登陆注册
15692600000008

第8章

For example, in the spring of 1915 there was an appalling slaughter of our young soldiers at Neuve Chapelle and at the Gallipoli landing. I will not go so far as to say that our civilians were delighted to have such exciting news to read at breakfast. But I cannot pretend that I noticed either in the papers, or in general intercourse, any feeling beyond the usual one that the cinema show at the front was going splendidly, and that our boys were the bravest of the brave. Suddenly there came the news that an Atlantic liner, the Lusitania, had been torpedoed, and that several well-known first-class passengers, including a famous theatrical manager and the author of a popular farce, had been drowned, among others. The others included Sir Hugh Lane; but as he had only laid the country under great obligations in the sphere of the fine arts, no great stress was laid on that loss. Immediately an amazing frenzy swept through the country. Men who up to that time had kept their heads now lost them utterly. "Killing saloon passengers! What next?" was the essence of the whole agitation; but it is far too trivial a phrase to convey the faintest notion of the rage which possessed us. To me, with my mind full of the hideous cost of Neuve Chapelle, Ypres, and the Gallipoli landing, the fuss about the Lusitania seemed almost a heartless impertinence, though I was well acquainted personally with the three best-known victims, and understood, better perhaps than most people, the misfortune of the death of Lane. I even found a grim satisfaction, very intelligible to all soldiers, in the fact that the civilians who found the war such splendid British sport should get a sharp taste of what it was to the actual combatants. I expressed my impatience very freely, and found that my very straightforward and natural feeling in the matter was received as a monstrous and heartless paradox. When I asked those who gaped at me whether they had anything to say about the holocaust of Festubert, they gaped wider than before, having totally forgotten it, or rather, having never realized it. They were not heartless anymore than Iwas; but the big catastrophe was too big for them to grasp, and the little one had been just the right size for them. I was not surprised. Have I not seen a public body for just the same reason pass a vote for ?0,000 without a word, and then spend three special meetings, prolonged into the night, over an item of seven shillings for refreshments?

Little Minds and Big Battles Nobody will be able to understand the vagaries of public feeling during the war unless they bear constantly in mind that the war in its entire magnitude did not exist for the average civilian.

He could not conceive even a battle, much less a campaign. To the suburbs the war was nothing but a suburban squabble. To the miner and navvy it was only a series of bayonet fights between German champions and English ones. The enormity of it was quite beyond most of us. Its episodes had to be reduced to the dimensions of a railway accident or a shipwreck before it could produce any effect on our minds at all. To us the ridiculous bombardments of Scarborough and Ramsgate were colossal tragedies, and the battle of Jutland a mere ballad. The words "after thorough artillery preparation" in the news from the front meant nothing to us; but when our seaside trippers learned that an elderly gentleman at breakfast in a week-end marine hotel had been interrupted by a bomb dropping into his egg-cup, their wrath and horror knew no bounds. They declared that this would put a new spirit into the army; and had no suspicion that the soldiers in the trenches roared with laughter over it for days, and told each other that it would do the blighters at home good to have a taste of what the army was up against. Sometimes the smallness of view was pathetic. A man would work at home regardless of the call "to make the world safe for democracy." His brother would be killed at the front. Immediately he would throw up his work and take up the war as a family blood feud against the Germans. Sometimes it was comic. A wounded man, entitled to his discharge, would return to the trenches with a grim determination to find the Hun who had wounded him and pay him out for it.

It is impossible to estimate what proportion of us, in khaki or out of it, grasped the war and its political antecedents as a whole in the light of any philosophy of history or knowledge of what war is. I doubt whether it was as high as our proportion of higher mathematicians. But there can be no doubt that it was prodigiously outnumbered by the comparatively ignorant and childish. Remember that these people had to be stimulated to make the sacrifices demanded by the war, and that this could not be done by appeals to a knowledge which they did not possess, and a comprehension of which they were incapable. When the armistice at last set me free to tell the truth about the war at the following general election, a soldier said to a candidate whom I was supporting, "If I had known all that in 1914, they would never have got me into khaki." And that, of course, was precisely why it had been necessary to stuff him with a romance that any diplomatist would have laughed at. Thus the natural confusion of ignorance was increased by a deliberately propagated confusion of nursery bogey stories and melodramatic nonsense, which at last overreached itself and made it impossible to stop the war before we had not only achieved the triumph of vanquishing the German army and thereby overthrowing its militarist monarchy, but made the very serious mistake of ruining the centre of Europe, a thing that no sane European State could afford to do.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 大道沧途

    大道沧途

    天之道,有一有万;武之道,有始有终。在苍茫大陆上,看郑家少年在乱世中爆发耀眼光芒。
  • 中医小秘方

    中医小秘方

    有人说中医药是国粹,更有人说民间偏方是“国宝”,是中华医药宝库中的一朵奇葩。所谓偏方,指药味不多,大众尚未知,且对某些病症具有独特疗效的药方。中国传统医药,自神农尝百草以来,历经五千年而不衰,留下来的偏方,更是历久弥坚,绝非西洋药品所能替代。民间素有“小偏方治大病”“单方气死名医”之说。有些说法虽有夸张之嫌,但其疗效几乎有口皆碑,深入民心。
  • 公平之路

    公平之路

    豪门废材流?偶遇金手指后开始厉害了?遭遇退婚流?冲上女主家门开始嘲笑了?逆袭开挂流?偏激暴躁的像奋青一样了?走向巅峰流?最终只想证明自己牛逼了?你错了!你错了!你错了!我们变强不是反驳世俗的欺辱。我们变强不是证明她看走眼了。我们变强不是屌丝奋斗成功史。我们变强不是为了证明自己牛。我们,只想寻觅一条公平之路,以求证道。
  • 云中静月

    云中静月

    静月之美,苍穹为然,所谓萌者,必然在其中。蒙寻之月,天道且远,蒙光寻月,若再云中后。静月舞空,云中定天,天道轮回,掌控在一切。————云中静月
  • 朝阳帝国

    朝阳帝国

    地球尖端科技正紧锣密鼓地向外太空延伸,却不知,太空另一端也在虎视眈眈窥视着地球。一场遍及全球的浩劫之后,曾经璀璨辉煌的地球文明沦为废墟上的史前遗迹。这里充斥着行尸走肉,异能觉醒者,变异兽掠食者,史前机甲改造者,以及生物进化史上无数次论证早已灭绝的野蛮凶兽和正在衍生的形形色色新生物;当然,与众多危险生物并存于世的还有刚走出地穴的人类。人类文明没有终点。末日,或许是幸存者的诞辰?冰川下,埋藏千古的石棺推开了神秘莫测波谲云诡的新世界大门……这是现代文明大毁灭后的故事。
  • 网友大神是教官

    网友大神是教官

    本以为考上大学就轻松了,谁知遇上阎罗教官。迟到。翘课。打游戏。为毛每次都被阎罗教官逮住。教官,您就不能放过我吗!!!!!!”娘子,该洗洗睡了“某只不要脸的腹黑大神说。”睡个毛啊“女主暴怒
  • 悲鸣序曲

    悲鸣序曲

    凯恩永远不会忘记那个晚上,那个与尤希亚相遇的夜晚,那个月光笼罩的夜晚……那是他一切宿命的开始
  • 星海商帝

    星海商帝

    夏霖一个即将毕业的学生意外捡到一串的手链,从此开始传奇的联邦商人生活,正当他心安理得享受成为联邦商人的权利时,一个巨大的危险正在向他靠近……
  • 经验奇方

    经验奇方

    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。
  • 霸道总裁的独家新娘

    霸道总裁的独家新娘

    在墨家,她是墨家骄傲冷漠的千金,在外,她是性感妖娆的playgirl,大胆,热情。“不过一个主动送上门的女人而已,还真的以为会对她上心?”一句嘲弄的话,把她的心,刺的鲜血淋漓,甚至,不顾及她的身体,强行打掉她肚子里的孩子,囚禁已然失去生机的她,更是残忍的逼迫她看着他别的女人亲热恩爱。在订婚前夕,一夜肆虐,却不知,那是他们最后一次见面,留下的只有地上的斑斑血迹……六年后她挽着丈夫,抱着孩子,出现在他面前,嫉妒,悔恨,在他如墨的眼眸里深深的烙下印记,她已经是他连求的机会都没有了的人。向来骄傲的他,毫不犹豫的跪在她的面前:“我求你,让我留在你身边,只要你能看我一眼!”