience was rewarded. A middleaged soldier with a
very serious manner arose hesitatingly, with encouraging noises from his
comrades.</p>
<p>"It's not Mr. Lloyd George I'm worrying about, sir," he said, "all I wants
is enough for the missus and me. I had trouble to get that before the
war."</p>
<p>Cries of "Hear! Hear!"</p>
<p>"Why did you have trouble?" inquired the lecturer mildly.</p>
<p>"The wages was too low."</p>
<p>"And why were the wages too low?"</p>
<p>"You've got me there. I hadn't thought."</p>
<p>"But isn't it your business as a voter to think?" asked the lecturer.
"That's why the government is sending me here, to start you to thinking,
to remind you that it is you soldiers who will have to take charge of this
country and run it after the war is over. And you won't be able to do that
unless you think, and think straight."</p>
<p>"We've never been taught to think," was the illuminating reply.</p>
<p>"And if we do think we've never been educated to express ourselves, same
as you!" shouted another man, in whom excitement had overcome timidity.</p>
<p>"I'm here to help you educate yourselves," said the lecturer. "But first
let's hear any ideas you may have on the question I asked you."</p>
<p>There turned out to be plenty of ideas, after all. An opinion was ventured
that Mr. Lloyd George served the nation, not for money but from public
spirit; a conservative insisted that ability should be rewarded and
rewarded well; whereupon ensued one of the most enlightening discussions,
not only as a revelation of intelligence, but of complexes and obsessions
pervading many of the minds in whose power lies the ultimate control of
democracies. One, for instance, declared that—"if every man went to
church proper of a Sunday and minded his own business the country would
get along well enough." He was evidently of the opinion that there was too
much thinking and not enough of what he would have termed "religion."
Gradually that audience split up into liberals and conservatives; and the
liberals noticeably were the younger men who had had the advantages of
better board schools, who had formed fewer complexes and had had less time
in which to get them set. Of these, a Canadian made a plea for the
American system of universal education, whereupon a combative
"stand-patter" declared that every man wasn't fit to be educated, that the
American plan made only for discontent. "Look at them," he exclaimed,
"They're never satisfied to stay in their places." This provoked laughter,
but it was too much for the sculptor—and for me. We both broke our
vows and made speeches in favour of equality and mental opportunity, while
the lecturer looked on and smiled. Mr. Lloyd George and his salary were
forgotten. By some subtle art of the chairman the debate had been guided
to the very point where he had from the first intended to guide it—to
the burning question of our day—education as the true foundation of
democracy! Perhaps, after all, this may be our American contribution to
the world's advance.</p>
<p>As we walked homeward through the fog I talked to him of Professor Dewey's
work and its results, while he explained to me the methods of the
Reconstruction Department. "Out of every audience like that we get a group
and form a class," he said. "They're always a bit backward at first, just
as they were tonight, but they grow very keen. We have a great many
classes already started, and we see to it that they are provided with
text-books and teachers. Oh, no, it's not propaganda," he added, in answer
to my query; "all we do is to try to give them facts in such a way as to
make them able to draw their own conclusions and join any political party
they choose—just so they join one intelligently." I must add that
before Sunday was over he had organized his class and arranged for their
future instruction.</p>
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