登陆注册
5348800000062

第62章 THE ENDING OF THE WAR(1)

1

About the end of the war there are two chief ways of thinking, there is a simpler sort of mind which desires merely a date, and a more complex kind which wants particulars.To the former class belong most of the men out at the front.They are so bored by this war that they would welcome any peace that did not definitely admit defeat--and examine the particulars later.The "tone" of the German army, to judge by its captured letters, is even lower.It would welcome peace in any form.Never in the whole history of the world has a war been so universally unpopular as this war.

The mind of the soldier is obsessed by a vision of home-coming for good, so vivid and alluring that it blots out nearly every other consideration.The visions of people at home are of plenty instead of privation, lights up, and the cessation of a hundred tiresome restrictions.And it is natural therefore that a writer rather given to guesses and forecasts should be asked very frequently to guess how long the war has still to run.

All such forecasting is the very wildest of shooting.There are the chances of war to put one out, and of a war that changes far faster than the military intelligence.I have made various forecasts.At the outset I thought that military Germany would fight at about the 1899 level, would be lavish with cavalry and great attacks, that it would be reluctant to entrench, and that the French and British had learnt the lesson of the Boer war better than the Germans.I trusted to the melodramatic instinct of the Kaiser.I trusted to the quickened intelligence of the British military caste.The first rush seemed to bear me out, and I opened my paper day by day expecting to read of the British and French entrenched and the Germans beating themselves to death against wire and trenches.In those days I wrote of the French being over the Rhine before 1915.But it was the Germans who entrenched first.

Since then I have made some other attempts.I did not prophesy at all in 1915, so far as I can remember.If I had I should certainly have backed the Gallipoli attempt to win.It was the right thing to do, and it was done abominably.It should have given us Constantinople and brought Bulgaria to our side; it gave us a tragic history of administrative indolence and negligence, and wasted bravery and devotion.I was very hopeful of the western offensive in 1915; and in 1916 I counted still on our continuing push.I believe we were very near something like decision this last September, but some archaic dream of doing it with cavalry dashed these hopes.The "Tanks" arrived to late to do their proper work, and their method of use is being worked out very slowly....I still believe in the western push, if only we push it for all we are worth.If only we push it with our brains, with our available and still unorganised brains; if only we realise that the art of modern war is to invent and invent and invent.Hitherto I have always hoped and looked for decision, a complete victory that would enable the Allies to dictate peace.

But such an expectation is largely conditioned by these delicate questions of adaptability that my tour of the front has made very urgent in my mind.A spiteful German American writer has said that the British would rather kill twenty thousand of their men than break one general.Even a grain of truth in such a remark is a very valid reasoning for lengthening one's estimate of the duration of the war.

There can be no doubt that the Western allies are playing a winning game upon the western front, and that this is the front of decision now.It is not in doubt that they are beating the Germans and shoving them back.The uncertain factor is the rate at which they are shoving them back.If they can presently get to so rapid an advance as to bring the average rate since July 1st up to two or three miles a day, then we shall still see the Allies dictating terms.But if the shove drags on at its present pace of less than a mile and four thousand prisoners a week over the limited Somme front only, if nothing is attempted elsewhere to increase the area of pressure, [*This was written originally before the French offensive at Verdun.] then the intolerable stress and boredom of the war will bring about a peace long before the Germans are decisively crushed.But the war, universally detested, may go on into 1918 or 1919.Food riots, famine, and general disorganisation will come before 1920, if it does.The Allies have a winning game before them, but they seem unable to discover and promote the military genius needed to harvest an unquestionable victory.In the long run this may not be an unmixed evil.Victory, complete and dramatic, may be bought too dearly.We need not triumphs out of this war but the peace of the world.

This war is altogether unlike any previous war, and its ending, like its development, will follow a course of its own.For a time people's minds ran into the old grooves, the Germans were going /nach Paris/ and /nach London/; Lord Curzon filled our minds with a pleasant image of the Bombay Lancers riding down /Unter den Linden./ But the Versailles precedent of a council of victors dictating terms to the vanquished is not now so evidently in men's minds.The utmost the Allies talk upon now is to say, "We must end the war on German soil." The Germans talk frankly of "holding out." I have guessed that the western offensive will be chiefly on German soil by next June; it is a mere guess, and I admit it is quite conceivable that the "push" may still be grinding out its daily tale of wounded and prisoners in 1918 far from that goal.

None of the combatants expected such a war as this, and the consequence is that the world at large has no idea how to get out of it.The war may stay with us like a schoolboy caller, because it does not know how to go.The Italians said as much to me.

"Suppose we get to Innsbruck and Laibach and Trieste," they said, "it isn't an end!" Lord Northcliffe, I am told, came away from Italy with the conviction that the war would last six years.

同类推荐
  • 唐诗鉴赏大辞典(上)

    唐诗鉴赏大辞典(上)

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说金毗罗童子威德经

    佛说金毗罗童子威德经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宦乡要则

    宦乡要则

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 热病衡正

    热病衡正

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 葬法倒杖

    葬法倒杖

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 谁来娶我的女儿

    谁来娶我的女儿

    每逢周末和法定节日,上海市HP区NJ路附近某公园的北角人头攒动,熙熙攘攘。一群中老年人三三两两,或立或坐,以品评的目光相互打量。这些人或是拿着写满信息的纸牌四处游走,或是站在自己的“摊位”前面。这里就是上海相亲角,一个特殊的公共聚会场所。相亲角中上演的并非是“剩男剩女”的戏码,真正的主角是他们的父母——当年的知青一代。知青一代在婚恋大事上曾经被“党疼”“国爱”,而今他们的子女要解决婚姻问题时,国家却早已从私人情感领域退出。国家对住房、医疗、教育等社会保障性领域的改制,迫使城市居民凡事依靠自己的程度达到了1949年以来前所未有的高度,父母们的集体性焦虑在相亲角中展露无遗。
  • 精灵之草系崛起

    精灵之草系崛起

    宠物小精灵,已经有了七个世代,然而草系从来没有出现过天王,也没有什么厉害的训练家。来自南方橘子群岛的少年,是否能携带着他的草系小精灵们开辟出属于自己的道路,将草系小精灵们独有的魅力展现出来?在真实的小精灵世界中,草系小精灵们真的这么无力吗?……………………………………………………………………看了大侦探皮卡丘里的土台龟突发奇想,想写出一篇不一样的小精灵世界,第一次写文,争取将作者脑中那个奇妙的与众不同的小精灵世界展现出来。
  • 刍言

    刍言

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 白狐不妖

    白狐不妖

    他是世间唯一的九尾白狐,长相俊美,千年之前,他傲视天下众生;她是自小孤苦无依的女子,只因被传言害死双亲,所以自小便不招存人待见。“你为了聚她魂魄便要杀了我吗”?她眼泪缓缓的留下来……
  • 民族与民族主义:苏联、俄罗斯、东欧学者的观点(世界民族研究丛书)

    民族与民族主义:苏联、俄罗斯、东欧学者的观点(世界民族研究丛书)

    本书收集了苏联、俄罗斯和一些东欧国家著名民族问题研究专家的文章,内容涉及苏联建立的理论问题、苏联时期的民族政策、苏联解体前后的民族主义、目前俄罗斯的民族政策,以及南斯拉夫、民主德国、罗马尼亚等国学者对本国民族主义和民族问题的研究。该文集主要是以上这些国家学者对马克思主义民族理论及其应用问题的研究,具有代表性,对我们的民族理论研究也具有启发意义。
  • 洛瀚传之驭兽篇

    洛瀚传之驭兽篇

    和我一起探索这个神奇多彩的驭兽世界,好吗?这里有倒悬在空中的城市倒悬天;有水天一色,天在水中的水镜天;有画中世界的画山;有水阁云天之城云梦泽;有星光起落之地极星天;有众星流舞之地群星之巅;有深海秘境归墟;有鬼魅魍魉纵横的不日;有科技废墟的南明圣离天;有进入便难以出去的“地远天遥”;有刮着无休风暴的湍流界;有硅基生命的遗失大陆……
  • 故事初甜

    故事初甜

    [短篇]每一个故事都挺不错,希望总有一个你会喜欢。「周更」「每个故事4-7章」
  • 多重人格怎么破

    多重人格怎么破

    多重人格怎么破?系统:自然是用爱来拯救啊!可是宿主大对目标莫得感情怎么破?某男面带微笑,表示日久生情……
  • 呢喃娉婷

    呢喃娉婷

    再强大的人都是会有弱点的,不错,曲予尘就是淳于岩若这一生的弱点,却也是她的金丝铁甲。一个劫,她明明可以轻轻松松渡过,不过她还是放纵了自己。自己将自己的一生都与妖兽绑在了一起,同时,也跟他绑在了一起。他们注定纠葛,既然避不过,就好好面对吧。最开始,她一不小心在人间提前苏醒,她生下他们的孩子,在他的眼前消失,化作片片昙花。她原以为自己能放下,可最终她还是承了幽冥川主的情,让他的魂魄与自己一起在石潭篁林长眠,更是和他一起上了目宗山,为他练就了不老不死之身。只是,让她放下身份,付出一切来守护的人,最终竟要与她为敌。她不甘心,在佛祖座下三十六万年,提着一柄青冥剑,要讨回属于淳于一族的一切,可最终她还是败给了自己......
  • 一缕柔情画相思

    一缕柔情画相思

    她在他眼里不是位正经淑女,他在她眼里同样不是正人君子,他们两看两生厌。要是他们能一直这么相互厌烦下去也还好,可是他们相爱了,都说爱情很甜蜜,可他们的爱情大多数是苦的,苦的要命……