登陆注册
15692600000010

第10章

How the Fools shouted the Wise Men down Thus, like a fertile country flooded with mud, England showed no sign of her greatness in the days when she was putting forth all her strength to save herself from the worst consequences of her littleness. Most of the men of action, occupied to the last hour of their time with urgent practical work, had to leave to idler people, or to professional rhetoricians, the presentation of the war to the reason and imagination of the country and the world in speeches, poems, manifestoes, picture posters, and newspaper articles. I have had the privilege of hearing some of our ablest commanders talking about their work; and I have shared the common lot of reading the accounts of that work given to the world by the newspapers. No two experiences could be more different. But in the end the talkers obtained a dangerous ascendancy over the rank and file of the men of action; for though the great men of action are always inveterate talkers and often very clever writers, and therefore cannot have their minds formed for them by others, the average man of action, like the average fighter with the bayonet, can give no account of himself in words even to himself, and is apt to pick up and accept what he reads about himself and other people in the papers, except when the writer is rash enough to commit himself on technical points. It was not uncommon during the war to hear a soldier, or a civilian engaged on war work, describing events within his own experience that reduced to utter absurdity the ravings and maunderings of his daily paper, and yet echo the opinions of that paper like a parrot. Thus, to escape from the prevailing confusion and folly, it was not enough to seek the company of the ordinary man of action: one had to get into contact with the master spirits. This was a privilege which only a handful of people could enjoy. For the unprivileged citizen there was no escape. To him the whole country seemed mad, futile, silly, incompetent, with no hope of victory except the hope that the enemy might be just as mad. Only by very resolute reflection and reasoning could he reassure himself that if there was nothing more solid beneath their appalling appearances the war could not possibly have gone on for a single day without a total breakdown of its organization.

The Mad Election Happy were the fools and the thoughtless men of action in those days. The worst of it was that the fools were very strongly represented in parliament, as fools not only elect fools, but can persuade men of action to elect them too. The election that immediately followed the armistice was perhaps the maddest that has ever taken place. Soldiers who had done voluntary and heroic service in the field were defeated by persons who had apparently never run a risk or spent a farthing that they could avoid, and who even had in the course of the election to apologize publicly for bawling Pacifist or Pro-German at their opponent. Party leaders seek such followers, who can always be depended on to walk tamely into the lobby at the party whip's orders, provided the leader will make their seats safe for them by the process which was called, in derisive reference to the war rationing system, "giving them the coupon." Other incidents were so grotesque that I cannot mention them without enabling the reader to identify the parties, which would not be fair, as they were no more to blame than thousands of others who must necessarily be nameless. The general result was patently absurd; and the electorate, disgusted at its own work, instantly recoiled to the opposite extreme, and cast out all the coupon candidates at the earliest bye-elections by equally silly majorities. But the mischief of the general election could not be undone; and the Government had not only to pretend to abuse its European victory as it had promised, but actually to do it by starving the enemies who had thrown down their arms. It had, in short, won the election by pledging itself to be thriftlessly wicked, cruel, and vindictive; and it did not find it as easy to escape from this pledge as it had from nobler ones. The end, as I write, is not yet; but it is clear that this thoughtless savagery will recoil on the heads of the Allies so severely that we shall be forced by the sternest necessity to take up our share of healing the Europe we have wounded almost to death instead of attempting to complete her destruction.

The Yahoo and the Angry Ape Contemplating this picture of a state of mankind so recent that no denial of its truth is possible, one understands Shakespeare comparing Man to an angry ape, Swift describing him as a Yahoo rebuked by the superior virtue of the horse, and Wellington declaring that the British can behave themselves neither in victory nor defeat. Yet none of the three had seen war as we have seen it. Shakespeare blamed great men, saying that "Could great men thunder as Jove himself does, Jove would ne'er be quiet; for every pelting petty officer would use his heaven for thunder:

nothing but thunder." What would Shakespeare have said if he had seen something far more destructive than thunder in the hand of every village laborer, and found on the Messines Ridge the craters of the nineteen volcanoes that were let loose there at the touch of a finger that might have been a child's finger without the result being a whit less ruinous? Shakespeare may have seen a Stratford cottage struck by one of Jove's thunderbolts, and have helped to extinguish the lighted thatch and clear away the bits of the broken chimney. What would he have said if he had seen Ypres as it is now, or returned to Stratford, as French peasants are returning to their homes to-day, to find the old familiar signpost inscribed "To Stratford, 1 mile," and at the end of the mile nothing but some holes in the ground and a fragment of a broken churn here and there? Would not the spectacle of the angry ape endowed with powers of destruction that Jove never pretended to, have beggared even his command of words?

同类推荐
  • 钱氏私志

    钱氏私志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 吽迦陀野仪轨

    吽迦陀野仪轨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 皇明本纪

    皇明本纪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 入楞伽心玄义

    入楞伽心玄义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 雷公炮炙论

    雷公炮炙论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 穆恋

    穆恋

    她从未想过青梅竹马,两小无猜的他,从来都不曾属于她更让她难以预料的则是他的温柔与阴谋他们的故事是刚开始但却也走向了尽头
  • 女校纯情霸主

    女校纯情霸主

    霸主不好当,校长不好做,尤其是女校的校长,白天很累,晚上更累,哎……
  • 重生之异能杀手

    重生之异能杀手

    她本是第一杀手,却被好友与亲妹妹嫉妒,与她未婚夫谋害而死。重生在另一个人身上的她,身怀异能与空间,看她如向翻天覆地。…某男:即然有那么多人情欠着,要不……以身相许吧!
  • 梦游异周

    梦游异周

    要钱没钱要财也没有,只有嗷嗷待哺的几张口。上无高堂,左无兄弟,右无姐妹,背无靠山。手里全是负资产,一家的重担却要她来扛。大侄爱拾猫,二侄爱养狗。阿妹抱着捡来的哥哥,就是不撒手。唉!猫生猫,狗生狗,每年都要增加好几个。还没出阁就被退货,出门还遇飞来横祸,这个日子可要怎过。心愿小小,满足大大。且看一个百无一用的女子,如何用自己勤劳的双手,赚出个幸福的未来。
  • 分手快乐你要快乐

    分手快乐你要快乐

    爱情是这个世界上最美好的东西,我们都无法拒绝...我们苦苦求索,寝不安席,却在它到来的那一刻犹,彷徨...
  • 那个鬼差我要了

    那个鬼差我要了

    她在车祸中丧生,原本以为可以安安稳稳投胎,重新来过,没成想一个意外,直接将她卖身给了冥界,投胎转世的梦想从此远离。好吧那咱乖乖做个冥界小职员—鬼差,可是谁来告诉她,人人都有家,为什么她没有!哎哎!姑娘那不是酒啊!我的汤啊!喝了孟婆汤的她搅得冥界鸡飞狗跳,众鬼都说冥王是好心,将她这个祸害带在身边!可是难道只有她觉得冥王腹黑吗!哎算了算了!在冥王府办公也不错!天庭来的神仙好帅啊!流口水!妖族的王子好美艳啊!继续口水!可是冥王您老黑着个脸做什么,哎办公室职员什么的果然最难混了!
  • 重凌开始

    重凌开始

    只是练笔的残搞,学生小白文,连作者自己都看不下去了,比如主教泡妞太过直白,人贩子太没个性,大场面控制不了。由于删了有些可惜,因此分享出来让大家吐槽。12W字已弃稿,准备重新开始写,会保留一些线索。还有一点需要注意的是作者的文笔很烂,小心中毒。
  • 刁蛮娘子十五岁:偷夫记

    刁蛮娘子十五岁:偷夫记

    都说胸大无脑,可这似乎不是形容她的吧?最起码她觉得自己胸够大,脑子也够灵活!做个好吃懒做的小丫头,好过做千金小姐吧?勾引个王爷,总比勾引皇帝好吧?唔,天底下最让自己后悔的是:放着国色天香的美男不敢吃!!
  • 五虎征西

    五虎征西

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 旧时长安新雨凉

    旧时长安新雨凉

    讲述的是《史记》流传的爱恨情仇一部奇书,两代人的著述,三代人的努力传承这是一场博弈,不过是荣誉与荣誉的对碰,却最终不可调和,我只不过希望父亲书稿流传,名留青史,如果注定有人牺牲那么我愿意走上祭坛.....