<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_V_III" id="CHAPTER_V_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.</h2>
<h3>HOW THE WAR ENDED.</h3>
<p>Days passed—weary, waiting, anxious days. A whole
month went by. What had really happened at sea was
unknown. After the truce, London very gradually began
to resume her normal life, though the gaunt state of the
streets was indescribably weird.</p>
<p>Shops began to open, and as each day passed, food
became more plentiful and consequently less dear. The
truce meant the end of the war, therefore thanksgiving
services were held in every town and village throughout
the country.</p>
<p>There were great prison-camps of Germans at Hounslow,
Brentwood, and Barnet, while Von Kronhelm and his
chief officers were also held as prisoners until some
decision through diplomatic channels could be arrived<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
at. Meanwhile a little business began to be done;
thousands began to resume their employment, bankers
reopened their doors, and within a week the distress and
suffering of the poor became perceptibly alleviated. The
task of burying the dead after the terrible massacre of the
Germans in the London streets had been a stupendous
one, but so quickly had it been accomplished that an
epidemic was happily averted.</p>
<p>Parliament moved back to Westminster, and daily
meetings of the Cabinet were being held in Downing
Street. These resulted in the resignation of the Ministry,
and with a fresh Cabinet, in which Mr. Gerald Graham,
the organiser of the Defenders, was given a seat, a settlement
was at last arrived at.</p>
<p>To further describe the chaotic state of England occasioned
by the terrible and bloody war would serve no
purpose. The loss and suffering which it had caused the
country had been incalculable; statisticians estimated that
in one month of hostilities it had amounted to £500,000,000,
a part of which represented money transferred from British
pockets to German, as the enemy had carried off some of
the securities upon which the German troops had laid their
hands in London.</p>
<p>Let us for a moment take a retrospective glance. Consols
were at 50; bread was still 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per loaf; and
the ravages of the German commerce-destroyers had sent
up the cost of insurance on British shipping sky-high.
Money was almost unprocurable; except for the manufacture
of war material, there was no industry; and the
suffering and distress among the poor could not be exaggerated.
In all directions men, women, and children had
been starving.</p>
<p>The mercantile community were loud in their outcry
for "peace at any price," and the pro-German and Stop-the-War
Party were equally vehement in demanding a
cessation of the war. They found excuses for the enemy,
and forgot the frightful devastation and loss which the
invasion had caused to the country.</p>
<p>They insisted that the working class gained nothing,
even though the British fleet was closely blockading the
German coast, and their outcry was strengthened when
a few days after the blockade of the Elbe had begun,
two British battleships were so unfortunate as to strike
German mines, and sink with a large part of their crews.
The difficulty of borrowing money for the prosecution<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</SPAN></span>
of the war was a grave obstacle in the way of the
party of action, and preyed upon the mind of the British
Government.</p>
<p>Socialism, with its creed of "Thou shalt have no other
god but Thyself," and its doctrine, "Let us eat and
drink, for to-morrow we die," had replaced the religious
beliefs of a generation of Englishmen taught to suffer
and to die sooner than surrender to wrong. In the hour
of trial, amidst smoking ruins, among the holocausts of
dead which marked the prolonged, bloody, and terrible
battles on land and at sea, the spirit of the nation quailed,
and there was really no great leader to recall it to ways
of honour and duty.</p>
<p>The wholesale destruction of food, and particularly of
wheat and meat, removed from the world's market
a large part of its supplies, and had immediately sent
up the cost of food everywhere, outside the United
Kingdom as well as in it. At the same time, the attacks
upon shipping laden with food increased the cost of
insurance to prohibitive prices upon vessels freighted for
the United Kingdom. The underwriters after the first
few captures by the enemy would not insure at all except
for fabulous rates.</p>
<p>The withdrawal of all the larger British cruisers for the
purpose of defeating the main German fleets in the North
Sea left the commerce-destroyers a free hand, and there
was no force to meet them. The British liners commissioned
as commerce-protectors were too few and too
slow to be able to hold their adversaries in check.</p>
<p>Neutral shipping was molested by the German cruisers.</p>
<p>Whenever raw cotton or food of any kind was discovered
upon a neutral vessel bound for British ports, the vessel
was seized and sent into one or other of the German
harbours on the West Coast of Africa.</p>
<p>The United Kingdom, indeed, might have been reduced
to absolute starvation had it not been for the fact that
the Canadian Government interfered in Canada to prevent
similar German tactics from succeeding, and held the
German contracts for the cornering of Canadian wheat,
contrary to public policy.</p>
<p>The want of food, the high price of bread and meat in
England, and the greatly increased cost of the supplies
of raw material sent up the expenditure upon poor relief
to enormous figures. Millions of men were out of employment,
and in need of assistance. Mills and factories<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</SPAN></span>
in all directions had closed down, either because of the
military danger from the operations of the German
armies, or because of the want of orders, or, again, because
raw materials were not procurable.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, when the invasion began, many rich
foreigners who had lived in England collected what portable
property they possessed and retired abroad to
Switzerland, Italy, and the United States. Their
example was followed by large numbers of British subjects
who had invested abroad, and now, in the hour of distress,
were able to place their securities in a handbag and
withdraw them to happier countries.</p>
<p>They may justly be blamed for this want of patriotism,
but their reply was that they had been unjustly and
mercilessly taxed by men who derided patriotism, misused
power, and neglected the real interests of the
nation in the desire to pander to the mob. Moreover,
with the income-tax at 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> in the pound, and with the
cost of living enormously enhanced, they declared that
it was a positive impossibility to live in England, while
into the bargain their lives were exposed to danger from
the enemy.</p>
<p>As a result of this wholesale emigration, in London
and the country the number of empty houses inordinately
increased, and there were few well-to-do people left
to pay the rates and taxes. The fearful burden of the
extravagant debts which the British municipalities
had heaped up was cruelly felt, since the nation had to
repudiate the responsibility which it had incurred for
the payment of interest on the local debts. The Socialist
dream, in fact, might almost be said to have been
realised. There were few rich left, but the consequences
to the poor, instead of being beneficial, were utterly
disastrous.</p>
<p>Under the pressure of public opinion, constrained by
hunger and financial necessities, and with thousands of
German prisoners in their hands, the British Government
acceded to the suggested conference to secure peace.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>Peace was finally signed on January 13, 1911. The
British Empire emerged from the conflict outwardly
intact, but internally so weakened that only the most
resolute reforms accomplished by the ablest and boldest
statesmen, could have restored it to its old position.</p>
<p>Germany, on the other hand, emerged with an additional<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</SPAN></span>
21,000 miles of European territory, with an extended
seaboard on the North Sea, fronting the United Kingdom
at Rotterdam and the Texel, and, it was calculated, with
a slight pecuniary advantage. Practically the entire cost
of the war had been borne by England.</p>
<p>As is always the case, the poor suffered most. The
Socialists, who had declared against armaments, were
faithless friends of those whom they professed to champion.
Their dream of a golden age proved utterly delusive.
But the true authors of England's misfortunes escaped
blame for the moment, and the Army and Navy were
made the scapegoats of the great catastrophe.</p>
<p>When success did come, it came too late, and could
not be utilised without a great British Army capable of
carrying the war into the enemy's country, and thus
compelling a satisfactory peace.</p>
<div class="center"><br/><br/>THE END.</div>
<div class="center"><br/><br/>PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES.</div>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p> </p>
<div class='tnote'><h3>Transcriber's Note:</h3>
<p>A table of contents with links has been added at the beginning of the book.</p>
<p>Obvious punctuation errors were corrected.</p>
<p>High-resolution images can be accessed by clicking on the images in the text.</p>
<p>Hyphens removed:
"hill[-]side" (page 152),
"look[-]out" (page 221),
"mid[-]day" (page 149),
"night[-]fall" (page 157),
"rear[-]guard" (page 142),
"sharp[-]shooters" (page 191),
"wide[-]spread (page 230).</p>
<p>Hyphen added: "by[-]ways" (page 224).</p>
<p>The following words appear both with and without hyphens and have not
been changed: "back[-]waters", "motor[-]omnibuses",
"pickel[-]haubes".</p>
<p>Page 43: the double quotation mark after "Well, Mr. Mayor," was changed to a single quotation mark.</p>
<p>Page 50: "communciation" changed to "communication" (established direct communication).</p>
<p>Page 60: "to" changed to "the" (came the VIIth Army Corps).</p>
<p>Page 76: "thei" changed to "their" (some of their field batteries).</p>
<p>Page 85: "Aryglls" changed to "Argylls".</p>
<p>Page 89: "squardon" changed to "squadron" (squadron after squadron).</p>
<p>Page 143: "fellow" changed to "fellows" (hundreds of poor fellows).</p>
<p>Page 166: "fo" changed to "for" (for our salvation).</p>
<p>Page 178: "Shepheard's Bush" changed to "Shepherd's Bush".</p>
<p>Page 187: "Rosyln Hill" changed to "Roslyn Hill".</p>
<p>Page 253: added "as" (and as soon as fired on).</p>
</div>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="full" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />