A TEXT-B001iT% WAR. Class _Il£A3 Book Wi Copyright }I"_ 1^ ! C COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR FOR AMERICANS A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR FOR AMERICANS WRITTEN AND COMPILED == BY , AN AMERICAN Being the Fourth Edition of "A PRIMER OF THE WAR FOR AMERICANS" REVISED AND ENLARGED J/ WILLIAM WHITE, M.D.. Ph.D.. LL.D. Fellow of the American College of Surgeons Trustee of the University of Pennsylvania PHILADELPHIA THE JOHN C. WINSTON COMPANY PUBLISHERS ^J^.^ Copyright, 1915, by The John C. Winston Co. MAY -5 1915 ©CI,A398680 C3 To The Amebicak Press Which, as a whole, from the very first days of the war has with courage, fidelity and intelligence resolutely upheld the principles of right, of justice and of democracy and has accurately expressed the sympathy of the vast majority of Americans for the cause of the Allies. PEEFACE Very soon after the beginning of the war its literature was already so voluminous, the statements made by the warring nations were so contradictory, the accusations and counter-accusations were so numerous, the pleas of impas- sioned advocates were so irreconcilable, that a certain be- wilderment and confusion on the part of Americans was almost inevitable. It is greatly to the credit of the intelligence and clear thinking of the nation that, from the day England's "White Book" was laid before the world, this country as a whole — with the exception of those Germans living here, who are known as "German-Americans" — ranged itself spontane- ously and with practical unanimity on the side of the Allies. But however correct this position was — and I believe it was absolutely correct — it soon became apparent that not everyone who occupied it could give cogent and convincing reasons for the belief that was in him, or could refutei clearly and logically the opposing arguments and correct the misstatements on which they were often based. As I found this to be my own case I began to set aside, or to note down, as if I were preparing for a lecture, the questions which seemed to me of fundamental importance and the answers that most impressed and satisfied me. Later, for the attempted benefit of my family and of a few friends, and for the further clarification of my own views, I threw these memoranda into the form of a series of questions and answers. In doing this I had then no definite idea of any other use of this material and in now acceding to the suggestion of some friends that the matter thus (vii) viii PREFACE brought together be given wider distribution I should very much like it to be understood that I do not feel that I have any special fitness for the self-imposed task. If I lay the result before readers — ^if I have any — outside the small circle for whom it was originally intended, it is only to try to do just for this moment the little that lies in me to help a cause in which I profoundly believe. If the paper has any value it will not be from what I have written, but from the collocation of the opinions of others, each of whom is a recognized authority as to the subject he deals with. Wherever my answers have involved questions of fact I have taken pains to attain accuracy. When they have related to matters of opinion I have endeavored to give the basis for such opinions. I adopted the Socratic method in the beginning because for me, without special training, it was the easiest. I have retained it for the same reason. I beg to add finally that any proceeds that may accrue from the sale of this pamphlet are pledged in advance to the Belgian Eelief Fund. J. William White. 1810 S. Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia. November, 1914. PREFACE TO THE "TEXT-BOOK" The unexpected attention paid to my compilation and the rapid exhaustion of three editions has led me to add some chapters based on subsequent occurrences and on later writings, and to re-issue the so-called "Primer" in this new and amplified form. I have, however, tried to adhere to my original intent, which was that the book should derive any value it might have, rather from the collation an.d arrangement, in readable and logical form, of the writings of others, (chiefly of Americans), than from the expression of my own views. This does not mean that I have not confidence in my views or that they are not fixed and decided, but merely that I recognize that there are very many others better qualified to speak authoritatively, and that when their opinions and mine coincide I am more effectively serving the cause I desire to help, by free quotation than by orig- inal pronouncement. Many of the questions dealt with change from day to day in the form of their presentment to the public, but as to most of them there are underlying principles which can as well be maintained or opposed with reference to one set of facts as to another, just as specific test cases are sub- mitted to a court, so that the decision may thenceforth apply to all similar cases. The effort to keep pace with the rapid march of current events, has precluded careful atten- tion to literary form. Some of the matter- dealt with is of necessarily ephemeral character. The desire to present important questions, or questions involving broad prin- ciples, from different aspects, and as approached from dif- (ix) z PREFACE TO THE TEXT-BOOK ferent sides or expressed in different language, has led to some repetition. In spite of this, I venture to hope that as a compilation the book fairly and fully represents intelligent American opinion at this juncture, and that, for a time at least, it may have some value as a work of reference when, among Americans, the questions I have asked and tried to answer come up for discussion. With this idea in mind, I have added an "Index of Names," giving, when it is not given in the text itself, a brief identification of each person men- tioned, so far as it was possible to do so. I have been compelled to omit a few of the German apologists because I could find nothing about them in any "Who's Who," or in any biographical dictionary, although I included in my search a "Dictionary of the Noted Names of Fiction." In this edition are incorporated, in addition to much new matter, portions of a paper written in collaboration with Miss Agnes Eepplier; and a brief address delivered by me before The Contemporary Club of Philadelphia. J. W. W. March, 1915. 1 CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAGE What evidence exists as to the real reason, the funda- mental cause of this war ? 17 CHAPTER II. What is the evidence as to the events immediately leading up to the war in their relation to the culpability of Germany ? 60 CHAPTER III. What has been the attitude of the German Apologists in relation to Belgium since the violation of neutrality ? 75 CHAPTER IV. As time went on has there been reason to modify or to mitigate the almost universal condemna- tion of Germany's treatment of Belgium felt and expressed at the outset in this country ? 99 CHAPTER V. In what estimation does America to-day hold Belgium? 130 CHAPTER VI. Is there any evidence which tends to show why the present time was selected by Germany to Pre- cipitate the war ? 135 (xi) xii CONTENTS CHAPTER VII. PAGE What are the principles represented by the opposing forces in this war ? 138 CHAPTER VIII. In addition to the evidence already presented as to the mental attitude of the average German toward his own race and toward other European races, are there any facts tending to show his real atti- tude toward America? 156 CHAPTER IX. What is the attitude of German-Americans toward this war and toward the principles involved ? 171 CHAPTER X. What is the extent and what are the aims of the organ- ized German propaganda in America? 190 CHAPTER XI. How much reliance is to be placed upon statements emanating from Germany at this time? 250 CHAPTER XII. What is the truth as to the pre-eminence of German "Kultur" of German civilization, of German achievement in letters, arts and sciences? 313 CHAPTER XIII. What of Russia in this war, and of the "Slav Peril" ? . . 333 CONTENTS xiii CHAPTEE XIV. PAGE What are the duties of America at this time? 337 CHAPTER XV. What are the interests of America at this time? 350 CHAPTER XVI. What is the effect of the official attitude — past and present — of this country on (a) Americans, (&) Other peoples ? 364 CHAPTER XVII. From the confusing and contradictory reports from the fields of war and from other information to be gleaned elsewhere are there any indications that justify an opinion as to the final outcome of the struggle ? 448 CHAPTER XVIII. What can America do to bring about peace ? 481 CHAPTER XIX. What, in the light of this war, should be the aim of this and other civilized countries for the future? 495 CHAPTER XX. What general opinions are justified by the foregoing evidence ? Summary 499 References 507 Bibliography 515 Index of ISTames 517 General Index ......... 539 n ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE Facsimile of a page from the Diary of Private Paul Glode 120 Facsimile of a Page of "Boiler-Plate" — Matrix — Sent to American ^N'ewspapers by the German Informa- tion Service 194 CHAPTEE I. What Evidence Exists as to the Real Reason, the Fundamental Cause of This War? a. The most conclusive evidence is to be found in the writings and teachings of prominent and representative Germans during the past forty-three years, i. e., ever since the victory of Germany over France. These writings and teachings demonstrate the deter- mination of Germany to attain "World Power." This determination was the fundamental cause of the war. The writings in question are fairly illustrated by excerpts given below, (p. 30) It should be premised that as soon as these doctrines became widely known to the world outside of Ger- many and exerted their inevitable influence upon public opinion, apologists and repudiators sprang up among the Germans, or the "German-Americans." For example, to take only a few of the latter : Herr Eidder, of the Staats Zeitung, says (1) in reference to certain English writers : "I am unable to come to any other conclusion than that their readings have been confined to Bernhardi and Treitschke, those two German writers who were never part of German intellec- tual life and were both disowned by the German people. "As a matter of fact, Bernhardi is not even read in Germany. Of his works, published by Gotta, only 8,000 copies have been given to the public to date. "The writings of Treitschke, as a historian, are regarded by Germans as brilliant, but Treitschke is remembered by them as a man of intense party feeling who labored under the spirit of 1870, and was incapable of true sympathy with their racial aspirations." 2 (17) 18 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR All the evidence I have been able to find shows the essential falsity of these statements. Another German-American calls Bernhardi "a retired German general of Jingoistic tendencies," and asks for "proof" that his book had the approval of the Kaiser. It would seem sufficient reply to him to ask for proof that it had his disapproval. In the absence of such proof it is fair to assume, in view of the Kaiser^s incessant activities and restless supervision of all things German, and especially of all things military, that at least the book did not greatly displease him. Still another, Professor Jastrow, also repudiates Bernhardi as an exponent of Ger- man thought, but gives no more convincing reasons. The following quotation from a letter of Dr. Jastrow (2) well illustrates the tactics I am considering. After asserting that at first "we" (he professes to be speaking for Americans) threw the sole responsibility of the war upon the Kaiser, he continues : "When doubt arose as to the accuracy of this picture of a modern combination of Machiavelli and Napoleon, we discovered Bernhardi, and found that his influence, or that of the whole party which he represents, was behind it all. Bernhardi fre- quently quoted a man by the name of Treitschke, and, although very few in this country had ever heard of him and scarcely anybody had read him (for his works had not been translated into English), we were willing to take him on faith, and were quite satisfied that his teachings involved the conquest of all of Western Europe and of England for the purpose of spread- ing German 'culture' ; and to this programme we added, of our own accord, the subsequent conquest of the United States." He must, like Miinsterberg (page 183), be writing to impress a peculiarly infantile type of American mind. The effort to belittle, for this purpose, the great Pan- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 19 German historian, by speaking of him as "a man named Treitschke," is particularly characteristic. But his whole argument to the effect that because we 'Tiave just discovered" these people, therefore we are wrong in believing that they represent Germany, is scarcely worthy of notice. What does it matter that Americans generally were not familiar with their writings until this shocking war was begun? Of what importance is it that we were in ignorance of their grandiose plans and sinister purposes? What bearing on the real question has the fact that Treitschke had not been translated into English when we first began to take an interest in him ? None whatever. It is not worth while to try to drag that herring across the trail. The question remains: What were their teachings and what reason is there to believe that they greatly influencedi German public opinion? As to Dr. Jastrow's final sentence that "we added of our own accord the subsequent conquest of the United States," I beg to refer the reader — with at present merely incidental mention of the offensive "we" and "our" — to pages 354-56. We are asked to believe that a former member of the German army staff, who, so far as we know, has never been reproved or censured or contradicted by the Kaiser, or by any other member of that staff, who wrote as an expert in both German statesmanship and German strategy, and whose book, published three years ago, forecast with entire accuracy the actions and movements of Germany in the present war, was "disowned by the German people" and did not represent the military caste to which he belonged. It is not possible to believe this or to think that he was 20 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR not in full touch with the scarcely concealed purposes of the "Weltmacht oder Medergang" party. His book was an amazingly frank exposition of those purposes and an ex- travagant and unqualified eulogy of militarism. Dr. Dernburg, with the same obvious object of belittling Bernhardi, speaks repeatedly of two editions only of Bern- hardi's "Germany and the Next War." The German book lists give six editions within eighteen months. In the opinion of Moltke himself, Bernhardi's father was the "Erste Kenner der Kriegswissenschaft in Deutschland." Sir John Prench wrote an introduction to the English translation of Bernhardi's work on Cavalry. (3) Before the war Bernhardi's uncontradicted statements were generally accepted as embodying the views of the aristocratic caste, and in the present campaign both the German armies and the German diplomats have, even down to relatively unimportant details, followed with curious exactness his prophetic tactics. As to Treitschke, whom many of the German-American commentators similarly repudiate, he was unquestionably one of their great national historians. Viscount Bryce calls him "the famous Professor of History." His lectures at Berlin were listened to for years by crowded and enthu- siastic audiences, his teachings as to Politih became a gos- pel. Mr. Norman Hapgood (4) says of him ; "He, most of all, made intellectual Germany drunk with the idea of her so-called destiny. He taught her that all history led up to the leadership of the Teuton. . . . Germans quote him as no historian is quoted by the English or the French. In interpreting history he is their Bible. Their political thinkers never tire of him." A similar estimate of him is expressed by another writer : A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 21 "Professor von Treitschke's role in all this education for war of the German peoples has been that of the man who has pros- tituted history in the interests of armament firms. One of hisi arguments is that political idealism is dependent on war, and that it is war alone that makes men realize that they belong to a definite political institution, to wit, the German nation; and since the nation really lives on account of its heroes, war is the 'terrible medicine' which prevents heroism disappearing from the ranks of humanity. In his view there can be no hero- ism in peace. It was Professor von Treitschke who really began, even before 1870, the educational campaign of the intel- lectual class, and he has been its most fanatic, as well as its most popular, exponent." (5) Their denial of Treitschke's influence in Germany assumes, as do most of their assertions, a comfortable ignorance on the reader's part. They would have us be- lieve that this great historian, whose seventeen volumes moulded German thought and fired German deeds, was an ordinary professor, listened to with pleasure because of his agreeable oratory, but without any semblance of authority. Treitschke was no orator, no dealer in words. He was not in an American college, talking to boys and girls. High oflSeials, diplomats, distinguished soldiers thronged to hear him ; and on these audiences he impressed his life-long hatred of England, and his vision of Germany, — Grermany dominated always by his beloved Prussia, — as the world power of the future. "I write for Germans, not for for- eigners," he was wont to say; and it would certainly astound any educated German to hear Doctor Dernburg assert (in order to convince Americans of the lamblike qualities of his countrymen) that Treitschke, great and successful upholder of militarism, whose counsels have borne fruit a thousandfold, was merely a pleasant speaker. 23 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAE 'Viiose conference vere inainiT attended on aecoim.t of his refined rhetoric.'' PoTrrs in his rexiew ( 6 ) of Miinsterberg'g book has dealt •with this same attempt either to belittle or to ignore these ■writers. Miinsterberg (7) Jhas adopted the latter plaiL "The professors arsmnent is a disingeimoxis one. It is disin- gemious in Ms complete amission — a sxcrelT very significant omission — of any reference to Treitsehte or to Bernhardi. I am quite prepared to agree that the militarr clique in Germany is not alone responsiMe for this ■vrar. !!vo mere diqne, no mere ■war party. eoxQd ever succeed in ronsing the spirit of a na;t3iBa- a= the German nation lias been aroused. Bnt this matter of great popnlar German "writers is quite another thing. I am afraid it is only too obrions "why Professor Miinsierberg makes no mention of them 1 After reading them, it is not "rery easy to maintain our belief in the pttrely pacific intentians of a Ger- many "nnto"Qehed by "world-ambitions ! *•' 'Germany's pacific and indnstrions popnlation had only one ■wish: xo deTelop its agrienltural and indnstrial, its cultural and moral resources. It had no desire to expand its frontiers OTer a new square foot of land in Eiirope. The neighbors be- grudged this prosperity of the Fatherland "which had been "weak and poor and through centuries satisfied "with songs and thoughts and dreams. They threatened and threatened by eTer- inereasing armajnents.' So -writes Professor Munsterberg; but "unfortunately it has not been Professor Munsterberg, but much more daring and adTentnrous geni"ases "who hare been the jttBnthpieees of the "working of fate in the matter of German pd»lic opinion. The great Treitsehke, a really national histo- rian, and one of enormous genius and power — a " m a Ti in every respect much more remarkable than Munsterbergs Euckens and Hamaeks — devoted his "whole life to inspiring the German peo- ple "with his ideal of offensive "war, for the sake of "world- domination. ■\Bemhardi. "whose book has done so much to pop'ulariae these "views, quotes TTeitsehke on every page." Doctor DembtiTgr defending- the militarism of Bern- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 23 hardi and Treitsclike says that it was created as "a dire necessity for the defense of our four frontiers.'' On the other hand, Gerhart Hauptmann, the most original of contemporary German writers, represents Germany as struggling to burst the ^"iron band" forged by jealous enemies around her breast, which is an ornate way of saying that she seeks to extend her frontiers, to find a larger "place in the sun." Does that mean "defense?" If not, who speaks for Grermany, — Hauptmann or Dernburg? They cannot both be right, even though the now despised Bernhardi does say that "The whole realm of human knowl- edge is concentrated in the German brain." The plain fact is that the longer the war lasts, and the more we read of the blundering diplomacy which preceded it, the perfidy with which it was inaugurated, the lame excuses, the contradictory denials, the insolent approvals of that blistering shame, and the preposterous "appeals" which, in terms of alternate flattery and bullying, have been addressed to the United States, the less we revere that mighty German brain, which, if full of knowledge, is corre- spondingly empty of wisdom. Knowledge is proud that it has learned so much. Wisdom is humble that it knows no more. Dr. Dernburg has recently been more explicit as to Germany's purposes. In an article with the highly imagi- native title of "When Germany Wins" (S), he has formu- lated Germany's peace terms, because "it might be of some interest to Americans to know what Germany would do" under the hypothetical condition indicated in his title. The article, being written for Americans (not for Germans or German- Americans), endeavors to maintain a studied moderation. The old phrase is once 34 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR more employed: "The only thing ©ermany stands com- mitted to is to hold and maintain its ^place in the smi/ " But the contemplation of the delectable feast that, "When Germany Wins," will be spread before the conqueror, brings on an involuntary watering of the mouth that causes a wolf's slaver to betray the temporary occupant of the lamb's clothing. "As a general! rule I would not consider it wise for my country to attempt any territorial aggrandizement in Europe/' "Any rearrangement of the European map that would not follow national lines pretty definitely would be only a source of constant friction hereafter." The italics are mine. The world knows now what to think of German promises,* even when definite, official and solemn. It there- fore also knows how wide a gate is left open by expressions such as "pretty definitely" and "as a general rule." More- over, he is "speaking only as a private person and cannot voice in any way official sentiment," though he "feels sure" that he is "at one with the best German element." I have elsewhere (pp. 92, 300 ef seq.) called attention to the num- ber of myths and of non-existent conditions he and his fel- lows have "felt sure" of. But with all these preliminaries it develops that Dr. Demburg's ideas of the immediate demands of a victorious Germany are as follows : "I. Germany will not consider it wise to take any European territory, but will make minor corrections of frontiers for mili- tary purposes by occupying such, frontier territory as has proven a weak spot in the German armor. "II. Belgium belongs geographically to the German Empire. She commands the mouth of the biggest German stream; Ant- werp is essentially a German port. That Antwerp should not belong to Germany is as much an anomaly as if New Orleans and the Mississippi delta had been excluded from Louisiana, or as if New York had remained English after the War of Inde- pendence. Moreover, Belgium's present plight was her own A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 25 fault. She had become the vassal of England and France. Therefore, while 'probably' no attempt would be made to place Belgium within the German Empire alongside Bavaria, Wiir- temberg, and Saxony, because of her non-G'erman population, she will be incorporated in the German Customs Union after the Luxemburg pattern, "III. Belgium neutrality having been proved an impossibility, must be abolished. Therefore, the harbors of Belgium must be secured for all time against British or French invasion. "IV. Great Britain having bottled up the North a ma/t-e liberum must be established. England's theory that the sea is her boundary, and all the sea her territory down to the three- mile limit of other Powers, cannot be tolerated. Consequently, the Channel coasts of England, Holland, Belgium and France must be neutralized, even in times of war, and the American and German doctrine that private property on the high seas should enjoy the same freedom of seizure as private property does on land must be guaranteed by all nations. This condition Herr Dernburg accompanies by an appeal to the United States duly to note that Britain is making commercial war upon Germany. "V. All cables must be neutralized. "VI. All Germany's colonies are to be returned. Germany, in view of her growing population, must get extra territory capable of population by whites. The Monroe Doctrine bars her from America; therefore she must take Morocco, 'if it is really fit for the purpose.' "VII. A free hand must be given to Germany in the develop- ment of her commercial and industrial relations with Turkey, 'without outside interference.' This would mean a recognized sphere of German influence from the Persian Gulf to the Dar- danelles. "VIII. There must be no further development of Japanese influence in Manchuria. "IX. All small nations, such as Finland, Poland, and the Boers in South Africa, if they support Germany, must have the right to frame their own destinies, while Egypt is to be re- turned, if she desires it, to Turkey. "These conditions, Herr Dernberg concludes, would 'fulfill the peaceful aims which Germany has had for the last forty- four years.' They show, in his opinion, that Germany has no wish for world dominion or for any predominance in Europe 26 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR incommensurate with the rights of the 122 millions of Germans and Austrians." As to the Baltic Provinces of Eussia, he says : "Whethef these could be added to the German Empire would hinge on the question whether they could be defended." (9) To reiterate, if this statement, cautiously prepared to demonstrate to a neutral power the extreme moderation of Grcrmany's intentions (and at a time when the end is not within sight), is to be given any weight, let Americans imagine for themselves the probable demands of a really victorious Germany. (See pp. 34, 27, 28.) Lest it may still be thought that these are exceptional views, or that they represent only the opinion of a diplomat, I append those of a scientist (Ernst H^ckel). Mr. Villard, (10) before quoting Hgeckel, calls attention to the great need for an American Society for the Promulgation of Truth in Germany. He cites various directions in which it could be of use, beginning with the Kaiser's telegram to the King of England on August 1, 1914 (p. 73), "The troops on my frontier are in the act of being stopped by telegraph and telephone from crossing into France." He believes this could not have been publicly known or understood in Germany. He instances the official German despatch which reported the British army as sur- rounded ; the ultimata sent to Paris and Petrograd at the most critical of all possible critical moments; the long article in the Yossische Zeitung, by Dr. Ludwig Stein, on "The Change of Opinion in America" (in which is claimed a complete reversal of our Judgment on the war) ; and the recent speech of Major-General von Eoehl, commanding in Hamburg, who, "speaking under the statue of Kaiser Wil- helm I, said, exactly in the spirit of the great Kaiser's grandson, Wilhelm II, *We shall not again sheathe our A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 27 sharp and just sword until the last of our enemies recog- nizes that only one people has the right to play a leading part in the political world, and that people is the German people/ " He contrasts this with the systematic belittle- ment — ^for Americans — of Bemhardi's book and views. He continues : "Our American society for informing Germany could have no more pressing duty than to make German editors understand that Professor Haeckel injures not merely his own high and international repute, but that of all Germany as well, when he calmly sets down this programme as his view of what steps Germany should take to 'reorganize Europe on Teutonic lines' when victory is hers: " '1. The crushing of the English tyranny. " *2. The invasion of Great Britain and the occupation of London. " '3. The division of Belgium ; the largest portion, from Os- tend to Antwerp in the west, to he a confederated German state; the northern part to be given to Holland; the south- eastern part to be given to Luxemburg, which, thus enlarged, becomes also a confederated German State. " '4. A large number of the British colonies and the Congo Free State to go to Germany. " '5. France to surrender to Germany some of her northeast- ern frontier provinces. " '6. Russia to be rendered impotent by the reconstitution, under Austrian auspices, of the kingdom of Poland. " '7. The German provinces of the Baltic to be returned to the German Empire. " '8. Finland, united with Sweden, to become an independent kingdom.' " A Philadelphia paper (11) summarizes, as follows, a pamphlet published in March, entitled the "World War and Its End,'' by Eudolf Martin, former German Minister of the Interior. The writer pictures the dismemberment 28 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR of Eussia and Ftance, the absorption of the Balkan States and the domination of England by Germany. "The huge indemnity which the author believes will be demanded by Germany when she dictates peace terms in Lon- don, after two years' fighting, is estimated on the basis of war costs of 30 milliards of marks to be sustained by Germany, Austria and Turkey, in the proportion of 16, 10 and 4, respec- tively. "As Germany at the end of the Franco-Prussian War made the French pay two-and-one-half times what it cost to conduct the conflict, so, the writer believes, Germany will make the Allies pay similarly at the end of the present war. In addition 75 milliards will be demanded for the support of dependents of those killed. "The writer sees Germany firmly established along the present French coast, in a position to control both London and Paris, and possessed of an air fleet of many thousands of machines and 20,000 air-men. He sees England forced to consent to the construction of a tunnel tmder the English Channel, equipped with four railway tracks and an automobile roadway, at both ends of which the German forces are in control. "Russia he pictures as completely dismembered, its territory divided up among neighboring powers, its coffers depleted to the point of bankruptcy, its menace to the German Empire forever gone. In the process of dismemberment he predicts the organization of new States. "Sweden, the author believes, will receive Finland; Germany, the Baltic Provinces and Poland; Austria will take the entire south of Russia, including Kiev and Odessa; Turkey will receive the entire Caucasus, including the government of Saratow ; Rus- sia will have to retire both from the Baltic, the Black and the Caspian Seas. "Serbia is to go to Austria-Hungary; Egypt to Turkey; a part of Arabia to Rumania, provided the latter allies itself sincerely with Grermany, Austria and Turkey; and every other State which similarly joins this group will be properly rewarded. "Not only does Alsace-Lorraine remain German, but Belfort is to join it once more as a German possession. Belgium not A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 29 only becomes German^ along with the Congo, but is to pay an indemnity of Q^^ milliards of francs within a few years of the close of the war. "Regarding the disposition of the colonial possessions of the Allies the writer goes into little detail, beyond stipulating that England and France must lose Egypt, India, Algiers, Timis and Morocco as a penalty for inducing their inhabitants to bear arms against Germany. "The Suez Canal the writer sees permanently in the hands of 'our ally, Turkey.' After the conclusion of peace, he hopes, English ships, instead of longer paying tolls into the pocket of the English-owned Suez Canal Company, will have to pay them to 'our ally, Turkey.' "The heavy indemnities proposed, the writer frankly says, are for the purpose of so weakening Germany's enemies that it will be years before they can even contemplate war against her again. They are supplemented by taxation and a military system from the present Belgium to the new Russian border that will strengthen Germany indefinitely. "Though Grermany's territory will be greatly increased in Europe, it must be laid down as a basic principle, in the writer's opinion, that the electorate eligible to choose the membership of the controlling Reichstag must be confined to the old bound- aries. "Newly acquired Russian Poland, with its own legislature in Warsaw, may perhaps become an adjunct kingdom, with Prince August William, of Russia, as ruler. The Belgians, he believes, may also form a kingdom and govern themselves. The acquired Baltic provinces, as well as the territory taken from France, can, he thinks, without harm have their own parlia- ments, and live under the direction of an imperial governor general." It would seem that doctrines and ambitions indistin- guishable from those of the now outlawed and repudiated Bernhardi and Treitschke are taught and promulgated by their successors. I have failed to find in the writings of the Grerman apologists any evidence of ante-bellum repudiation of these 30 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR latter writers, and in the absence of such evidence, and in the light of the collateral proof furnished by the writings of others (quoted below), by the writings even of those who now seek to discredit and to belittle them, and by the circumstances attending the outbreak and conduct of the war, they must be considered as representing the views of at least that part of the German people who were intelli- gent enough to understand them. The quotations follow. I have used some of those employed by Viscount Bryce in a recent article (12), and have added to them from a list of my own almost as striking and conclusive: "War is in itself a good thing. It is a biological necessity of the first importance." "The inevitableness, the idealism, the blessing of war as an indispensable and stimulating law of development must be re- peatedly emphasized." "War is the greatest factor in the furtherance of culture and power. EflForts to secure peace are extraordinarily detrimental as soon as they can influence politics." "Efforts directed toward the abolition of war are not only foolish, but absolutely immoral, and must be stigmatized as un- worthy of the human race." "Courts of arbitration are pernicious delusions. The whole idea represents a presumptuous encroachment on natural laws of development, which can only lead to more disastrous conse- quences for humanity generally." "The maintenance of peace never can be or may be the goal of a policy." "Efforts for peace would, if they attained their goal, lead to general degeneration, as happens everywhere in nature where the struggle for existence is eliminated." "Huge armaments are in themselves desirable. They are the most necessary precondition of our national health." "The end all and be all of a State is power, and he who is not man enough to look this truth in the face should not meddle with politics." (Quoted from Treitschke's "Politik.") "The State's highest moral duty is to increase its power." A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 31 "The State is justified in making conquests whenever its own advantage seems to require additional territory." "Self-preservation is the State's highest ideal and justifies whatever action it may take if that action be conducive to that end. The State is the sole judge of the morality of its action. It is, in fact, above morality, or, in other words, whatever is necessary is moral. Recognized rights (i. e., treaty rights) are never absolute rights ; they are of human origin and, therefore, imperfect and variable. There are conditions in which they do not correspond to the actual truth of things. In this case in- fringement of the right appears morally justified." "In fact, the State is a law unto itself. Weak nations have not the same right to live as powerful and vigorous nations." "Any nation in favor of collective humanity outside the limits of the State and nationality is impossible." "War is a biological necessity of the first importance, a regu- lative element in the life of mankind which cannot be dispensed with, since without it an unhealthy development will follow, which excludes every advancement of the race, and, therefore, all real civilization." "Just as increase of population forms, under certain circum- stances, a convincing argument for war, so industrial condi- tions may compel the same result." "Frederick the Great recognized the ennobling effect of war. 'War,' he said, 'opens the most fruitful field to all virtues, for at every moment constancy, pity, magnanimity, heroism and mercy shine forth in it; every moment offers an opportimity to exercise one of these virtues.' " "We can, fortunately, assert the impossibility of efforts after peace ever attaining their ultimate object in a world bristling with arms, where a healthy egotism still directs the policy of most countries. 'God will see to it,' says Treitschke, 'that war always recurs as a drastic medicine for the human race.' " "We ought to know that there is no such thing as eternal peace; we ought to have always in our minds that saying of Moltke's 'perpetual peace is a dream, and not even a beautiful dream. But war is a link in the divine system of the uni- verse.'" (13) "The German nation has been called the nation of poets and thinkers, and it may be proud of the name. To-day it may 33 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR again be called the nation of masterful combatants, as which it originally appeared in history." (14) These quotations could be largely added to, but as their authors are generals, philosophers^ theologians, and princes, they seem representative enough to show the spirit that, whatever may have been its numerical or geographical extent, actuated and inspired that portion of the German people who had the power last midsummer to commit the entire nation to a gigantic war, with "Deutschland iiber Alles" and "Weltmaeht oder ISTiedergang" as its battle cries. Every student of ISTature recognizes and deplores the cruelty inseparable from the struggle for existence under- lying the great biological law of the survival of the fittest. But it has remained for these spokesmen of Germany to apply it to civilized nations, without essential change or modification, eliminating all considerations of morality, of altruism, of kindliness to the weak or helpless, of every- thing, in fact, which serves to distinguish us from our fellow animals. There is little enough at the best, but Bernhardi's "biological necessity" of war, like the "neces- sity" — to overrun Belgium — of the German Chancellor, is simply a barefaced return to the ethics of the tiger or, in its coldbloodedness, of the crocodile. It was amusing, though irritating, to find an American (Professor Jastrow), (15) in face of the above evidence and much more that is similar, crjdng to the American people : "Let us be fair and recognize that the spirit of militarism is strong in all of the warring nations." and then going on, with the tendency that most of our ^'German-American" disputants have clumsily shown, to A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 33 belittle while attempting to conciliate the country of their adoption, to say: "Even we are not entirely free of it, for does not Theodore Roosevelt voice a widely prevailing sentiment when he advocates warfare as essential to the full strength of the nation ?" The answer to which is, of course, that Colonel Eoosevelt never "voiced" or otherwise favored any such sentiment, and that no sensible person ever believed it to be widely prevalent in this country (p, 340). The distinction between the advocacy of sufficient arma- ments to ensure respectful treatment from military or naval bullies and the advocacy of "warfare" is so patent that the misstatement implies a confusion of thought that should much lessen the value — if it had any — of the author's labored but superficial impartiality. The real animus invariably crops out in all these "German-Amer- ican" writers, and, in the present case, the "appeal for f air- jiess and moderation" contains the statement that it was a "privilege" "To see a great united people rising to fight, not for ag- grandizement, for ports on the Atlantic Ocean, or for colonies, or eager for conquest of any kind, but struggling solely for their existence to preserve the fruits of their labors of the last thirty years." The "appeal" also describes the readiness of "Germany" *'to promise the integrity of France and even of the French Colonies if England would remain neutral." (The italics are mine.) It does not mention the fact that this sugges- tion was made by Prince Lichnowski (the German Ambas- sador in London) on his individual initiative and without authority from his government; or that on July 29th the 34 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR German Chancellor, when asked about the French colonies, had declined to commit himself (English White Book, No. 85) ; or that at about that time Germany had failed to say that it was "prepared to engage to respect the neutrality of Belgium so long as no other power violates it," although France had given an unequivocal promise to that effect. Nor does it allude to the English reason for refusal to accept the informal suggestion, namely, "that France with- out losing territory might be so crushed as to lose her posi- tion as a Great Power and become subordinate to German policy." As to Nietzsche, the German apologists place a touching reliance upon American ignorance when they say that be- cause the word superman or overman was used by Goethe before it was used by Nietzsche, therefore we might with equal justice trace Germany's war spirit to the one phil- osopher as to the other. If they see no difference between the philosophy of Goethe and the philosophy of Nietzsche; between Goethe's Olympian overman rising spiritually and intellectually above the foibles of humanity, and Nietzsche's bully trampling down whatever is not strong enough to resist; between the balance of perfect sanity and the fren- zied revolt which precedes madness, they must be in a state of curious mental confusion. But they need not assume that their readers are equally confused. "Germany," says that too ardent upholder, Dr. Dernburg, "has waged no war of any kind, has never acquired a territory in all her life except by treaty." Good, peaceful, friendly, gentle nation ! Even the little rudenesses common to less virtuous folk are foreign to her soul. "She never was aggressive to anybody." And how she has been misjudged ! We, in America, thought she had annexed Hanover, appropriated Schleswig-Holstein, divided up Poland, swallowed Silesia whole, taken by force Alsace and Lorraine. We thought she was even now an- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 35 nouncing through her War Lord the incorporation of Bel- gium into Germany's "glorious provinces'' (p. 58). How came we to be so deceived? Doctor Dernburg a-sks sarcastically, (16) "Do Americans believe all the ^ojfficial news' which the Eussians are sending continuously from the seat of war as to their enormous successes ?" Assuming that we do not, he then asks why we believe the "White Books/' which he describes as "written for the purpose of making out a nation's case." The comparison of British and Belgian ^'books'' with a newspaper report would be absurd. They are plain, chron- ological, complete records of all the diplomatic documents bearing upon the war. But perhaps Doctor Dernburg is thinking of the German "White Book," which James M. Beck has characterized as disclosing "the suppression of documents of vital importance," and which has necessarily made no more impression on Americans than did that amazing pamphlet issued by a number of German State- owned teachers and scholars, and called "The Truth About Germany" (p. 251). These gentlemen may be the reposi- tories of "the whole realm of human knowledge." Who shall gainsay it? But wisdom failed them in their need. They committed the fatal error of making their misstate- ments ludicrous. This has been a digression, but it will serve as an example of the "fairness and moderation" of the Miinsterbergs and Franckes, the Eidders and Jagemanns, the Alberts and von Machs, the Hilprechts, Jastrows, and Dernburgs. 6. But Question 1 is not yet fully answered. Can amy collateral evidence of the determination to attain to "World Power" he found in the estimation in which Germans hold their country and themselves? I think it can. A little book with the crude title of "German/s Swelled 36 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Head," written by Emil Eeich, a Hungarian, I believe, and published in London, in 1907, contains much interesting, sometimes amusing, information on this subject. The writer quotes various authors in support of the statement that when the Kaiser speaks or writes of Greater Grermany he "in all sincerity means two-thirds of Europe. He means that the German Empire of the near future will, and by right of Race ought to, comprise two-thirds of Europe." He adds that this idea may appear too childish for serious consideration, says that in all countries there have been single eccentrics who have absurdly overrated the significance and importance of their nation, and that such persons do not prove very much as to the state of mind of the majority of a people. But he insists that "That which, in other countries never rises beyond a mere oddity is, in contemporary Grermany, a vast wave of national thought. In the Fatherland, as has long been remarked by many an observing traveler or scholar, the vrriters, teachers, journalists and scholars of the day have an infinitely greater influence on the people than similar brain-workers ever wield in England." He then quotes from "T^ie Foundations of the XlXth Century," a book which he says was warmly and publicly approved by the Kaiser, and which sold largely in Germany and gave rise to a mass of controversial literature. The author. Chamberlain by name, says : "By Germans, I mean the various populations of Northern Europe, who appear in history as Kelts, Germans, Slavs, and from whom, mostly in inextricable confusion, the peoples of modern Europe are sprung. That they came originally from a single family isi certain, but the German, in the narrower Tacitean sense, has kept himself so pre-eminent among his kins- men, intellectually, morally and physically, that we are justified A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 37 in applying his name to the whole family. The German is the soul of our culture. The Europe of to-day, spread far over the globe, exhibits the brilliant result of an infinitely varied rami- fication. What binds us into one is the Germanic blood. . . . Only Germans sit on European thrones. What has happened is only prolegomena. . . . True history begins from the moment when the German, with mighty hand, seizes the inheri- tance of antiquity." Eeich quotes further from the work of Ludwig Wolt- man, "Die G&rmanen und die Renaissance in Italien" (1905), in which the effort is made to prove that Ben- venuto Cellini, Michaelangelo, Lorenzo Ghiberti, Giovanni Bellini, Leonardo da Vinci and Eaff aelle, were all of German birth or ancestry. He admits that this may be merely mis- placed erudition, or "stuff and twaddle.^' His point is that it is characteristic, that it is taken seriously in Germany, and that it was gravely noticed in some of the oldest and most respectable German reviews. He quotes again the author of the "Eoundations of the XIX Century," who says^ apropos of the overrunning of the Holy Eoman Em- pire by the Germans : "We can regret only one thing — that the German did not, everywhere his conquering arm preyed, exterminate more com- pletely," and that consequently the Latins "gradually recovered wide territories from the only quickening influence of pure blood and unbroken youth, in fact, from the control of the highest talent." Elsewhere the same writer laments that Italy "is lost, irredeemably lost, because it lacks the inner driving power, the greatness of soul which would fit its talent. This power comes from Race alone. Italy had it as long as it pos- sessed Germans." Eeich says that Friedrich Lange, erstwhile editor of the Tagliche Rundschau, has gone so far as to invent and preach a species of "German religion" {Deutsche Religion), 38 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR and from many pulpits it has been announced that "the German people is the elect of God, and its enemies are the enemies of the Lord/' He quotes from the "Vorwarts" an extract from an oration by the theologian, Lezius : "Solomon has said: 'Do not be too good; do not be too just.' The Polish press should be simply annihilated. All Polish so- cieties should be suppressed, without the slightest apology being made for such a measure. This summary procedure should be likewise applied to the French and Danish press, as well as to the societies of Alsace, Lorraine and Schleswig- Holstein. Especially should no consideration whatever be shown to anything relating to the Poles. The Constitution should be altered with regard to the latter. The Poles should be looked upon as helots. They should be allowed but three privileges: to pay taxes, serve in the army, and shut their jaws" (sic). He (Eeich) supports his views by the statement of the Kussian novelist, Dostoiewski, who writes : "Chauvinism, pride, and an unlimited confidence in their own strength have intoxicated the Germans since the war (1870). This people, that has so rarely been a conqueror and has so often been conquered, had all of a sudden beaten the nation that had humiliated all the other nations. ... On the other hand, the fact that Germany, but yesterday all parceled out, has been able in so short a time to develop so strong a po- litical organization, might well lead the Germans to believe that they are about to enter on a new phase of brilliant develop- ment. This conviction has resulted in making the German not only Chauvinistic and conceited, but flighty as well; it is not only the Teutonic grocer and shoemaker now who are over- confident, but professors, eminent scientists, and even the min- isters themselves as well." "No wonder that the arrogance of the 'Elect Ones of God' comes out at every possible and impossible occasion. When Bismarck was asked what he would do should some one hun- A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR 39 dred thousand British soldiers be landed on the north coast of Germany in case of a war with Great Britain, France and Germany, he replied: 'I should have them arrested by the police.' " He continues : , "Can one wonder, under such circumstances, that the Kaiser a few years ago, at the celebration of the two hundredth anni- versary of the foundation of the Kingdom of Prussia, ex- claimed: 'Nothing must be settled in this world without the intervention of Germany and of the Grcrman Emperor.' " He miglit have added the following: "Only one is master of this country. That is I. Who op- poses me I shall crush to pieces. . . . Sic volo, sio jubeo. . . . We Hohenzollerns take our crown from God alone, and to God alone we are responsible in the fulfilment of our duty. . . . Suprema lex regis voluntas." (17) J. Ellis Barker. (18) He might also have quoted Professor Eudolf Eucken, of the University of Jena, a leader of German ethical thought : "To us more than any other nation is intrusted the true structure of human existence; as an intellectual people we have, irrespective of creeds, worked for soul depth in religion, for sci- entific thoroughness. . . . All this constitutes possessions of which mankind cannot be deprived; possessions, the loss of which would make life and effort purposeless to mankind." (19) Eucken has not since changed his mind. In January, 1915, he writes: (20) "This war is not only a struggle between certain nations, but also between certain forms of culture. We are fighting for the maintenance and spreading of the special form of culture which 40 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR our nature has implanted and the whole course of our history has developed in us. . . . • "Thus it is that we have raised religion, philosophy, educa- tion, music and poetry to lofty heights. We have achieved such great things in the world because we put our soul into our work. Because we did not seek externals, but ourselves, in culture, it became for us a matter of deepest earnest "Mankind at this point needs German methods. However much our opponents may rail against us just now, they will eventually be forced to make use of us for their spiritual pres- ervation." The Berlin Deutsche Tageszeitung urges the necessity of forcing the German language on the whole world. "It is a crying necessity," the Berlin paper says, "that Ger- nmn should replace English as the world language. Should the English language be victorious and become the world lan- guage the culture of mankind will stand before a closed door and the death knell will sound for civilization." After talking of the '^'^moral decay" of Great Britain and the "fearful brutalizing influences and complete animalizar tion of the human species" in "every land where the English language is spoken" the Deutsche Tageszeitung continues : "Here we have the reason why it is necessary for the Ger- man, and with him the German language, to conquer. And the victory once won, be it now or be it one hundred years hence, there remains a task for the German than which none is more important, that of forcing the German tongue on the world. On all men, not those belonging to the more cultured races only, but on men of all colors and nationalities, the Grcrman language acts as a blessing which, coming direct from the hand of God, sinks into the heart like a precious balm and en- nobles it. "English, the bastard tongue of the canting island pirates, A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 41 must be swept from the place it has usurped and forced back into the remotest corners of Britain until it has returned to its original elements of aa insignificant pirate dialect." The feelings which this last amiable suggestion excited in the minds of Americans have nowhere been better ex- pressed than by Miss Eepplier (21), who, after remarking that every nation holds its own speech infinitely dear, and believes it to be infinitely superior to the speech of other and less favored countries, continues : "Conquering races have recognized the supreme importance of forcing their tongue upon the conquered, who, in their turn, have rebelled with bitterness against this finality of defeat. For centuries Ireland has striven to preserve a language which has no longer a vital part to play. Alsace has cherished with pathetic pride and tenderness the speech she was bidden to forego. Thirty years after the surrender of Strasburg a visitor could hear no word save French in the cafes and the streetsi. If the rules were rigid, the defiance was invincible. German for the schools, French for the home. German for officials, French for the family. German for protection, French for pleasure. German for the stem realities of life, French for the mad hope which never wholly died. "Some months ago a Berlin newspaper, in happy anticipation of 'der Tag,' pealed forth a prophetic note of triumph for the German tongue. Not conquered provinces alone, we were as- sured, but the whole wide world of civilization was destined to use this speech and be the better for it. 'On men of all colors and nationalities the German language acts as a blessing, which, coming direct from the hand of God, sinks into the heart like a precious balm and ennobles it.' "One wonders if German text and German script are included in the gift of a too partial Providence, and if we are 'rejecting grace' by trying to elude them. One wonders apprehensively whether, since German is the tongue beloved of Heaven, we shall all have to speak it when we go there. Here on earth this 'precious balm' acts like an irritant upon men and women who are not devout enough to recognize a blessing when it is poured on them. I once spent a summer in Bavaria with a young 42 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR American girl who never forgave the Bavarians for speaking their own language. Every time she heard the hated gutturals, she would wrinkle her pretty nose and say: 'It ought to be forbidden by law.' "As for English, 'the bastard tongue of canting island pirates,' its day has well-nigh run. Prussia, we are warned, will force it back into the remotest corners of Britain, 'until it has returned to its original elements of an insignificant pirate dialect.' The fact that corrupt variations of this dialect are stammered fitfully by 8,000,000 of people in Canada and 97,000,000 of people in the United States, need not be taken into account. We know that nothing is impossible to heaven; and if the 'precious balm' of German is going to be spilled into our hearts, we must resign ourselves to our mercies. The jargon of Shakespeare, the broken utterances of Milton, and Keats, and Wordsworth, will, in the happy years to come, be deciphered by droning philologists, who may supply a key to certain simple passages or shake despairing heads over these rude relics of piracy, these pages 'full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing.' " Major-General von Disfurtli (retired), in an article con- tributed to the Hamburg Nachrichten, writes as follows : "No object whatever can be served by taking any notice of the accusations of barbarity leveled against Germany by her foreign critics. We owe no explanations to anyone. Whatever act is committed by our troops for the purpose of discouraging, defeating and destroying the enemy is a brave act and fully justified. Germany stands the supreme arbiter of her own methods. It is no consequence whatever if all the monuments ever created, all the pictures ever painted, all the buildings ever erected by the great architects of the world be destroyed, if by their destruction we promoted Germany's victory. War is war. The ugliest stone placed to mark the burial of a German grena- dier is a more glorious monument than all the cathedrals of Europe put together. They call us barbarians. Wliat of it? We scorn them and their abuse. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 43 "For my part, I hope that in this war we have merited, the title, 'barbarians.' Let neutral peoples and our enemies cease their empty chatter, which may well be compared to the twitter of birds. Let them cease to talk of the Cathedral of Rheims, and of all the churches and all the castles in France which liave shared its fate. Our troops must achieve victory. What elae matters V I am not certain that, in spite of the crude brutality of this statement, it is not to be preferred to the oily hypocrisy of some of the other German defenders. For example, in an address at New Eochelle, in this country. Dr. Dernburg is reported (22) to have said: "We Germans love the French and Belgians, who were forced into the war." The American paper which quotes this goes on sarcastically : "This explains why the British are fighting so desperately. "Judging from the experiences of France and. Belgium, only a rugged and husky nation can survive German affection. After the first demonstration of German love toward Belgium, Great Britain naturally decided that it was better to fight. Otherwise the Germans might take a notion to love the British, too. "Certainly, if the Germans love the French and Belgians, as Doctor Dernburg says, the British can hardly be blamed for pre- ferring German hatred, as giving them at least a fighting chance.' " Professor von Leyen, writing in the Frankfurter Zeitung, says: (33) "There are the neutral nations. Most of them side in sym- pathy with the English, Russians, and French. Most of them entertain hostile feelings against Germany. We do not need them. They are not necessary to our happiness nor to our more material interests. Let us ban them from our houses and our tables. Let us make them feel that we despise them. They must understand that they are condemned to be left out in the cold just because they do not merit German approval. 44 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Grermany must and will stand alone. The Germans are the salt of earth; they will fulfill their destiny, which is to rule the world and to control other nations for the benefit of mankind." Professor Adolph Lasson, a German Privy Councillor and Professor of Philosophy in Berlin University, writes : "A man who is not a German knows nothing of Grermany. We are morally and intellectually superior beyond all com- parison as are our organizations and our institutions." As to the facts bearing upon this preposterous over- valuation of German achievement, I shall have something to say later, but now my object is to present a small portion of the existing evidence as to the state of mind which, pervading all Germany, did so much to bring on the war. John Jay Chapman deals trenchantly with the subject of Germany's mental condition: (34) "A perception of their insanity began to dawn on us in the first days of the war, when the Imperial Chancellor propounded his novel theories as to the binding character of treaties. These German doctrines chilled us. They prevented us from sympa- thizing with the magnificent display of German patriotism which accompanied the crime against Belgium. Soon after this the Teutonic philosophy of extermination was further re- vealed to us in the orders of the commanders, in the actual con- duct of the troops, and also in the books about Germany which we all began to read at this period. "We now discovered that the literature of Pan-Teutonism, which, up to this time, we had taken to be a sort of bad joke, was a very serious matter — representing as it did Unreason En- throned. "Pan-Teutonism had been teaching that Germany must save mankind through bloodshed. In a private person such a belief A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 45 would lead to his incarceration; but so many books are pub- lished nowadays, and everyone is so inured to extravagant argu- ments, that no one objects to Unreason in a book. There is a kind of squint of insanity — of the malice of the neurotic in- valid — which accompanies the text in much Pan-German litera- ture. The author passes from obvious truths to obvious con- tradictions without knowing that he has made a transition. The author, moreover, is more sure he is right than a sane man ever ia; and when he wishes to be impressive he runs into mega- lomania. These characteristics of a madman, ( 1 ) unconscious passage from reason to unreason, (2) certitude, and (3) mega- lomania, are to be found in all the German war literature. Strangely enough, the turn of phrase and tone of mind are alike in the writings of the learned and of the vulgar. The war spirit speaks in a war tongue. Both the literati of Germany and the man-in-the-street in Germany blaze with passion and vociferate with conviction. To them their phrases are full of sacred truth; to them religion and piety, patriotism, profound thought, and holy inspiration live in the words they utter. "To my mind, there is immense psychological interest in these exhibitions of pure, unadulterated patriotism. Their sin- cerity penetrates us; but the idea they convey is zero. Their message is, indeed, '&. tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.' Such is the message of any mere race patriotism, of any patriotism which obliges the rest of the world to be subdued before it can receive the benefits of the pretended dispensation. Zero is the substance and the sym- bol of race patriotism. All the piety and enthusiasm with which it is offered to the world, all the gimboats and bloodshed which herald it are powerless to raise the intellectual value of this emotion above the zero point." Prof. Ostwald, a Nobel prize winner (as a chemist), and a well-known €remian scientist, says (25) that the most profound cause of the war "lies in the fear entertained by our enemies of the power, un- precedented in history, with which Germany has put into practice her great ideal of social efficiency — an ideal which 46 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Germany by this very war proposes to realize in the future more completely than ever before. They talk of German mili- tarism; it is possible, I admit, that the hostility which Ger- many is finding to-day in all parts of the world was created by the development of German militarism; but it is just that militarism- which constitutes one of the most significant ex- pressions of the German power of organization or social effi- ciency. Germany, thanks to her genius for organization or social efficiency, has attained a stage of civilization far higher than that of all other peoples. This war will in the future com- pel these other peoples to participate, tmder the form of Ger- man social efficiency, in a civilization higher than their own. Among our enemies the Russians, in brief, are still in the period of the undisciplined tribe, while the French and the English have only attained the degree of cultural development which we ourselves left behind fifty years ago. Their stage of culture is that of individualism; but above that stage lies the stage of organization or social efficiency, and it is this stage which Germany has reached to-day." Treitschke said, years ago : "Then when the German flag flies over and protects this vast Empire, to whom will belong the sceptre of the universe? What nation will impose its wishes on the other enfeebled and decadent peoples? Will it not be Germany that will have the mission to ensure the peace of the world? Russia, that im- mense colossus, still in process of formation, and with feet of clay, will be absorbed in its home and economic difficulties. England, stronger in appearance than in reality, will, without any doubt, see her colonies detach themselves from her and exhaust themselves in fruitless struggles. France, given over to internal dissensions and the strife of parties, will sink into hopeless decadence. As to Italy, she will have her work cut out to ensure a crust of bread to her children. . . . The future belongs to Germany, to which Austria will attach herself if she wishes to survive." Beieh, who quotes this, gives many other quotations to A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 47 support his main thesis, judgment on which I must now leave to my readers. It was as follows, and it must be re- membered that it was written more than seven years ago : "The actions of a nation like the Germans are, in the first place, influenced by their state of mind; and, given that that state of mind in Germany is now one bordering on absolute megalomania, or the most morbid form of self-conceit and swelled-headedness, it is safe to conclude that their actions, too, will soon assume forms of the most daring self-assertiveness and aggression." (26) In some directions the ignorance of the German writers shared, as later events showed, by the German diplomats — is astounding. General Bernhardi's knowledge of current history may be estimated by the fact that he assumes (1) that trade rivalry makes a war probable between Great Britain and the United States, (3) that he believes the Indian princes and people likely to revolt against Britain should she be involved in war, and (3) that he expects her self-governing Colonies to take such an opportunity of severing their connection with her ! "General Bernhardi invoked History, the ultimate court of appeal. He appeals to Caesar. To Caesar let him go. Die Weltgeschicte ist das Weltgericht — World history is the World tribune. "History declares that no nation, however great, is entitled to try to impose its type of civilization on others. No race, not even the Teutonic or the Anglo-Saxon, is entitled to claim the leadership of humanity. Each people has in its time contributed something that was distinctively its own, and the world is far richer thereby than if any one race, however gifted, had established a permanent ascendancy. "The world advances not, as the Bernhardi school suppose, only or even mainly by fighting. It advances mainly by think- 48 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR ing, and by a process of reciprocal teaching and learning; by a continuous and unconscious co-operation of all its strongest and finest minds. "Each race — Hellenic, Italic, Celtic, Teutonic, Iberian, Sla- vonic — has something to give, each something to learn; and • when their blood is blent the mixed stock may combine the gifts of both. "The most progressive races have been those who combined willingness to learn with a strength which enabled them to receive without loss to their own quality, retaining their primal vigour, but entering into the labours of others, as the Teutons who settled within the dominions of Kome profited by the les- sons of the old civilization." (27) John Jay Chapman, in his admirable and useful collec- tion of the utterances of representative Germans ("Deutsch- land iiber AUes"), which he has compiled, analyzed and illuminated by pertinent and often eloquent comment, deals with this subject of German megalomania, so fully and interestingly that I may dismiss it with his remarks in his chapter on "The Genesis of Madness :" "I will cite a few grotesque expressions from Bernhardi, because they could not have been used by a man who knew what the struggle for liberty of opinion in Western Europe had consisted in: 'There is no nation which knows how to unite so harmoniously (as the German does) the freedom of the intel- leotual and the restraint of the practical life on the path of free and natural development.' These be fine words ; but just where the 'freedom of the intellectual' should end, and the 'restraint of the practical' should begin in each case — this is the question that has puzzled the world, and sent the martyrs to the pyre and the statesmen to the scaffold. Again : 'This independence of the individual within the Umits marked out by the interests of the State forms the necessary complement of the wide exten- sion of the central power, and assures an ample scope to a liberal development of all our social conditions.' This is the chatter of a parrot. "So also is the following statement of what education ought A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 49 to teach. 'The State should teach that the mind which thinks only of itself perishes in feeble susceptibility, but that moral worth grows up only in the love of the Fatherland and for the State, which is the haven of every faith and the home of justice and honourable freedom of purpose.' I have italicized the words which show the feebleness of the German intellect in these fields of thought. "The following argument could hardly have been put forth seriously in any country where argument was an instnunent of government; Count von Bernstorff insisted that Germany had not utilized the Belgian route because it was the quickest and easiest into France, but had gone through Belgium only because she was forced to act on the defensive. Germany knew that some day France was going to invade Belgium; but France could wait; Germany could not wait. Thus it was really France that began the war. "A man who had spent his youth in the debating club would not have presented such a case as this to the world; but in a tyraimy there is no distinction between dogma and argument. The official view is propounded and that is enough. "Bernhardi's books will always be valuable as the best short explanation of the war. They give the mind of the Teuton in 1914. They have done more towards explaining the disease which is now ravaging the German intellect than all the rest of German literature taken together. Moreover, Bern- hardi's books will always have a specific psychopathic interest. The future student will handle them with curiosity, saying: 'Sixty-four million people once, and for a short time, believed these things.' "The keynote of the German creed is as follows : War is the natural state of man, and 'evokes the noblest activities of human nature.' 'The brutal incidents inseparable from every war vanish completely in the idealism of the main results.' These beliefs, it should be noticed, give respectability to the German designs against France. They lend the light of con- science and religion to a crime, and invoke a great principle to cover a piece of private vengeance. The Germans, being a highly bookish and sophisticated people, require good motives for bloodshed. The Holy Ghost is therefore summoned. The sin of feebleness is, it appears, 'the political sin against the Holy Ghost.' 4 50 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "In order to make it seem probable that the Germans will win in their war, the French and English are depicted as decrepit, outworn peoples, degenerate Romans, etc., whereas the Germans are the young blood of the world. The British play out-of-door games, — a sure sign of eflFeminacy; whereas the Germans sing, and play on the violin — sure proofs of manly endowment. The Germans are a 'chosen people' and the great men of the past have all been Germans. The most learned au- thor of this school proves that Christ and Dante were Teutonic characters. All of these crotchets have been believed in by the illuminati of Germany, by her professors and doctors, poets, priests, and leaders of thought. Why have they been thus believed? Because they have been handed out by the govern- mental central authority, by the source of opmdon. Folly, blasphemy, or nonsense, when sanctioned by the Oovernment, becomes to the Germans religion. Is it not strange that this nation, endowed with all the talents but one, has been done to death by the lack of that small linch-pin — political common sense? Their sin has found them out. Their one weakness has ruined all the fabric of their strength. "In Germany the State appoints the professors in the uni- versities; and thus during the last thirty years of military ascendancy, only militants have been appointed. There has been no future for learned men unless they favored militarism. And nevertheless a certain ancient prestige hung about the skirts of learning which the government sought to use when the war broke out. The Kaiser, therefore, fired oflF all the guns of culture in a sort of parlour salute, in which incense was used instead of gun-powder. There is probably not a name of note in German letters which is not to be found at the bottom of a war-cry, or of a cry for blood and vengeance. The sav- agery of these literary tricoteuses, which has so shocked the world, comes from their indorsement of whatever is being done by the military. Thus, one reads in one column of a newspaper that the Germans have deported into Germany forty-five hundred French boys between the ages of fifteen and seventeen, drawing them from Noyon and other French towns under Ger- man occupation. One thinks of how the parents of these boya must feel; one wonders what century one is living in; one recalls the words of Bismarck, that the Prussians must 'bleed France white.' One remembers Bernhardi's remarks that Franc© A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 51 must be so weakened that she can 'never cross our path again.' In another column of the same paper there is a passionate threnody of the poet Wolfkehl, saying that 'the war came from God'; that its purpose is 'to save the European soul,' and that its horrors are necessary. Of all these horrors the words of the poet are the worst. "This war has been made by the intellectuals ; the philosophy of it is a study-bred thing, like the new German bomb-shells. That philosophy of destruction, which lies beneath both the siege-guns and the pamphlets, is a tissue of super-sophistica- tions, by which the old-time and gross passions of murder, theft, lust, hatred, and a certain nameless cruelty (which is new to the world and worse than all the rest), have been let loose on those nations which happen to live next to Germany, The hell of an insane sophis.tication burns behind this war in the German universities; and the hell of murdered women and children walk before it through Belgium. This war and its lit- erature are all one thing. We must watch both, of them to get a vision of modern Germany. When we see the total populations of cities fleeing before the advance of the German Army in Belgium, we must examine the creed of the learned Teuton. "Crack open a bit of Germany anywhere. Doctor Lenard, Professor of Physics at Heidelberg, thinks that Westminster Abbey and the tomb of Shakespeare ought to be destroyed. The brain of a people is ignited and is burning up with the rest of the Teutonic combustibles. We can not put out either of them, but must let them crackle and give out blast after blast, till the panic is over. Then we shall be able to look about us and find out how much is left of the German intelligence. "To recapitulate: — Germany has gone mad through dwelling on her imaginary wrongs. This came about because of the lack of political training in Germany, which left the citizen at the mercy of Government officials for his private opinions. The learned and eloquent classes thus became the tools of a military organization. The result has been an era of panic and destructive insanity of which this war is a sign." While opinions differ as to the personal responsibility of the Kaiser for this war, it seems to me that he so fully typifies in his own character, actions and behavior, the S^ A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR megalomania of the nation that it is nothing less than absurd to describe him as reluctantly pushed into the war and as struggling until the last moment for peace. The Kaiser is in all probability a neuropsychopathic, said to have a chronic and recurring infection of the middle ear (a not unknown cause of grave cerebral disease), and evincing many symptoms of the condition known as para- noia, in which there are usually present more or less definite systematized delusions, the other mental processes remain- ing approximately normal. If in such case the insane premises of the paranoiac are admitted, his conclusions will often legitimately follow. If the Kaiser is Kaiser by Divine decree, by the direct appointment of God, as he has repeatedly asserted, he cannot be blamed for thinking, as he has often shown that he does think, that whatever he does is right. But is it possible in the year 1915 that a quite sane person can believe, as the Kaiser surely does believe, that he is God's special appointee — appointed to rule over and guide the destinies of sixty millions of people ? I have no doubt the Miinsterbergs will have some answer to that question that will — to them — ^be psychologically satisfying. But I defy them to answer it to the satisfaction of the American people. That this mental condition is compatible with unusual ability, with a high degree of personal charm, with the efficient performance of work and discharge of duties out- side the sphere of delusion, has been repeatedly and abun- dantly shown and is a matter of everyday experience with alienists. The history of the world also presents many examples of individuals not entirely sane, like Joan of Are, who were able greatly to influence, largely through their profound belief in themselves and their cause, the course of human events. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 53 "The Kaiser does not believe in representative government for Germany. He does not believe in democracy, at least not for Germany. Neither did Bismarck. Bismarck doubtless believed a good deal in Bismarck, partly as the agent of the Almighty, partly as Bismarck, director of the German people. Government of Germany by Bismarck through his Kaiser was representative government of a sort, for Bismarck, in a way, was representative. The Kaiser does not believe in that. He dis- charged Bismarck at once. He believes in government by the Kaiser as the agent divinely appointed to govern the German people. He is not responsible to the German people for what he does, but to the Almighty. He believes — he must believe — that he is competent to judge what is right for Germany and that when he does it he has God for his ally." (28) One of the best illustrations of the "delirium of gran- deur" with which the Kaiser appears to be afflicted (and with which on account of its frequency in ordinary luna- tics all medical men are familiar) is given in this very belief in his Divine vicegerency and in his constant and familiar references to God in his speeches, letters and telegrams. The Dean of American letters, Mr. William D. Howells, has dealt so eloquently with this phase — and other phases — of the Kaiser's character (29) that I shall let him continue this answer to the second portion of Question 1 — believing that the Kaiser represents in an exaggerated form (due probably to disease), the megalomania of the nation, and believing also that what Mr. Howells writes of him repre- sents with equal truth the estimate of him held to-day by the large majority of Americans. "As early as August 22nd the censorship of war news allowed us to learn that 'the Kaiser had ordered the Supreme Council of the Evangelical Church throughout Germany to include the following prayer in the liturgy at all public services during the war: 'Almighty and merciful God of the armies, we beseech 54 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR in humility for Thy Almighty aid for our German fatherland. Bless the entire German war force. Lead us to victory and give us Thy grace that we may show ourselves to be Christians toward our enemies. As well, let us soon arrive at peace which will everlastingly safeguard our free and independent Germany.' "This carefully worded supplication must have been instantly rushed to the Throne of Grace, to the Father of Mercies, to Him without whose knowledge not even a sparroAV falls to the ground, and the response might seem to have been instant, for we read that on the 25th the Kaiser wired his daughter-in-law, the Crown Princess: " 'I rejoice with thee over the first victory of Wilhelm. God has been on his side and has most brilliantly supported him. To Him be thanks and honor. I remit to Wilhelm the Iron Cross of the second and first class. . . . God protect and succor my boys. Also in the future God be with thee and all wives. '(Signed) Papa Wilhelm.' "But in some respects this was apparently asking too much. In spite of the flattering recognition of His support of the Crown Prince. He seems to have thought it enough to be only with the Crown Princess 'in the future.' He evidently could not be bothered to look after 'all wives,' for we read that the wives of unarmed peasants and citizens were driven, with their children, from their homes in a country which Papa Wilhelm was wasting with fire and sword through a violation of its rights aa a neutral nation and of his own word solemnly given, and went wandering beggared through their native land. Other wives were slain at their hearthstones by Papa Wilhelm's artil- lery, or torn to pieces in their beds by bombs dropped from Papa Wilhelm's dirigibles flying over sleeping towns. "So far as 'all wives' were concerned, the Helper of the widow and the orphan was not so constant as Papa Wilhelm desired, though Papa Wilhelm had especially commended them to His care. Yet Papa Wilhelm did not lose heart, for in a tele- gram of the 27th we find him declaring from his headquarters on the Main, 'Confidence in the irresistible might of our heroic army and unshakable belief in the help of a living God, together with the consciousness that we are fighting for a, A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 55 ■worthy cause, should give us faith in an early delivery of Germany from its enemies.' "It may be that the Supreme Being, the 'living God' as the first of living men here handsomely calls Him, was perhaps not really so very hand-in-glove with the Kaiser. It may be that He did not 'brilliantly support' the Crown Prince in battle, and that it was solely 'the invincible might of his heroic army' which gave the Kaiser early victory. For Papa Wilhelm had been training them in their work of multiple murder for forty years, incessantly, relentlessly, at the cost of the best years of their youth, of their freedom, of whatever makes life sweet and dear. To perfect the pitiless machine into which he turned a kindly people he spared no means known to the art of the oppressor; he sacrificed to this end truth and honor and the love of men; he substituted the terror of Use majeste for patri- otic loyalty; he made revenge and hate the prime motives of the nation which he welded into an adamantine mass, to be hurled, when the time came, against another nation which he had schooled them, in the uttermost cruelty of fear, to abhor. In this work he signed promises which trusting nations took for treaties with all the sacred and solemn guarantees, but which his ministers called 'scraps of paper' when the convenient time came. He made their commanders the terror of the men, and be perpetuated among the ofiicers of his army the code of the duel ; by his will the law of the sword became supreme against the law of the land in any question between soldiers and civil- ians. He turned the tide of civilization from its flow toward peace and goodwill, and drove its stream back among the morasses of the past, where it was choked with the corpses of the immemorial dead, the embers of their homes, and the ruins of their altars, so, that when the time came to destroy a peace- ful city his soldiers were as ready to do his will as they were to drive the wedge of their bodies through the enemy's lines and to fall in heaps that stayed their advance. "There is no means of telling just yet what the effect of his prayers has been with the Heavenly Father, or whether in the event they will avail against the prayers of the Belgians, the French, the English, and the Russians, beseeching the same God for victory against him. Who, indeed, always excepting the German Emperor, may declare what dwells in the will of the Almighty, or what His purpose is ? Will He continue His bril- 56 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR liant support of the Crown Prince, or will He lift up His coun- tenance and make it to shine upon the peoples who have, humanly speaking, been cruelly outraged in all that is dear to civilized men, whose lands have been overrun by invading armies, whose cities have been burned, whose fields have been laid waste, whose wives and little ones have been driven beg- gars into the wilderness which wanton invasion has made of their country? At the actual writing it seems as if the Creator of heaven and earth may have thought twice concerning His imperial protege, and ceased to 'bless the whole Grerman force.' Part of this force is now retracing its bleeding steps, slowly indeed, and perhaps not finally; its retreat may be merely the recoil of the wild beast for another spring upon its prey; but as yet it does not seem so, and humanity may begin to breathe again. No one except the Kaiser may guess at the unfathomable counsels of the Ancient of Days." After describing the state of public feeling in Germany, and the generally accepted and applauded plans for her aggrandizement, another writer says of the Kaiser: "The German Emperor's speeches visualize the ideas of the man who has the final power to say how this public sentiment and these plans shall be used; and very clearly they prove that the Kaiser feels no responsibility to any person, to any moral code, or to any ethical ideal. He is the final arbiter. "That the Emperor William II has always anticipated the world-war which is now waging — is more than proved by the extracts from His Majesty's speeches. His very first official act upon coming to the throne was to issue an edict to the German army, and it was not until some days after that he issued a proclamation 'To my people.' To him the soldier is far more important than the civilian. Votes and elections count for nothing. "The German Emperor's speeches are voluminous. They have appeared in Germany in various forms and run to several volumes. The selections here given have not been deliberately picked out for the purpose of showing that the Kaiser has assumed the leadership of the war mania movement. It would A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 57 have been impossible to have made any selection which would not have pointed in the same direction. The idea of war is ever in His' Majesty's mind, even when he is addressing himslf to purely pacific matters. The dove of peace is always mated with the German eagle. Hife Majesty cannot unveil a civid monmnent without referring to the military glory of his ancestors. He cannot address an educational conference without emphasizing that in his opinion the best kind of educa- tion is that which leads the youth of Germany to contemplate the military achievenfents' of their forefathers. He cannot pay a compliment to the ruler of another State without at the same time referring to the bravery and chivalry of the other mon- arch's military forces. He cannot even preach a sermon without referring to the military exploits of the ancient Hebrews; and he cannot even pray without calling upon the Lord of Hosts to lead the German army to victory." (30) The Kaiser set on foot the decoration of the "Avenue of Victory" at Berlin, drew up the general plan, and person- ally selected the artists who sculptured the various groups. At a dinner to which these artists were invited, the Kaiser said : "As I proclaimed on a former occasion, I, too, regard it as my mission, in conformity with the ideas of my parents, to stretch my hand over my German people and its rising genera- tion; to foster the beautiful; to develop art in the life of the people ; but only in fixed lines and within those strictly defined limits which are to be found in the sense of mankind for beauty and harmpny." (January, 1902.) (31) "The great ideals have become for us Germans a permanent possession, while other nations have more or less lost them. The German" nation is now the only people left which is called upon in the first place to protect and cultivate and promote these great ideals . . . ." (32) Speaking at a banquet of the Provincial Diet of Bran- denburg, in February, 1892, the Kaiser said: 58 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "The firm conviction of your sympathy in my labours gives me renevced strength to persist in my work, and to press for- ward on the path which Heaven has laid out for me. I am helped thereto by my feeling of responsibility to the Ruler of All, and the firm' conviction- that He, our ally of Rossbach and Dennewitz, will not leave me in the lurch. He has given Him- self such endless trouble Avith our old Mark and with our House that we can assume that He has not done this for nothing. "The august figure of our great Emperor William the First, who has passed from among us, is always present with us, together with his mighty deeds. How were these accomplished ? Through the unshakable belief held by my grandfather in the mission intrusted to him by God, which he combined with an untiring zeal for duty. He was supported by the Mark and entire German Fatherland. Amid these traditions I have grown up and in them I was reared by him. I also have the game belief." (At the annual dinner of the Diet of Brandenberg, March, 1893.) (33) "May the might of Germany become as firm and as powerful as was once that of the Roman world-empire, so that in the future 'I am a German citizen' may be uttered with the same pride as was the ancient 'Civis Romanus sum." (Saltzburg, 1900.) (34) It seems unnecessary to multiply evidence that the Kaiser has a form of megalomania that amounts to disease, or that he, unfortunately, in this respect, represents with fair accuracy, the present frame of mind — ^probably only temporary — of the German nation. But I shall add one additional bit of testimony, just at hand. It may be untrustworthy, but it has the earmarks of genuineness. An order issued by "Papa Wilhelm" to his troops in East Prussia is said (35) to read in part as follows: "Thanks to the valor of my heroes, France has been severely punished. Belgium, which interfered with our attack, has been added to the glorious provinces of Germany. From the course A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 59 of militaiy events you know that the punitive expedition into Russia has also been a brilliant success. "My heroes, the hour of trial has n'ow come for you and for the whole of Germany. If Germany is dear to you — if your families are dear to you — if your culture, your faith, your nation, your Emperor, are dear to you, you will offer the enemy worthy resistance." I ask the reader to note the crescendo^ — from "Germany" through "families," "culture," "faith," and the "nation" up to the "Emperor!" Also the announced addition of Belgium to the "glorious provinces of Germany." The Kaiser may not have written this, hut, if he didn't, the author takes rank vi^ith Chatterton. There is a "con- densed novel" in those paragraphs worthy of Bret Harte or Leacock. But, after all, the question of the exact mental condi- tion of the Kaiser is not of fundamental importance. His power is unquestioned, his leadership indisputable. He stands to-day before the world as the embodiment of the spirit of the school of the Bernhardis and Treitschkes. He is the apotheosis of the Mlinsterberg idea of an Emperor as "the symbol of the State." The world believes that had he so willed this war would not have occurred. Whether his will to war was, how- ever indefensible and brutal, a sanely reasoned determina- tion, or the irresistible impulse of a mental defective the world may never know. As I have said, now it is not im- portant. CHAPTER 11. What is the Evidence as to the Events Immediately Leading up to the War in Their Relation to the Culpability of Germany? As I was trying to formulate my ideas in reply to this question, there appeared in the public press (36) a most illuminating and convincing article from the pen of one of the leaders of the American Bar, Mr. James M. Beck. He propounds, at the outset, three questions : Was Austria justified in declaring war against Servia? Was Grermany justified in declaring war against Euissia and France? Was England justified in declaring war against Germany ? He reviews in a masterly manner all .the official and documentary evidence now before the world, and assumes that it is to be presented to a "Supreme Court of Civiliza- tion" for consideration and judgment. In reply to the last of these questions he cites the solemn treaty of 1839, whereby Prussia, France, England, Austria and Eussia ^T^ecame the guarantors" of the "perpetual neutrality" of Belgium, which treaty was reaffirmed by Count Bismarck, then Chancellor of the German Empire, on July 23, 1870, and even more recently (1913) by the German Secretary of State, who said in the Reichstag : "The neutrality of Belgium is determined by international conventions, and QermoMy is resolved to respect these conven- tiorts." To confirm this solemn assurance, the Minister of War added in the same debate : (60) A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 61 "Belgium does not play any part in the justification of the German scheme of military reorganization. The scheme is justified by the position of matters in the East. Germamf will not lose sight of the fact that Belgium neutrality is guaranteed "by international treaties." A year later, on July 31, 1914, Herr von Buelow, the German Minister at Brussels, assured the Belgian Depart- ment of State that he knew of a declaration which the German Chancellor had made in 1911 to the effect "that Germany had no intention of violating our (Belgium's) neutrality," and "that he was certain that the sentiments to which expression was given at that time had not changed" (See Belgian "Gray Book," Nos. 11 and 12.) Mr. Beck says it seems unnecessary to discuss the wanton disregard of these solemn obligations and protestations, when the present Chancellor of the German Empire, in his speech to the Eeichstag and to the world on August 4, 1914, frankly admitted that the action of the German military machine in invading Belgium was a wrong. He said : "We are now in a state of necessity, and necessity knows no law. Our troops have occupied Luxemburg and perhaps are already on Belgian soil. Gentlemen, that is contrary to the dictates of international law. . . . The wrong — I speak openly — that we are committing we will endeavor to make good as soon as our military goal has been reached. Anybody who is threatened as we are threatened, and is fighting for his highest possessions, can only have one thought — how he is to hack his way through." Mr. Beck might have added that by this same treaty Belgium had pledged herself to resist any violation of her neutrality, and that it was not only her right but her duty to bar the way to the march of Germany's legions across the land. Mr. Beck continues as to the German Chancellor's 62 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR **defence" by saying that it is not even a plea of confession and avoidance. It is a plea of "Guilty" at the bar of the world. It has one merit — that it does not add to the crime the aggravation of hypocrisy. It virtually rests the case of Germany upon the Gospel of Treitschke and Bernhardi, which was taught far more effectively by Machiavelli in his treatise, "The Prince," wherein he glorified the policy of Cesare Borgia in trampling the weaker States of Italy under foot by ruthless terrorism, unbridled ferocity and the basest deception. The wanton destruction of Belgium is simply Borgiaism amplified ten thousand fold by the mechanical resources of modern war. As to this point, Mr. Beck concludes that unless our boasted civilization is the thinnest veneering of barbarism ; unless the law of the world is in fact only the ethics of the rifle and the conscience of the cannon; unless mankind after uncounted centuries has made no real advance in political morality beyond that of the cave dweller, then this answer of Germany fails to show a "decent respect to the opinions of mankind." Germany's contention that a treaty of peace is "a scrap of paper," to be disregarded at will when required by the selfish interests of one contracting party, is the negation of all that civilization stands for. "Belgium has been crucified in the face of the world. Its innocence of any offense, until it was attacked, is too clear for argument. Its voluntary immolation to preserve its solemn guarantee of neutrality will 'plead like angels, trumpet-tongued, against the deep damnation of its taking off.' On that issue the Supreme Court could have no ground for doubt or hesita- tion. Its judgment would be speedy and inexorable." Mr. Beck then goes on to discuss the evidence offered to the public in the British and German "White Papers" and the "Eussian Orange Paper," and asks what verdict an A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAB 63 impartial and dispassionate court would render upon the issues thus raised and the evidence thus submitted. He eays : "Primarily such a court would be deeply impressed, not only by what the record as thus made up discloses, but also hy the significant omissions of documents knoivn to he in existence. "The official defense of England and Russia does not appa- rently sihow any failure on the part of either to submit all of the documents in their possession, tut the German 'White Paper' on its faoe diiscloses the suppression of documents of vital importance, while Austria has as yet failed to submit any of the documentary evidence in its possession. "We know from the German 'White Paper' — even if we did not conclude as a matter of irresistible inference — ^that many important communications passed in this crisis between Germany and Austria, and it is probable that some communica- tions must also have passed between those two countries and Italy. Italy, despite its embarrassing position, owes to the world the duty of a full disclosure. What such disclosure would probably show is indicated by her deliberate conclusion that her allies had commenced an aggressive war, which released her from any obligation under the Triple Alliance." His conclusion as to this point is that until Germany is willing to put in evidence the most important documents in its possession, it must not be surprised that the world, remembering Bismarck's garbling of the Ems dispatch, which precipitated the Franco-Prussian war, will be incred- ulous as to the sincerity of Germany's mediatory efforts. He then reviews the entire diplomatic correspondence, as published, repeatedly calling attention to the absence of im- portant documents from the German and Austrian records. He finds that those two nations were guilty, not only of con- cealment or suppression of portions of the record, while Germany was pretending to lay its case unreservedly before the world, but that they were "diplomatic pettifoggers" who took a "colossal snap judgment"; that the German 64 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR Secretary of State was guilty of a "plain evasion" ; the Ger- man Imperial Chancellor of a "pitiful and insincere quibble"; of "hypocrisy," of "arrogance" and "unreason- ableness." Of one contention of the German Secretary of State, that Austria might act in disregard of Germany's wish in a matter of common concern, he says : "This strains human credulity to the breaking point. Did the German Secretary of State keep up a straight face when he uttered this sardonic pleasantry? It may be the duty of a diplomat to lie on occasion, but is it ever necessary to utter such a stupid falsehood? The German Secretary of State sar- donically added in the same conversation, that he was not sure that the effort for peace had not hastened the declaration of war; as though the declaration of war against Servia had not been planned and expected from the first." Mr. Beck does not fail to call attention to the fact that — "In reaching its conclusion our imaginary court would pay little attention to mere professions of a desire for peace. . . ." "No war in modern times has been begun without the aggressor pretending that his nation wished nothing but peace, and invoking Divine aid for its murderous policy. To para- phrase the words of Lady Teazle on a noted occasion, when Sir Joseph Surface talked much of 'honor,' it might be as well in such instances to leave the name of God out of the question." The Judgment of the Court he says would be unhesitat- ingly as follows : "1. That Germany and Austria in a time of profound peace secretly concerted together to impose their will upon Europe and upon Servia in a matter affecting the balance of power in Europe. Whether in so doing they intended to precipitate a European war to determine the mastery of Europe is not satisfactorily established, although their whole course of conduct suggests this as a possibility. They made war almost inevitable by A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 65 (a) issuing an ultimatum that was grossly unreasonable and disproportionate to any grievance that Austria had, and (b) in giving to Servia, and Europe, insufficient time to consider the rights and obligations of all interested nations. "2, That Grermany had at all times the povrer to compel Austria to preserve a reasonable and conciliatory course, but at no time eiffectively exerted that influence. On. the contrary, she certainly abetted, and possibly instigated, Aiistria in its unreasonable course. "3. That England, France, Italy and Russia at all timea sincerely worked for peace, and for this purpose not only over- looked the original misconduct of Austria, but made every reasonable concession in the hope of preserving peace. "4. That Austria, having mobilized its army, Russia was reasonably justified in mobilizing its forces. Such act of mobilization was the right of any sovereign State, and as long as the Russian armies did not cross the border or take any aggressive action no other nation had any just right to com- plain, each having the same right to make similar preparations. "5. That Germany, in abruptly declaring war against Russia for failure to demobilize when the other Powers had offered to make any reasonable concession and peace parleys were still in progress, precipitated the war." He adds that — "The Grerman nation has been plunged into this abyss by its scheming statesmen and its self-centered and highly neurotic Kaiser, who in the twentieth century sincerely believes that he is the proxy of Almighty God on earth, and therefore infal- lible." Since his article appeared, another labored defence of Germany has been sent to America, and, fathered by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, at one time the German Colonial Sec- retary, and said to be "now Germany's most conspicuous advocate in the United States," has been given to the American press. It still further illustrates many of the 66 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR points already made. For example, it speaks again of the mythical French attack upon Germany across Belgium, resting the assertion "upon absolutely unimpeachable infor- mation," which it does not give. Such attempts as have been made to sustain this eleventh-hour defence are, so far as I have seen, like many of those in the German "White Paper," based on similarly vague and unsupported state- ments. The whole effort in this last lengthy and involved document is to try to show that Eussia is "responsible for the war," that England "was fully cognizant of this fact," and that the latter's "claim that she entered this war solely as the protector of small nations is a fable." So far as I know, no such claim has been made by Eng- land. The word "solely" is interpolated to make the Ger- man case stronger. In fact, in the reply by the English professors and men of science to the learned men of Ger- many responsible for "The Truth About Germany" (page 251), the former say with emphasis: "Great Britain, together with France, Russia, Prussia and Austria, had solemnly guaranteed the neutrality of Belgium. In the preservation of this neutrality our deepest sentiments and our most vital interests are alike involved. Its violation would not only shatter the independence of Belgium itself; it would undermine the whole basis which render* possible the neutrality of any State and the very existence of such States as are weaker, much weaker, than their neighbors. We acted in 1914 just as we acted in 1870." But if the claim had been made, it would have had greater inherent probability and would be far more strongly upheld and substantiated by the admitted facts than is this last absurd effort to represent Germany as resisting "with quiet politeness" a demand, "as a price of British neutrality" to consent to her own "humiliation" and "retirement from the position of a Great Power." A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 67 Is it likely that a nation — or two nations — obviously, as events have shown, unprepared for immediate war would have made such a demand upon the greatest military power the world has ever seen, at a time when, as events have also shown, she was ready to the last apparently petty detail to challenge, if need be. United Europe? Does not every intelligent person in the world know that her early successes, on the offensive, were due to this very prepared- ness, which her opponents could at the time but feebly imitate ? And since then, in her remarkable defensive cam- paign, was not her temporary safety assured by these same preparations, so complete last August that it is scarcely conceivable that they could have been bettered by or through delay ? But even in this paper the same clumsy confusion between "Might" and "Eight," which has put Germany on the defensive before the civilized world is once more shown. I wish I had space to quote in full that part of this "Eeview of Official War-Papers." It speaks of the "heavy heart" with which Germany, "following the law of self- preservation," "decided to violate the neutrality of Bel- gium." It says that after England had informed the Belgians — as by solemn contract and by every law of honor and decency she was bound to do — ^that she would support them in case "Germany applied pressure to induce them to depart from neutrality" — England's own words — "Belgian fanaticism broke loose against Germany." Can Americans read with any patience the German expressions of ex post facto regret — the hypocritical assump- tion that they are discharging a sacred duty ? "By nobody," says the Kolnisehe Zeitung (close to the Berlin authorities ) , "is the fate of Belgium, the burning down of every building, the destruction of Louvain, so deeply deplored as by 68 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR the German people and our brave troops, who felt bound to carry out to the bitter end the chastisement they were compelled to inflict." Every burglar who, — caught red-handed and resisted, — > added murder to his other crimes, might with equal force "deeply deplore" the "necessity" that "compelled" him to "inflict chastisement/' It is nauseating. And through it all outcrops at all sorts of malapropos times their insufferable self-appreciation. "We, however," says the Berlin Tageszeitung, "do not need to regard the public opinion of the world. In the last instance the German people, united with the Emperor, are alone com- petent to decide the correctness of Germany's course." The plea of "necessity" constantly recurs in the Grerman apologiae, and was symbolized and summarized by Gerhart Hauptmann, the German dramatist, in his reply to an appeal from the Frenchman, Eomain Eolland, author of "Jean Christophe": "Our jealous enemies forged an iron ring aroxmd our breast and we knew our breast had to expand, that it had to split asunder this ring, or else we had to cease breathing." Translated into plain English, dear reader, this is as if your neighbor Schmidt, his family having somewhat outgrown the modest residence in which he began house- keeping, had called God to witness that in the Holy name of Family it was necessary for him to take your house and that of his other neighbor Claretie (and some of your out- lying farms), and that it was also necessary (under God's guidance) to get at you through the property of a third A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 69 neighbor, Vandervelde, which property, as the latter objected and resisted, it was further necessary to bum and destroy together with many of Vandervelde's children and his wife. In reply to these various German attempts to establish the righteousness of their cause by the plea of necessity for more room, and to their charges that Great Britain, having all she needs, is meanly and falsely trying to shut out the Teutons, Mr. Powys writes: (37) "How are we to suppose that Anglo-Saxon authorities would answer the charge of hypocrisy and disingenuousness ? I fancy they would claim — at any rate we may now be allowed to claim for them — ^that, quite obviously, the events of the past cannot be changed. By whatever means the Anglo-Saxon got possession of so vast a portion of the world's surface, he has got possession of it, and now holds it firmly. His apologists would doubtless add that not only does he hold it firmly, but he holds it wisely and liberally; he holds it, in fact, with as much regard for the liberty and local traditions of the peoples involved as is compatible with holding it at all. But the fact that the events of the past have enabled him to secure all these spoils ought not to be made a reason for the perpetual con- tinuation of the struggle. He has secured them. That is the end of it. If the Germans had been equally favored by oppor- tunity and chance they would have secured them. But as things are now, the past cannot be changed. And evolution must go forward. And such evolution, forcing life up to a different sort of struggle upon a different sort of plane, must be allowed free play for new valuations and new moral stand- ards." Chesterton has well summed up the German ethics. They have been told by their politicians that all arrange- ments dissolve before "necessity." That is the importance of the German Chancellor's phrase, excusing and explaining the violation of the neutrality of Belgium: "We are now 70 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR in a state of necessity and necessity knows no law." He did not allege some special excuse in the case of Belgium, which might make it an exception to the rule. He dis- tinctly argued, as on a principle applicable to other cases, that victory was a necessity and honor was a scrap of paper. "The Prussians had made a new discovery," says Chesterton, "in international politics — that it may often be convenient to make a promise and yet curiously inconvenient to keep it. . . . They, therefore, promised England a promise on con- dition that she broke a promise and on the implied condition that the new promise might be broken as easily as the old one." This, after all, well summarizes an important part of the German "diplomacy." To return to Mr. Beck's paper, I beg to say finally that I have quoted some of his conclusions without his argu- ments, because, while the latter were incapable of satis- factory condensation, within my limits, I wanted to call particular attention to the impression made on the highly trained mind of one representative American by the docu- ments on which the German and German-American special pleaders largely rest their case. The responsiblity for the war seems likely to be a per- ennial subject of discussion, but every new fact disclosed tends to fix it more and more clearly upon Germany. Eecently (38), the former Premier of Italy, Giovanni Giolitti, in a speech to the Italian Parliament, revealed an episode of a year ago last August which had a bearing on the present war. He said that : "In August, 1913, Austria notified the Italian Grovernment by telegram that she intended to make war on Servia; and at that time, in response to Austria's inquiry about Italy's atti- tude, he, as Prime Minister, and the then Minister of Foreign Affairs, the Marquis di San Giuliano, agreed in telling Austria A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 71 that, as such a war would be a war of aggression and not of defense, Italy would not be bound by the Triple Alliance to aid Austria, and would therefore remain neutral. 'It is neces- sary to declare this to Austria in the most formal manner,' said Signor Giolitti to the Foreign Minister at that time, 'hoping that Germany will act to dissuade Austria from a very dangerous adventure.' This interpretation of the Triple Alli- ance, Signor Giolitti explained to the Italian Parliament, was accepted by Germany and Austria. The statement is not only important as confirming the general opinion expressed before the war that Italy would not aid the other two members of the Triple Alliance in aggressive warfare, but is also significant as evidence of Austria's and Germany's plans that will help to sustain the verdict already reached by neutral peoples concern- ing the responsibility for this war." Here again it seems fruitless to continue to adduce evi- dence — it would be only cumulative. To Americans who care to pursue it further I would recommend two works: Mr. Beck's "The Evidence in the Case" and Dr. Dillon's "A Scrap of Paper, the Inner History of German Diplo- macy." In the former, Mr. Beck has summed up in his usual masterly way the morals of the situation and has drawn an illuminating comparison between what might happen to us and what has happened to Belgium. "If, however, there had been no Hague Convention and no Treaty of 1839, and if Germany, England and Fraiice had never entered into reciprocal obligations in the event of war to respect Belgium's neutrality, nevertheless upon the broadest considera- tions of international law the invasion without its consent would be without any justification whatever. "It is a fundamental axiom of international law that each nation is the sole and exclusive judge of the conditions under which it will permit an alien to cross its frontiers. Its terri- tory is sacrosanct. No nation can invade the territory of another without its consent. To do so by compulsion is aji act 72 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR of war. Each nation's land is its castle of asylum and defense. This fundamental right of Belgium should not be confused or obscured by balancing the subordinate equities between France, Germany and England with respect to their formal treaty obli- gations. "Belgium's case has thus been weakened in the forum of public opinion by too insistent reference to the special treaties. The right of Belgium and of its citizens as individuals, to be secure in their possessions rests upon the sure foundation of inalienable right and is guarded by the immutable principle of moral law, 'Thou shalt not steal.' It was well said by Alex- ander Hamilton : " 'The sacred rights of man are not to be searched for in old parchments and musty records; they are written as with a sunbeam in the whole volume of human nature by the hand of Divinity itself and can never be erased by mortal power.' "This truth can be illustrated by an imaginary instance. Let us suppose that the armies of the Kaiser had made the progress which they so confidently anticipated, and had not simply cap- tured Paris, but had also invaded England, and that, in an attempt to crush the British Empire, the German General Staff planned an invasion of Canada. Let us further suppose that Germany thereupon served upon the United States such an arrogant demand as it made upon Belgium, requiring the United States to permit it to land an army in New York, with the accompanying assurance that neither its territory nor inde- pendence would be injured, and that Gtermany would gener- ously reimburse it for any damage. "Let us further suppose — and it is not a very fanciful sup- position — that the United States would reply to the German demand that under no circumstances should a German force be landed in New York or its territory be used as a base of hos- tile operations against Canada. To carry out the analogy in all its details, let us then suppose that the German fleet should land an army in the city of New York, arrest its Mayor, and check the first attempt of its outraged inhabitants to defend the city by demolishing the Cathedral, the Metropolitan Art Gallery, the City Hall and other structures, and shooting down remorselessly large numbers of citizens, because a few non-com- batants had not accepted the invasion with due humility. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 73 "Although Germany had not entered into any treaty to re- spect the territory of the United States, no one would seriously contend that Grermany would be justified in such an invasion." And in still another American book (39), Mr. Oswald Garrison Villard calls attention to a point which has hith- erto escaped most of the controversialists : "It would also not be amiss for those Germans who ponder over the failure of the neutral nations to sympathize with Ger- many, to read once more the telegram of the Kaiser to the King of England, of August 1, 1914, in which the Kaiser says: 'The troops on my frontier are in the act of being stopped by telegraph and telephone from crossing into France.' The sig- nificance of this to American readers lies in the Kaiser's astounding admission that mobilization against France meant immediate invasion of France iefore any declaration of war. Had this fact been publicly known or really tmderstood in Germany, it ought surely to have prevented the repeated asser- tions that France began the war by sending her aviators over German territory, by the entrance of armed patrols, a sudden attaelc in Lorraine, etc. For it is evident from the Kaiser's own words that long-prepared orders to invade French soil sent some of his troops onto it the instant the first order to mobilize appeared. Whether those troops did any damage or not, or reached French territory or not, before war was declared, is unimportant. The intent to rush right onto French soil before peace was officially ended is here admitted. It is thoroughly in keeping with the conversation of General von Moltke, in May, 1913, reported by the French ambassador to Berlin, that 'we (the Germans) must begin war loithout waiting, in order brutally to crush all resistance.' This has been denied in Ger- many, but it is in keeping with the attitude of leading mili- tarists, and was, perhaps, one of the bits of evidence that led Italy to reject outright Germany's claim that Italy must come to her aid because she had been attacked. At any rate, the German propagandists who seek to conquer hostile American opinion must find some way of getting around the Kaiser's despatch. Its revelation of what German mobilization really 74 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR meant does, however, in some degree explain why it was that the Kaiser and his military associates were so alarmed by the mere fact of Bussian mobilization." CHAPTEE III. What Has Been the Attitude of the German Apologists in Relation to Belgium Since the Violation of Neutrality? Professor Weber, of Kiel, said to be "very close to Prince Henry of Prussia and the HohenzoUern family, writes to an American friend :" (40) "It has been proved with certainty that Belgium had already entered into agreements with France long before the war to permit the passage of hostile troops through Belgium, perhaps even to take the field with them against us. "By this means Belgium had already surrendered her neu- trality and had actually taken a stand with our enemies. That we with one bold blow should dare to take the Belgium fortress is, therefore, easy to understand. We have been far too lenient in that we wished to give back to the Belgians their land im- harmed after the fall of Liege. "Since the Belgians were so deceived as not to accept this magnanimous offer, they must bitterly atone for it." As usual, nothing worthy of being called "proof" has been adduced in support of this statement, and admiration for the "magnanimity" which led Germany to offer to give back to the Belgians their own land must be withheld. Dr. Herman Hilprecht says that the Belgian Government "stubbornly declined the German proposition" — ^to allow the latter to violate the treaty of neutrality — and then attempts to justify fully and without reservation the subse- quent over-running of Belgium and the pillage and destruc- tion of Louvain. (41) Much precisely similar testimony might be adduced, (75) 76 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR chiefly from German-American sources, and would amply suffice to show the mistake of the American writer who said: (42) "The government of Germany has announced that "the occu- pation of Belgium is now virtually complete'; and the people of the empire are celebrating the achievement with pride and exultation. Thus is closed one of the bloodiest chapters in the war — and one of the darkest chapters in the records of inter- national dishonor. "No matter what horrors may await the world in the un- folding of the dreadful conflict, none can exceed in poignant tragedy the fate of this devoted people. From the time of Caesar the bravery and the dauntless independence of the Bel- gians have been celebrated by historians and sung by poets. And now these high qualities have inspired a supreme demon- stration of heroism and sacrifice which makes all humanity the debtor of the martyred nation. "This is the one phase of the war which can be discussed almost without raising controversy. Upon the issues of Prus- sian policy, French hatred, British jealousy and Russian plot- ting, advocates on either side wax furiously eloquent and raise questions which their opponents are taxed to answer. "But upon the hideous wrong perpetrated upon Belgium, the most ruthless devotee of militarism, the most fanatical expo- nent of imperialistic destiny and the rights of 'culture,' must take refuge in silence or falter out feeble extenuation. The facts of history, the records of diplomacy and the principles of international justice converge here to denounce an act unpar- alleled in its cruelty and perfidy." Unfortunately, since this was written, the imperialistic and "cultured" fanatics have shown that they have no idea of taking refuge in silence, but fatuously believe that they can impose upon a thinking and reasoning world a view that it has already contemptuously and with practical unanimity rejected. The same writer gives a brief outline of the case (from A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 1^)1 a slightly different standpoint from that of Mr, Beck), brings it down to date, and continues: "This [the treaty of 1839, etc., see pp. 80-82] was the record upon which Belgium stood when the troops of the Kaiser crossed her frontiers on August 2 last. The German govern- ment, having already violated the territory of Luxemburg, de- manded passage for its forces through the country whose in- tegrity it was sworn to honor and protect. With unblushing effrontery it called this demand a request for 'friendly neu- trality,' and declared that in case of opposition Germany would 'consider Belgium as an enemy.' "There was here a double crime. Germany not only foreswore her own covenant, but undertook to penalize Belgium for ob- serving that country's solemn obligation; for, of course, consent by Belgium to the free passage of the Kaiser's forces would have been a repudiation of the treaty by Belgium and tanta- mount to an act of war against France. "Apologists for the invasion have attempted to set up two defences. The first is that France was preparing to violate the treaty, and that Germany simply forestalled her. Fortu- ' nately, there are records which utterly disprove this pretense. After Germany's ultimatum, France offered the services of five army corps to Belgium to defend her neutrality. The answer was: " 'We are sincerely grateful to the French government for offering eventual support. In the actual circumstances, how- ever, we do not propose to appeal to the guarantee of the Powers. The Belgian government will decide later on the action which they may think it necessary to take.' "Belgium preferred to make her first appeal to Germany's sense of honor, and, when that failed, to the heroic resistance of a wronged people. And France was so ill-prepared for the invasion which Germany says she plotted that ten days elapsed before she had her forces in the neutral territory. "The second excuse offered in ex post facto palliation of the offense is that in the Belgian archives Germany has fovmd des- patches showing that in 1906 the British military attache and the Belgian General Staff discussed tentatively plans for landing a British force to defend Belgian neutrality if it were attacked 78 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR It shows the desperate nature of the German case when this incident is cited to justify a brutal invasion. "The arrangement for giving help to Belgium, if needed, was discussed at the time Germany had thrust herself to the verge of war with France over Morocco; and the proposal of Great Britain to defend the neutrality of Belgium, as she was bound to do, was as creditable as Germany's violation of that neu- trality was dishonorable, "All the eloquence and sophistries of the professors^ poets, and psychologists advocating the German cause cannot remove the black stain of this deed. The facts are irrefutable, and the proof of guilt inexorable." Doctor Bernhard Dernburg has made perhaps the most elaborate of the arguments in defense of the violation of Belgium's neutrality. He begins with a series of counter- charges, as follows : England has broken treaties. England has encouraged Portugal to break "a, treaty of peace and amity" with Germany. England has "solicited" the sever- ing of the Triple Alliance, i. e., has tried to prevent Italy from fighting by the side of her bitter and hereditary enemy, Austria. Japan broke a Japanese-Chinese treaty. Finally, the United States Supreme Court said in 1889 that, under certain circumstances, treaty stipulations might, in the interest of the country, be disregarded. This judgment was handed down when the Chinese were excluded from th6 United States. Much has happened in the quarter of a century since 1889, but there was not then, and is not now, any just basis of comparison between a modification or abrogation of a treaty concerning immigration, and the brutal rape and pillage of a whole country because of its insistence upon the most elementary of human rights. The fundamental point seems to be this : A treaty between two or more countries concerning matters of internal administration may be the subject of change under A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 79 changed conditions, or may be abrogated, and such change or abrogation may or may not be considered a casus belli. Furthermore, such a treaty may have to be broken in time of war under the law of imperative necessity (now appealed to by the Germans), and the degree of wrong involved in such infraction can be determined only by the circum- stances of the particular case. But a treaty concerning "neutrality/' in which the interests of five nations are involved, and by which, long in advance of war, each signatory binds itself not to acquire any advantage dependent upon the non-observance of such neutrality in time of war, is obviously made with particular reference to war and to war conditions. The nation that disregards such a treaty, that repudiates for its own interests such an obligation, is, as Mr. Fraley has said (p. 90), like the person who cheats at cards. It should be regarded as outside the pale of civilized inter- course. Doctor Dernburg's further claim as to Belgium is that the Treaty of 1839, which secured Belgium's independence, was no longer binding, because in 1870 new treaties were negotiated between England and France, and England and the North German Federation (August 9 and 26, 1870), guaranteeing Belgium's neutrality "for the duration of the war and for one year thereafter." Accordingly, he says, the treaty between Belgium and the Forth German Fed- eration came to an end in May, 1873. This matter is of vital importance in the argument. If Doctor Dernburg's claim is admitted, it would afford a technical excuse for Germany's treatment of Belgium. I do not believe that in the opinion of this country, or of the world, a dozen such technical excuses would suffice to win for Germany a pardon for her ruthless invasion. But the claim, of course, required examination on its merits. Fur- 80 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR thermore, it afforded a test of Doctor Dernburg's veracity, which I was glad to apply. It is, therefore, of twofold eignificance. It will be well to repeat here Doctor Demburg's exact language: (43) "When the war broke out there was no enforceable treaty in existence to which Germany was a party. Originally, in 1839, a treaty was concluded, providing for such neutrality. In 1866 France demanded of Prussia the right to take possession of Belgium, and the written French offer was made known by Bismarck in July, 1870. Then England demanded and obtained separate treaties with France, and with the North German Fed- eration, to the effect that they should respect Belgium's neu- trality, and such treaties were signed on the 9th and 26th of August, 1870, respectively. According to them both countries guaranteed Belgium's neutrality for the duration of the war and for one year thereafter. The war came to an end with the Frankfurt peace in 1871, and the treaty between Belgium and the North German Federation expired in May, 1872." Before examining into the truthfulness and force of this presentation of the case, it would be well to notice that Doctor Dernburg proceeded in his attempt to sustain it by rewriting for the German Chancellor his speech of August 4, 1914, in which the Chancellor said to the Beichstag that the invasion of Belgium was "contrary to the dictates of international, law," and was "wrong." The fatal frankness of these words compelled their dexterous apologist to trans- late them afresh into modified terms for the benefit of Americans. As softened for our ears, they read thus : "The neutrality of Belgium could not be respected, and we were sincerely sorry that Belgium, a country that, in fact, had nothing to do with the question at issue, and might wish to stay neutral, had to be overrun." If Doctor Dernburg has the only correct report of this A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 81 celebrated and incriminating speeeli, why has he withheld it until now, in order to confide it tardily to a waiting world ? I asked: What do the words "perpetual neutrality" mean in the Treaty of 1839 ? "\^Tien was that treaty abro- gated? Surely Doctor Dernburg knows that the negotia- tion of new treaties does not necessarily mean the abroga- tion of existing ones. Bismarck himself recognized this fact when, on July 22, 1870, he wrote to the Belgian Min- ister in Berlin: "In confirmation of my verbal assurances, I have the honor to give in writing a declaration which, in view of the treaties in force, is quite superfluous, that the Confederation of the North and its Allies will respect the neutrality of Belgium, on the understanding, of course, that it is respected by the other belligerent." I argued that if no treaty had been in existence since May, 1872 (which is the idea Doctor Dernburg is endeavor- ing to convey), why did the German Secretary of State say in the Eeichstag in 1913, "The neutrality of Belgium is determined iy international conventions^ and Germany is resolved to respect these conventions"? Why did the German Minister of War say in the same debate: "Germany will not lose sight of the fact that Belgium's neutrality is guxiranteed hy international treaties"? Why, on July 31, 1914, did the German Minister at Brus- sels assure ''the Belgian Department of State that he knew of a declaration which the German Chancellor had made in 1911 to the effect "that Germany had no intention of violating our" (Belgium's) "neutrality" and "that he was certain that the sentiments to which expression was given at that time had not changed" ? 82 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Why on August 4, 1914, did the German Foreign Secre- tary, after wiring the Ambassador in London of a mythical French attack across Belgium, go on to say : "Oermany had consequently to disregard Belgian neutrality"? How foolish! He should have communicated with Dernburg, and learned that Belgian neutrality died of inanition in May, 1873. What were we to think of Imperial Chancellors and Foreign Secretaries who were unfamiliar with so im- portant a fact, known all the while by an ex-colonial secre- tary? But these were theoretical arguments. It seemed worth while to look into the facts. Doctor Dernburg had — ^incau- tiously, it seems — supplied the dates. The Nouveau Becueil General de Traites (Vol. XIX, 1874, pp. 591-593) gives the text of the treaties Doctor Dernburg quotes. They were, as he says, signed on August 9, and ratified on August 26, 1870. The expressions used in the treaty between Prussia and Great Britain, and in that between France and Great Britain are identical. Both treaties are "to maintain the independence and the neu- trality of Belgium." In both the penultimate article (Article 3) is the one quoted by Doctor Dernburg. It reads as follows : "Art. 3. This treaty shall be binding on the High Contract- ing Parties during the continuance of the present war between North German Confederation and France, and for 12 months after the ratification of any treaty of j)eace concluded between those parties; and on the expiration of that time the independ- ence and neutrality of Belgium will, so far a^ the High Con- tracting Parties are respectively concerned, continue to rest as heretofore on the first article of the Quintuple Treaty of the 19th of April, 1839." I have italicised tKe part deliberately omitted by Doctor A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 83 Dernburg, a part not eveu separated from the rest of tlie article by a period ; a part at least as essential and as im- portant to the full significance of the agreement as the part he quoted; biit a part which, unfortunately for Doctor Dernburg, absolutely destroyed and nullified his contention that, because of the one-year clause, no treaty obligation in the case of Belgium has existed since 1873. He has left himself no room to deny his purpose because in the very next sentence he says : "Why the new treaties, if the old one held good? The Im- perial Chancellor has been continuously misrepresented as ad- mitting that in the case of Belgium a treaty obligation was broken." We have already seen that to bolster up this contention — that the Chancellor had been "misrepresented" — he has rewritten the Chancellor's speech. But that he should venture to publish that part of an article of a treaty which, taken from its context, seemed to support his argument, and suppress the portion — the last half of the same para- graph — which absolutely invalidated his argument, was, we confess, a surprise. Is it possible henceforth to place any reliance upon the statements of a writer who is capable of so glaringly mis- quoting an official document? He might as well have rewritten Article III of that treaty to suit the purposes of his argument, just as he does seem to have rewritten the Chancellor's speech, and Germany's message to our State Department {vide infra). Doctor Dernberg has provided for himself a back door of retreat in reply to any such frontal attack, by saying that "when the war broke out, there was no enforceable treaty in existence.'' This is, alas, only too true, but it is about the only scintilla of truth in his whole misleading, sophis- 84 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR tical, disingenuous and untrustworthy argument. As its writer elects to call himself a "guest" of this country — on whose invitation he neglects to say — the dictates of hospi- tality prevent me from applying to his statements a more fitting and more concise term. Dernburg took occasion at the same time to reiterate the old, old boast as to the glories of German civilization, which the events of the last few months should silence for- ever on men's tongues. What is civilization? Is it, as Doctor Dernburg seems to think, a matter of technical schools and electrical apparatus? Is it making cheaper stockings than the rest of the world ? Assuredly, no ! It is primarily a matter of conduct. It is an understanding of honor and of integrity. It is a recognition of the rights of others. The Eoman civilization was not a mere matter of good roads, good bridges and good aqueducts, though these things were built well. It did not rest on conquest or on eonunerce. "What Eome gave and secured," says Mr. Chamberlain, ^Vas a life morally worthy of man." Ger- many's campaign in Belgium — and the more that is said in defense of this great wrong, the blacker does it appear^ — is an affront to honor, a deathblow to integrity, a denial of just rights. It is a triumphant exposition of brute force ; of a life morally worthy of no man. It is a rejection of civili- zation, and of all that civilization implies. It is an abrupt return to savage and elemental conditions. What wonder that, knowing themselves forsworn, the Germans should strive to cast the guilt of their perfidy on Belgium's shoulders ! What wonder that, knowing them- selves to be unprincipled aggressors, they should have the hardihood to say that Belgium plotted against the peace of Europe ! There is no hatred so deep as that which we bear to the man we have wronged. There is no sight so bitter to a nation's eyes as the unstained honor of another A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR 85 nation it has dishonorably despoiled. As long as history is taught, the tale of Germany's broken word and Belgium's brave resistance will be told the world. As long as men stay men, they will loathe the oppressor and revere the indomitable courage of the oppressed. As long as truth stays truth, the blot on Germany's escutcheon will remain uneffaced and uneffaceable. Germany's present attitude toward Belgium has, in fact, excited throughout the whole civilized world feelings of the deepest contempt and aversion. The situation has nowhere, in the entire literature of the war, been more clearly and incisively dealt with than in the following editorial from a Philadelphia paper. (44) I quote it entire: "If Prof. Hugo Miinsterberg had not laid aside his avocation as eulogist of Germany's war policy, we should like to put to him a question in psychology. As a loyal German and an expert in the science mentioned, he might be able to explain why Ger- man statesmen and writers are so indignant against the Bel- gians ; so rancorously hostile to them ; so contemptuous toward their heroism and misery. "German impatience with France and aversion toward Russia we can understand, and German loathing for Great Britain ia an indulgence of which no impartial person would be willing to deprive a nation to which it gives such exquisite satisfaction. The author of the famous 'Hymn of Hate' against England has just received from the Kaiser the decoration of the Red Eagle of the Fourth Class; and everyone will agree that it is a well- deserved honor, selected with discrimination. "But Belgivim was not a powerful rival, like France; nor a 'menace to Teutonic civilization,' like Russia; nor a colossal obstruction to German world empire, like England. She was peaceful, orderly, neutral, innocent of aggressive designs, asking only to be let alone. Even in her anguish she is silent and xm- complaining. "That the vials of German wrath and contumely should be poured out upon Belgium is rather puzzling, until one recalls the proverbial teaching that it is a human failing to hate most 86 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR those whom we have injured. It may be the ruins of Louvain, the rich tribute of war levies and the spectacle of a nation haunted by famine that incite German resentment. ''We have already noted the persistent effort to undermine the world's admiration for Belgium's grave sacrifice. Her con- sultation with an English military attache as to possible meas- ures of defense, to be adopted 'only after violation of our neu- trality by Germany,' has been denoimced as a betrayal, an 'abandoment of neutrality,' by the Belgian government, justly punished by invasion. "But there is a more personal phase of the controversy which must appeal to many observers. This is the campaign of de- traction directed against the Belgians themselves. Recently a German-American publication, the Fatherland, criticised the American people for sending relief ships to the starving non- combatants, on the ground that this was assisting the enemies of Gtermany. "The instinct of chivalry toward a brave foe seems to be one of the features of war that have disappeared with the ma,rch of efficiency. The Belgians are denoimced for having resisted invasion; their king, despite his gallantry and devotion, is ridi- culed as a deluded conspirator and assailed as the betrayer of his people. "Sixteen years ago, with three lives between him and inheri- tance of the crown, Albert, of Belgium, lived for several months in the United States, studying American principles of govern- ment and his vocation of engineering. A book which he then wrote disclosed his intense admiration for liberal institutions; and these convictions he carried with him when unexpected deaths raised him to the throne. His simplicity of life, his democratic bearing and his tireless devotion to the economic advancement of Belgium made him a singularly useful and be- loved ruler. "During the war he has shown himself such a king as even democracy may honor. His determination to sacrifice his throne rather than the honor of his country evoked world-wide admiration, for he showed that he did not hesitate to pay his part of the price. "From the beginning he has shared the dangers of his troops, and to-day is as homeless as the poorest of his subjects. In the lefense of Brussels and Antwerp he was daily in the trenches. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 87 and now is in active command of the remnant of his army, whicli with supreme courage is blocking the path of the Ger- mans to Dunkirk and Calais. "It is of this leader, whose heroism has been one of the most gallant spectacles of the war, that the Hanoverscher Anzeiger, an influential German newspaper, says : " 'King Albert, who is now stubbornly defending the last few square miles of his country, will some day give to a future Shakespeare material for a tragedy. It will be the tragedy of a ruler who wanted to make his little nation great and pros- perous and happy, and who was shamelessly betrayed by his friends, in whose honesty and fairness he had trusted.' "This reads like a confession of Germany's treaty violation; but it appears that those who 'shamelessly betrayed' Belgium were not the Germans, but the French and English. The paper continues : " 'Albert trusted perfidious Albion ; he steered his little vessel into the wake of the French ship of state, not knowing that this proud ship was being steered by foreign pilots in for- eign pay into a fateful, ruinous imdertow.' "And then follows a column of savage sneering in this vein: " 'Albert, of the house of Coburg, whose scions are justly famed for their sagacity, did not develop after his kin's tradi- tion. He proved a dilettante on the throne, for did he not light- heartedly sacrifice Belgium's neutrality — the most sacred palla- dium of all small nations — to vague promises ? . . . " 'King Albert, unlike his uncle (King Leopold), was always eager to become popular, and could be sure to win the approval and good will of his people by conducting his policies a la mode de Paris. More significant of an intimate Belgian leaning to- ward the western countries, however, was his ambition to make his country a sea power. " 'Albert always had been interested in questions of technique, commerce and social economy. It was his intention to continue the colonial policy begun by Leopold II and to develop it, though in a different direction.' "If the war 'had taken a different turn,' says an astute Grer- man critic, 'then Belgium would have become a sort of second Portugal, a vassal State, and the great British Empire would have made her feel every day that she owed her existence only to England's mercy.' As it is, of course, she enjoys her present 88 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR felicity, and is couscioiis that slic owes it, to Germany's magna- nimity. "It is, however, the democracy of the Belgian king that most exasperates the Teutonic mind: " 'He and his people are now suffering the consequences of his ignorance. He ni;ide the fatal mistake of considering himself wiser than his uncle was. He played the crowned bom-geois. He catered to the scholars, artists and engineers. He always emphasized his democxatic sentiments, which were very popular in Belgium, for tliat coimtry is much behind in sociological aspect " 'In his ignorance, Albert, the dilettante, lent himself as the tool of the Britisli war-makers and of the French revenge-criera. His Coburger cousin. George of England, has tapped him, and Albert may thank George for the fate into which he stumbled blindly.' "With siich sentiments do the leaders of German thought ex- press their conception of international affairs and reveal them- selves upon questions of government and morality. The un- happy truth is that Prussianized Germany is utterly incapable of appreciating the Belgian spirit or the Belgian king; of understanding in the remotest degree the soul of this nation she has struck dowTi and the admiration it has stirred throughout the world. "Despite all her worship of militarism and the cult of glory, Germany could not feel the thrill of these lines by an Aus- tralian : " "In that Valhalla where the heroes go, A careful sentinel paced to and fro Before the gate, burned black with battle smoke, Whose echoes to the tread of armed men woke; Where up the fiery stairs, whose steps are spears. Came the pale heroes of the blood-stained years. " 'There were lean Ctesars from the gory fields. With heart that only to a sword thrust yields; And there were generals decked in pride of rank, Eed scabbard swinging from the weary flank: And slender youths who were the sons of kings, And barons with their sixteen quarterings. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 89 " 'And while the nobles went with haughty air, The courteous sentinel questioned, "Who goes there ?" And as each came, full lustily he cried His string of titles ere he passed inside. , " 'And presently there was a little man, A silent mover in the regal van. His hand still grasped his rifle, and his eyes Seemed blinded with the light from Paradise. His was a humble guise, a modest air — The sentinel hailed him sharply, "Who goes there ?" " 'There were no gauds tacked to that simple name, But every naked blade leaped out like flame, And every blue-blooded warrior bowed his head — "I am a Belgian"; this was all he said.' "Germany cries out against her 'ring of enemies.' Which of them does she imagine is the most dangerous? Is it Russia, with her unnumbered hordes ; France, with her intrepid armies ; England, with her mighty fleet? "More powerful than any of these is that little nation she has crushed under her weight and now despises and maligns. It is the crime against Belgium that will rob a German triumph of honor or fill a German defeat with bitterness and humilia- tion. For the judgment of humanity is sure, and it will be as stern as that delivered of old against him who wronged the helpless: 'It were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.' " The evidence as to the criminal and altogether inde- fensible position in which Germany finds herself in regard to Belgium is overwhelming. She has forfeited the respect of the civilized world. Her "promises" and "pledges" and "guarantees" will, as long as the present ruling class is in power, be regarded with contempt or derision by other nations. So far as the Belgian question relates to America, however, I have nowhere seen the issue better expressed than 90 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR by Mr. Joseph C. Fraley, of Philadelphia, who, in a bro- chure entitled "How and Why a War Lord Wages War" (which all Americans should read), says: "We know that the one hope of stopping wars, is to supply a world-wide sanction for the support of international laws and morals. We have nothing to do with the reasons which led certain powers to engage that Belgian territory should be neu- tral in time of war. We have everything to do with this par- ticular instance of treaty breaking, in that it constitutes a new departure, a crime against all neutrals. Treaties made for peace conditions are obviously liable to be broken in war, but a treaty made with special reference to war, belongs to that class of obligations whose infringement is like cheating at oarda. The offender gets no second chance." And yet it takes a German-American (Jastrow) to say that the historian of the future will, in analyzing the causes of the war, regard the neutrality of Belgium "as a very minor factor, perhaps entirely negligible" ! Doctor Dernburg says : "England takes the position that, in case France had used Belgium as a stepping stone, England would have gone to war against France for break- ing the Belgian neutrality. This is a remarkable proposi- tion." It is remarkable, but only as offering an absolute demonstration, incomprehensible to the German mind, of England's unswerving intention to live up to her treaty obligations. In August, 1870, as we have seen, on the instance of Lord Granville, Germany and France entered into an iden- tical treaty with Great Britain to the effect that if either belligerent violated Belgian territory. Great Britain would co-operate with the others for the defense of it. This treaty was most strictly construed during the Franco-Prus- sian war. It may seem "remarkable" to Doctor Dernburg that a A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 91 nation should live up to such an obligation; but whatever our own record may have been, however we may have sinned in the past, we hope that the time will never come when it will seem remarkable to Americans to keep our plighted word. On July 31, 1914, Sir Edward Grey telegraphed to Sir E. Goschen, British Ambassador at Berlin : "I said to the German Ambassador this morning that if Ger- many could get any reasonable proposal put forward which made it clear that Germany and Austria were striving to pre- serve European peace, and that Russia and France would be unreasonable if they rejected it, I would support it at St. Peters- burg and Paris, and go to the length of saying that if Russia and France would not accept it, His Majesty's Government would have nothing more to do with the consequences; but, otherwise, I told the German Ambassador that if France be- came involved we should be drawn in." (British White Paper, No. 111.) The following day Grey telegraphed Goschen: "I told the German Ambassador to-day that the reply of the German Government with regard to the neutrality of Belgium was a matter of very great regret, because the neutrality of Belgium aflFected feeling in this country. If Germany could see her way to give the same assurance as that which had been given by France, it would materially contribute to relieve anxiety and tension here. On the other hand, if there were a violation of the neutrality of Belgium by one combatant while the other respected it, it would be extremely difficult to restrain public feeling in this country." (British White Paper, No. 123.) To combat these ofiQcial and categorical statements, what does Doctor Dernburg offer? "On July 30/' he tells us, "the Belgian Charge d' Affaires at St. Petersburg wrote to 93 A TEXT -BOOK OF THE WAR his Government-— and the authenticity of this letter cannot be impeached — that the Eussian war party got the upper hand upon England's assurance that she would stand in with France." Here is a letter, said to be written by a Belgian Charge d' Affaires, at St. Petersburg, on July 30. The letter is not given. It does not appear in the official "Diplomatic Correspondence of the War," published by the Belgian Government. Its existence rests on an unsup- ported statement; but its authenticity "cannot be impeached." Are the American people, to whom this appeal is ad- dressed, satisfied to accept it as authentic on such evidence ? I do not think so. A little later, after a repetition of what is, as I have already said, the most contemptible and unworthy of all the arguments put forward by German apologists, — the attempt to make Belgium herself responsible for the out- rages committed against her (p. 124), a sarcastic effort to say she is "not the 'poor' little country" that is being pic- tured to the Americans, — Doctor Dernburg proceeds : "The Imperial Chancellor said that he had proofs that the French were to invade Germany by way of Belgium. Proof there is. French soldiers and French guns, in spite of all the denials made by the French Ambassador at Washington, were in Ligge and Namur before the 30th of July. Certainly this proof is only in private letters, but it comes from absolutely unimpeachable people." What would the Germans and "German-Americans" do without a few phrases, a few stock sentences worn thin in their hard service? Doctor Hilprecht publicly accuses the Allies of frightful cruelties on the basis of "official and absolutely trustworthy other information." Examination A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 93 shows that the "official information" is lacking, also the "trustworthiness," The German Foreign Secretary telegraphs the German Ambassador in London (August 4, 1914) (Ko. 157, British White Paper) : "Please impress upon Sir Edward Grey that the German army could not be exposed to French attack across Belgium, which was planned according to absolutely unimpeachable information/' — information, of course, un- given. And now Doctor Dernburg comes along with his unim- peachable authenticity and his '^absolutely unimpeachable people." Doctor Dernburg reiterated his "assurances" that "no matter what happens, the Monroe Doctrine will not be violated by Germany either in North America, or in South America." He had, of course, no authority to give such assurance. He neglected to repeat his former published statement that, by sending Canadian troops to the war, "Canada had placed herself beyond the pale of American protection," a statement confirmed by the inept von Bern- storfl^, the German Ambassador in this country, who also said that a German invasion of Canada would not violate the Monroe Doctrine. Doctor Dernburg did, however, accuse Canada of "a wilful breach of the Monroe Doctrine" by going to war, "thereby exposing the American Continent to a counter-attack from Europe, and risking to disarrange the present equilibrium." Can casuistry be more finely spun? Canada, an integral part of the British Empire, sends troops to aid in protecting England from the gra^e peril threatened by an autocratic military Power; and "thereby^' violates a doctrine, the very essence of which was the pro- tection of this entire hemisphere from the possibility of any 94 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR such autocratic military Power reaching over the sea to attack our all but defenseless shores. I must regretfully admit that to a certain sort of "legal" mind this theory of the non-violation of the Monroe Doctrine by the invasion of Canada is technically satis- fying {vide newspaper reports of a speech of ex- President Taft, ISTovember, 1914). But I would ask Americans gener- ally to refuse to accept without grave and justified sus- picion any such assurances as those given by von Bemstorff and Dernburg, and also to consider seriously whether they would desire to remain neutral for twenty-four hours after the bombardment of Quebec, or the occupancy of Toronto or Montreal. I think I know the answer. As the New York World observed : "Should German troops ever invade Canada, the application of the Monroe Doctrine to the specific case will he defined in Washington, not in Berlin." It may be added that unofl&cial "assurances," however "unimpeachable," were officially modified to "intentions" almost at once by our own State Department, which an- nounced that the instructions of Germany to von Bernstorff were to deny that Germany intends to seek expansion in South America. So the "assurance" becomes an "intent," and the "intent" does not include North America. Doctor Dernburg, more garrulous than his Government, endeavors to soothe our justifiable apprehension. "I am in the posi- tion to state," he says blandly, "that immediately after the outbreak of the war, by one of the first mails that reached the United States, the German Government, sent of its own free initiative, a solemn declaration to the Department of State that, whatever happened, she would fully respect the Monroe Doctrine." This would be more reassuring, first, A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 95 if Germany had so declared, and, next, if Germany's word were at par. But what difference does it make to ns whether she swears allegiance to the Monroe Doctrine, or threatens its annihilation ? We are no safer, and no more endangered, in the one case than in the other. But when Doctor Dernburg permits himself to say that "we" — meaning we Germans^ — "have no ambitions of en- largement in Europe or in America"; when he adds with touching simplicity: "We do not believe in incorporating in our empire any parts of nations that are not of our own language and race," Americans may be pardoned for asking how he reconciles this admirable disinterestedness with the words of the Kaiser addressed to his troops in East Prussia, which began, "Thanks to the valor of my heroes, France has been severely punished. Belgium, wMch interfered with ow attack, has been added to the glorious provinces of Oermany." Dernburg and the Kaiser ought to keep in closer touch if they want to influence America. The Kaiser's order appeared in our press on November 13, 1914. And yet on August 4, 1914, the German Foreign Secretary telegraphed the German Ambassador in London: "Please dispel any mistrust that may subsist on the part of the British Government with regard to our intentionsi, by re- peating most positively formal assurance that even in the case of armed conflict with Belgium, Germany will, under no pre- tense whatever, annex Belgian territory. Sincerity of this declaration is borne out by the fact that we solemnly pledged our word to Holland strictly to respect her neutrality. It is obvious that we could not profitably annex Belgian territory without making at the same time territorial acquisitions at expense of Holland. (British White Paper, No, 157.)" We wonder if the attention of Holland has been called 96 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAB to the Kaiser's order, as read in conjimction with the Sec- retary's admirable telegram! When it is, they should be read together with the opinion of the Kaiser's Professor of Philosophy at Berlin, Dr. Lasson: (45) "We Germans have little esteem and less respect and sym- pathy for the Holland of the present day. Holland in its isola- tion sinks more and more into the dull narrow-mindedness that is the mark of small sects. Without its hold on Germany it would have long ago disappeared. God be praised that the Dutch are not our friends." More recently (January, 1915), von Bethmann-Hollweg has felt it necessary to go back to the "scrap of paper" interview of August 4th, and re-interpret it, chiefly for the benefit of Americans. I have dealt with this elsewhere (p. 300), but it seems worth while to record the impression this effort has made upon an American editor: (46) "More important, but no more candid, is the recent defense put forth by the Imperial Chancellor, Doctor von Bethmann- Hollweg. This statesman's courageous admission at the open- ing of the war that G'ermany was committing 'a great wrong' because of 'necessity' has been the one noble utterance of his Government during the conflict. He now rejects, however, the esteem which his frank and generous statement won and joins the chorus of detraction against Belgium. "As the originator of the 'scrap of paper' doctrine regarding treaties, the Chancellor had attained a world-wide eminence which he resents. After six months' cogitation, he has de- cided that he has been a victim of misunderstanding, and that his historic phrase, far from being a cynical repudiation of international honor, was, in reality, an indictment of British hypocrisy and Belgian perfidy. He repeats the charge that Bel- gium had 'abandoned her neutrality' by consulting with Britain as to resisting the long-threatened violation by Germany, and A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 97 " 'England drew the sword only because she believed her own interests demanded it. Just for Belgian neutrality she would never have entered the war. That is what I meant when I told Sir Edward Goschen that among the reasons which had impelled England to go into the war, the Belgian neutrality treaty had for her only the value of "a scrap of paper." ' "We do not know the nature of the doctoral degree which the Chancellor holds, but in view of his defense we sincerely hope it is not a doctorate of laws. His attempt to erase the 'scrap of paper' stigma from the Government which assassinated Belgian nationality and stamp it upon the country which went to war in defense of that cause challenges admiration for its audacity rather than its wisdom. "We by no means subscribe to the theory that Great Britain's foreign policy is purely altruistic, or that she is pouring out her blood and treasure solely for the sake of plundered Belgium. Nor is this fantastic idea suggested by Britain herself. If Belgian had lain several hundred miles distant instead of across a narrow channel, and if a Germanized Belgium had not meant, as Germany boasted, 'a knife at the throat of England,' the British Government and people would possibly not have con- strued their guarantee of Belgium's neutrality to require resort to arms. "But even in that case it would have been Germany, not Eng- land, that made the treaty 'a scrap of paper,' while, as the matter stands. Great Britain is incontestably in the position of upholding her part in the treaty at tremendous cost, while Germany as clearly has violated her part for her own advantage. "The fundamental inspiration of England, of course, is self- interest or self-preservation — the identical purpose which Ger- many pleads. But it cannot be denied that she is promoting that cause by defending a cruelly vsTonged nation and the sanctity of international obligations, while Germany, under the same plea, has forsworn her word and committed a monstrous assault. "It is really astonishing that a statesman of high attainments should offer such a defense as that of Doctor von Bethmann- Hollweg. If it was an act of necessity, even of virtue, for Ger- many to violate the treaty for self-protection, it is quite out of the question for impartial observers to find guilty the country which observed and defended the treaty for the same reason. 7 98 A TEXT'BOOK OF TEE WAR -England ought really to cease harping on this theme of Belgian neutrality,' says the exasperated Chancellor. He do^s not yet realize that that chord vibrates to the fi-g" «*^^ n^nfty and that the note of its condemnation wall resound through all time." CHAPTEE IV. As Time Went on, Has There Been Reason to Modify or to Mitigate the Almost Universal Condemnation of Ger- many's Treatment of Belgium, Felt and Expressed at the Outset in This Country? I purposely abstain from making in this connection any definite accusation as to the individual "atrocities" ascribed to the Germans by the French and Belgians, because the evidence, even when it has been taken under oath, with names, places, dates, and details (as is the case with that offered to the world by the Belgian Commission), is met by denials, also under oath, and by virulent countercharges. It is also met, most ineffectively and almost absurdly, by the repeated publication of statements by some American newspaper correspondents who, I am sure with entire truthfulness, declare that, having been in the countries of the combatants, they saw no cases of such atrocities and could obtain no convincing evidence that they ever took place. This is interesting but unimportant. If the fact that certain persons, even those living continuously at or near the scene of a crime, and not merely visiting it with the escort and protection of the suspected criminals, had not seen the crime committed, and could get no reliable evidence that it had been committed, were allowed to weigh in Courts of Justice against the testimony of eye- witnesses who had seen it, there would be a general and world-wide jail delivery. Six reputable witnesses of a murder, a rape, a burglary, or an arson (and the Belgium case has the ear-marks of all (99) 100 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR four) should outweigh six million who would swear that — not having been there — ^they did not see it, and that they were later unable to obtain evidence satisfactory to them- selves that the murder, rape, burglary, or arson, had occurred. The entire question is one of the credibility of certain witnesses and of the weight to be given to collateral circumstances that have a bearing upon the case. Taking the latter first, should not the following extracts from Ger- man official orders be regarded as having a direct relation to the matter? EXTRACT FROM A PROCLAMATION TO THE MUNICIPAL AUTHORITIES OF THE CITY OF LIEGE. "August 22d, 1914. "The inhabitants of the to\sTi of Andenne, after having de- clared their peaceful intentions, have made a surprise attack on our troops. "It is with my consent that the Commander-in-Chief has or- dered the whole town to be burned and that about one hundred people have been shot. "I bring this fact to the knowledge of the city of Li&ge, so that citizens of Lifege may realize the fate with which they are menaced if they adopt a similar attitude. "The General Commanding in Chief. "(Signed) Von Bulow." NOTICE POSTED AT NAMUR, AUGUST THE 25TH, 1914. (1) "French and Belgian soldiers must be surrendered as prisoners of war at the prison before 4 o'clock. Citizens who do not ohey will he condemned to enforced labor for life in Germany. "A rigorous inspection of houses will begin at 4 o'clock. Every soldier found vnll be immediately shot. (2) "Arms, powder, dynamite, must be surrendered at 4 o'clock. Penalty: death by shooting. "The citizens who know where a store of arms is located must A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 101 inform the Burgomaster, tinder penalty of enforced labor for life. (3) "Each street will be occupied by a German guard, who will take ten hostages in each street, whom they will keep in custody. "If any outrage is committed in the street, the ten hostages will be shot. "The Commandant of the City. "(Signed) Von Bulow." Namur, 25th August, 1914. (Imprimerie Chantraine.) ' ^ LETTER ADDRESSED ON AUGUST 27TH, 1914, BY LIEU- TENANT-GENERAL VON NIEBER TO THE BURGOMASTR OF WAVRE. "On August 22d, 1914, the General Commanding the 2d Army, Herr von Bulow, imposed upon the city of Wavre a war levy of three million francs, to be paid before September 1st, as expia- tion for its unqualified behavior (contrary to the Law of Nations and the usages of war) in making a surprise attack on the German troops "I draw the attention of the City to the fact that in no case can it count on further delay, as the civil population of the City has put itself outside the Law of Nations by firing on the German soldiers. "The City of Wavre will he lurned and destroyed if the levy is not paid in due time, without regard for anyone; the innocent will suffer loith the gmlty." PROCLAMATION POSTED AT GRIVEGNEE, SEPTEMBER 8TH, 1914. "(1) Before the 6th of September, 1914, at 4 o'clock in the afternoon, all arms, munitions, explosives and fireworks which are still in the hands of the citizens, must be surrendered at the Chateau des Bruyeres. Those loho do not obey will render themselves liable to the death penalty. They will he shot on the spot, or given military execution, unless they can prove their innocence 102 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "(5) In order to be sure that this permission is not abused, the Burgomasters of Beyne-Heusay and of Grivegnee shall im- mediately draw up a list of persons "who shall be held as hostages,* at the fort of Fleron, in 24-hour shifts ; on September 6th, for the first time, from 6 o'clock in the evening until mid- day, September 7th. *"The life of these hostages loill depend upon the population of the aforesaid communes rem,ainmg pacific under all circtwi- stances. " ( 6 ) I will designate from the lists submitted to me the per- sons who will be detained as hostages from noon of one day to noon of the next day. If the substitute does not arrive in time, the hostage will remain another 24 hours. After this second period of 2^ hours, the hostage incurs the penalty of death if the substitution is not made "(10) Anyone knowing of the location of a store of more than one hundred litres of petroleum, beivzine, benzol, or other similar liquids in the aforesaid communes, and who does not report same to the military commander on the spot, incurs the penalty of death, provided there is no doubt about the quantity and the location of the store. Quantities of 100 litres are alone referred to "(11) Anyone who does not instantly obey the command of 'hands up,' becomes guilty (sic) of the death-penalty. . . . NOTICE POSTED AT BRUSSELS, OCTOBER 5TH, 1914, AND PRESUMABLY IN MOST OF THE COMMUNES IN THE COUNTRY. "On the evening of September 25th, the railway and tele- graph lines were destroyed on the Lovenjoul-Vertryck line. "Consequently, the two above-mentioned places, on the morn- ing of September 30th, had to give an account and to furnish hostages. "In the future, the communities in the vicinity of a place where such things happen {no matter whether or not they are accomplices) will be punished without mercy, "To this end, hostages have been taken from all places in the vicinity of railroad lines menaced by such attacks, and at A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 103 the first attempt to destroy the railroad tracks or the telegraph or telephone wires, they will be immediately shot. "Furthermore, all troops in charge of the protection of the railroad lines have received orders to shoot any person ap- proaching, in a suspicious manner, the railroad tracks or the telegraph or telephone lines. "The Governor General of Belgium, "(Signed) Baeon von dee Goltz, "Field Marsjial." NOTICE POSTED AT BRUSSELS, NOVEMBER 1ST, 1914. "A legally constituted Court Martial has pronounced, the 28th of October, 1914, the following condemnations: " ( 1 ) Upon Policeman De Ryekere for attacking, in the exer- cise of his legal functions, an agent vested with German au- thority, for wilfully inflicting bodily injury on two occasions, in concert with other persons, for facilitating the escape of a prisoner, on one occasion, and for attacking a German soldier — Five years imprisonment. "The city of Brussels, excluding suburbsi, has been punished, for the crime committed by its policeman, De Ryekere, against a German soldier by an additional fine of five million francs. "The Governor of Brussels, "(Signed) Baeon von Liietwitz, "General." EXTRACT FROM THE SIXTH REPORT OF THE BELGIAN COMMISSION OF INQUIRY. "After such proclamations^, who will be surprised at the mur- ders, burnings, pillage and destruction committed by the G'er- man army wherever they have met with resistance? "If a German corps, or patrolling party, is received at the entrance to a village by a volley from soldiers of the regular troops who are afterwards forced to retire, the whole population is held responsible. The civilians are accused of having fired or having co-operated in the defense, and without inquiry, the 104 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR place is given over to pillage and flames, a part of the inhabi- tants are massacred "The odious acts which have been committed in all parts of the country have a general character, throwing the responsi- bility upon the whole German army. It is simply the appli- cation of a preconceived system, the carrying out of instruc- tions, which have made of the enemy's troops in Belgium 'a horde of barbarians and a band of incendiaries.' " A very extraordinary instance of German prevision has been brought to light by Prof. Eaymond Weeks. (47) It is to be read in conjunction with the military orders quoted above and with the American and German evidence as to atrocities given below. It constitutes, perhaps, the most unique of all possible additions to the "Complete Letter Writer." Professor Weeks says: "The German military authorities are said to have foreseen everything. They even foresaw the need of denying atrocities, as is evinced by a manual called The Military Interpreter, second edition, Berlin, 1906; publisher, A. Bath. The author is Captain von Scharfenort, an official of the Military Depart- ment. This manual, among many useful formulae, offers a model letter of protest against an accusation of atrocities. This suggestive document is entitled, 'Letter to the Commander- in-Chief of the Hostile Army,' and commences thus : " 'In a circular letter of the Minister of Foreign Affairs you have reproached the German troops with numerous violations of international custom. " 'According to you, German troops have been guilty of acts of hostility against ambulances; they are said to have made prisoner, M. A., in the midst of an ambulance corps organized by him; they are accused of having made use of explosive bullets, of having compelled peasants in the vicinity of S. to dig trenches under fire; they are accused of having attempted to transport provision and munition trains and caissons by protecting them with the conventional sign of Geneva; finally, a physician who was earing for a wounded Prussian soldier is said to have been killed by him. A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR 105 « t; 'Although I was quite sure, a priori, that these accusa- tions were false, I was unwilling to rest content with simply assuring you that such things were impossible, and I made an inquiry to discover whether something might have happened which could have been transformed, by reporters unworthy of credence or filled with malevolence, into the monstrosities which were laid at our door.' "After stating that the inquiry offered great difficulties because of the vagueness of the accusations, he continues : " 'It is exact that M. A. was arrested, and that he had been occupied in caring for the wounded, but his arrest did not take place in the midst of an ambulance corps. It was moti- vated by the suspicion that the above-mentioned person was in communication with the garrison of S., and his arrest, as also his imprisonment which followed, took place with all of the consideration due to his situation and to his honorability. As to the duration of his detention, the military investigation alone can decide. As for all the other affirmations, I must declare them to be fabrications. Out of regard for the Powers which adhered to the Convention of Geneva and the declaration of St. Petersburg of November 29 (11 December), 1868, I add here and I affirm that the said-mentioned convention has been observed by the German troops in the most scrupulous manner,' etc. " 'Yes,' Professor Weeks adds, 'the German military authori- ties foresaw everything — except that some of their soldiers' diaries would be captured.' " / The strongest a priori argument against belief in Ger- nan atrocities rests upon the inherent improbability that men such as the Germans we have all known, and most of whom we have liked, could be so transformed by war as to be guilty of even a tithe of the hideous and bestial out- rages said to have been perpetrated by them. But are they the Germans we have known ? Is it safe to argue from Philip sober to Philip drunk? It is said that they were under iron discipline. Perhaps they were; but if that discipline openly and brazenly included a policy of 106 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR terrorism of the civilian populations of conquered terri- tory, it is itself an argument for the plaintiffs. A system that could in time of peace condone the Zabern infamy, as between individuals, could conceivably in time of war condone the asserted Belgian atrocities, as between nations. Military mouthpieces say (unrebuked, so far as I know), that "any act'^ committed by their troops for the purpose of "discouraging, defeating and destroying the enemy is a brave act." General von Disfurth is said to have said: (p. 42) "I hope that in this war we have merited the title barbarians." As to the asserted physical impossibility that some of the alleged occurrences could have taken place, I may speak with more confidence, from expert knowledge. The accomplished lady who writes for an American paper under the nom-de-plume of "Sallie Wistar" asked my opinion of the statement of a correspondent, who said: (48) ''It is unworthy of our people to accept such tales with- out proof. A moment's thought ought to convince any intelligent mind that a child, whose hands had been hacked oflE by the sword, could not have survived such an experi- ence, unless, indeed, the most skilled surgical treatment were immediately administered on the spot. ... It would require overwhelming proof to convince reasonable minds that any hapless, innocent Belgian child ever had its hands lopped off by the kindly Germans." I replied : "Your correspondent is mistaken in supposing that no child whose hands had been cut off could survive hemorrhage, fever, and shock unless skilled surgical aid be at once administered. The records of every accident and emergency hospital in the world would contradict this. "The proportion of children who would die after such mutilation would vary with the amount of hemorrhage, the degree of fever, or the extent of shock. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 107 *'But accepting the current descriptions as approximately correct, hemorrhage might be trifling, as it is apt to be after blunt wounds and crushes; fever would be absent if the wound remained, as it might remain, uninfected, and shock would be present to greater or less degree in accord with the elements of bleeding, pain and fright. Shock might be relatively trifling and need not in any case be necessarily fatal. "In some of the reported cases it seemed evident that the removal of the hand or hands had been a sequel to the wounds received, and, as might be expected, not an im- mediate and instantaneous severance by a sweep of a sabre. The latter would require a degree of expertness scarcely to be expected even from one of the War Lord's 'heroes.'' "To sum up> nothing that I have seen as to the alleged German atrocities is surgically impossible of belief." Perhaps the most astounding position taken by German- Americans as to Germany's behavior toward Belgium is to be found in an article called "War Hypocrisy Unveiled" in which the author (Albert E. Henschel), a member of the ISTew York Bar (49), in reply to the suggestion that Germany might invade this country to attack Canada, says : "In place of this moat unfair analogy let us suppose that your house was afire, with the only means of escape over your neighbor's roof. Would you dally over the question of the 'neu- trality' of your neighbor's house — considering that his home is his castle? — or would you simply go over his roof and save yourself and your family? "But what did the Germans do? Did they rush helter skelter into Belgium without so much as saying, 'By your leave?' "No. To the honor and dignity of human nature be it said that in that time of imminent peril they did what no other nation has ever done, they delayed sufficiently — when every mo- ment was precious — ^to ask permission of Belgium and to give 108 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR assurance that her integrity and independence would be pro- tected and reparation made for all losses. The future historian will refer to this act of Germany as a manifestation of a most sublime sense of justice, original and unique in the annals of the world. "When this offer was refused Germany did what any other European nation would have done in the first place. She went into Belgium to save herself from destruction. "There is no doubt that Belgium had the right to refuse permission and to resist invasion. But, when she made her choice, which involved war with Germany, she cannot complain of the war thus invited." There is one paint as tO' which many Americans will agree with him. German/s act considered as "a manifesta- tion of a most sublime sense of justice" is, beyond all cavil, '^original and unique in the annals of the world." I wish every American who desires to reach a just con- clusion as to the question of '^atrocities" could find time and opportunity to read "German Atrocities in France," a translation of the oflBcial report of the French Commis- sion the reports of the Belgian Commission of Inquiry (quoted above) ; "The Innocence of Belgium, established by the Military Documents Published by Germany"; and "Les Crimes Allemands, d'apres les Temoignages Alle- mands," by Joseph Bedier, Professor at the College da France. He would then be in possession of the affirmative side of the question and could judge for himself what weight to give to the denials. There is some evidence, however, which a book prepared by an American, for Americans, should contain. It has been summarized by Dr. Morton Prince in articles that appeared in February (50), and have been reprinted with the caption "The American Versus the German Viewpoint of the War." Dr. Prince reviews a series of articles by A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 109 Dr. von Mach, in which, vrndei the heading, "The German Viewpoint," he gives pictures of German army life in order to show that a prophecy of the elder Moltke's has been fulfilled and that because universal service has brought "the educated classes" into the army "a more humane way of waging war" has resulted. Dr. von Mach quotes from an account written by Professor von Hart- mann, now serving as a lieutenant in the German army. He calls his first "picture," a "French Lesson at the Front. Place — A Stubble Field in Belgium. Time — Autumn, 1914." He depicts groups of the "splendid fellows from the country" who have lighted their pipes after breakfast and are '^singing the beautiful home and soldier songs," which "often soften, for the time being, even the hardest hearts of warriors." Then they have a lesson in French! Another "picture" shows them marching to the front, sing- ing Koerner's "Prayer During Battle," beginning "Father I Call to Thee." Dr. von Mach adds : "Whatever selfish train of thought the individual soldier or officer had been following fell into insignificance before the grand concep- tion of God and man." Dr. Prince then presents his pictures, from the Ameri- can viewpoint. He says: "Dr. von Mach has given his pictures as drawn by an eye witness, Professor Hartmann, a German. Let me, too, draw some pictures, and let me, too, take my pictures from an eye witness in Belgium; but lie shall be a neutral witness, an American, Mr. E. Alexander Powell, who had unusual oppor- tunities to observe what he describes in his book, recently pub- lished, 'Fighting in Flanders.' He was one of the few corre- spondents on the firing line. , . . "I cite this account because I wish to disregard all ex parte testimony. All the . Belgian accounts are those of interested witnesses. We shall see the war waged in Belgium not from 110 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR the Belgian or the German viewpoint, but from the American viewpoint." He calls his picture "A German Lesson at the Front." Place — Aerschot. Time — August, 1914." He says that to understand the picture we must remember that orders had been deliberately given to burn and pillage Aerschot by the German commander after the German troops had entered the town. This, the commander himself told Mr. Powell, was in retaliation for the shooting of the chief of staff by a boy, 15 years of age, the son of the burgomaster, "What followed," Mr. Powell was given to understand — the exe- cution of the burgomaster, his son and several score of the leading townsmen, the giving over of the women to a lust- mad soldiery, the sacking of the houses, and the final burn- ing of the town — "wb,s, the punishment which would al- ways be meted out to towns whose inhabitants attacked German soldiers." This is what Mr. Powell saw : "In many parts of the world I have seen many terrible and revolting things, but nothing so ghastly, so horrifying as Aer* schot. Quite two-thirds of the houses had been burned, and showed unmistakable signs of having been sacked by a mad- dened soldiery before they were burned. "Everywhere were the ghastly evidences. Doors had been smashed in with rifle-butts and boot heels; windows had been broken; pictures had been torn from the walls; mattresses had been ripped open with bayonets in search of valuables; drawers had been emptied upon the floors; the outer walls of the houses were spattered with blood and pock-marked with bullets; the sidewalks were slippery with broken bottles; the streets were strewn with women's clothing, "It needed no one to tell us the details of that orgy of blood and lust. The story was so plainly written that anyone could read it," ... "Piecing together the stories told by those who did survive A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 111 that night of horror, we know that scores of townspeople were shot down in cold blood, and that, when the firing squads could not do the work of slaughter fast enough, the victims were lined up and a machine gun was turned upon them. "We know that young girls were dragged fiom their homes and stripped naked and violated by soldiers — many soldiers — in the public square in the presence of officers. "We know that both men and women were unspeakably mutilated, that children were bayoneted, that dwellings were ransacked and looted, and that finally, as though to destroy the evidences of their horrid work, soldiers went from house to house with torches, methodically setting fire to them." It may be observed here that there seems good reason to believe that, in many instances, the houses which were spared by the German soldiery, in accordance with direc- tions chalked upon their doors or shutters — "giite Leute- Nicht zu pliindern" — were those occupied by the German spies, known as "fixed agents." Germany is thought to spend $3,900,000 a year on this branch of her spy system ; and at the outbreak of the present war the number of "fixed" spies, i. e., spies permanently residing in a coun- try, were in France alone over 15,000. (51) The reason given by the Germans for the outrages at Aerschot — that the 15-year-old son of the burgomaster shot a German officer — ^is not denied. The Germans say that it was part of a pre-arranged plan. The Belgians say that the boy was acting in defence of his sister's honor. ]^o one now knows certmnly which story was true. But, as Dr. Prince says: "There must have been some reason, or perhaps the boy was a fanatic, or half-witted. Surely no sane man, and surely no man holding the responsible position of burgomaster, would give a dinner party to German officers and arrange to have his own son shoot one of them, knowing that there was no escape 112 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR from the consequences of such an act committed in his own home. "But accept either story you like, what do you think of the commanding officer, of the mode of conducting war, that exe- cutes several score of the leading townsmen, that shoots down women and children, that gives over the women to the soldiery, that orders the sacking of the houses and, finally, the burning down of the town, house by house, because a boy shot an officer ? "Is this the German idea of a 'hiunane way of waging war?' "If you think this mode quite justified, let me tell you how it impressed an American, one, remember, accustomed to the sights of war in many lands: " 'It was with a feeling of repulsion amounting almost to nausea that we left what had once been Aerschot behind us.' " The second scene, from the American viewpoint, is staged at Louvain. Time — same. Mr. Powell says it was: "Another scene of destruction and desolation." He describes the charred skeletons of the handsome buildings and says : "The fronts of many of the houses were smeared with crimson stains." He continues : "In comparison to its size, the Germans had wrought more widespread destruction in Louvain than did the earthquake and fire combined in San Francisco. "The looting had evidently been unrestrained. The roads for miles in either direction were littered with furniture and bedding and clothing. Such articles as the soldiers could not carry away they wantonly destroyed. Hangings had been torn down, pictures on the walls had been smashed, the contents of drawers and trunks had been emptied into the streets, literally everything breakable had been, broken. This is not from hear- say, remember, / smo it tcith my own' eyes. And the amazing feature of it all was that among the Germans there seemed to be no feeling of regret, no sense of shame. Officers in immacu- late imiforms strolled about among the ruins, chatting and laughing and smoking." A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 113 The orgy of blood and destruction had lasted two days. "Several American correspondents, among them Mr. Richard Harding Davis, who were being taken by train from Brussels to Germany, and who were held for some hours in the station at Louvain during the first night's massacre, have vividly de- scribed the horrors which they witnessed from their car win- dow. On the second day, Mr. Hugh S. Gibson, secretary of the American Legation in Brussels, accompanied by the Swedish and Mexican charges, drove over to Louvain in a taxicab. Mr. Gibson told me that the Germans had dragged chairs and a dining-table from a nearby house into the middle of the square in front of the station and that some officers, already consid- erably the worse for drink, insisted that three diplomatists join them in a bottle of wine. And this while the city was burning and rifles were cracking, and the dead bodies of men and women lay sprawled in the streets!" Dr. Prince adds, addressing Dr. von Mach: "Indeed, their 'beautiful home and soldier songs,' as you say, had softened their hearts, but the scene is a different one, isn't it? "But we have the same happy soldiers, 'lounging, talking and laughing,' just as your professor describes them, and smoking and drinking (though it is beer and wine instead of coffee) and 'everybody is elated,' just as you say. "But the Belgian townspeople, what of them ? Do the happy soldiers see them? I don't know." Louvain was not destroyed by bombardment or in the heat of battle. The Germans had entered it unopposed and had been in undisputed possession for several days. Mr. Powell had an interview with the commanding gen- eral, von Boehn, which as Dr. Prince says, is destined to become classic : "It had been sought by the general, who had expressed a wish to have an opportunity to talk with Mr. Powell, to give 114 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR him the German version of the treatment of the Belgian civil population for the enlightenment of the American public. Mr. Powell was accordingly invited to dine with the general. Here is more of the conversation as given by the former as 'nearly verhatim' as he could remember it. " 'But why wreak your vengeance on women and children?' I asked. " 'None have been killed,' the general asserted positively. " 'I as sorry to contradict you, General,' I asserted, with equal positiveness, 'but I have myself seen their bodies. So has Mr. Gibson, the secretary of the American legation in Brussels, who was present during the destruction of Louvain.' " 'Of course,' replied General von Boehn, 'there is always danger of women and children being killed during street fight- ing if they insist on coming into the streets. It is unfortunate, but it is war!' " 'But how about a woman's body I saw with the hands and feet cut off? How about the white-haired man and his son whom I helped to bury outside of Sempst who had been killed merely because a retreating Belgian soldier had shot a Gterman soldier outside their house ? " 'There were 22 bayonet wounds in the old man's face. I coimted them. How about the little girl, two years old, who was shot while in her mother's arms by an Uhlan and whose funeral I attended at Heyst-op-den-Berg ? How about the old man near Vilvorde who was hung by his hands from the rafters of his house and roasted to death by a bonfire being built imder him?' "The general seemed taken aback by the exactness of my in- formation." I have not space to quote further from Dr. Prince, but I hope all Americans who may read this will remember that the evidence given above is that of Americans, of "neutrals," not of French, or Belgians, or British, or Russians. I would ask them to read also the description of his own mental attitude given by Mr. Powell: (52) "An American, I went to Belgium at the beginning of the A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 115 war with an open mind. I had few, if any, prejudices. I knew the English, the French, the Belgians, the Germans equally well. I had friends in all four countries and many happy rec- ollections of days I had spent in each. When I left Antwerp, after the German occupation, I was as pro- Belgian as though I had been born under the red-black-and-yellow banner. I had seen a country, one of the loveliest and most peaceable in Europe, invaded by a ruthless and brutal soldiery; I had seen its towns and cities blackened by fire and broken by shell; I had seen its churches and its historic monuments destroyed; I had seen its highways crowded with hunted, homeless fugitives; I had seen its fertile fields strewn with the corpses of what had once been the manhood of the nation ; I had seen its women left husbandless and its children fatherless; I had seen what was once a Garden of the Lord turned into a land of desolation; and I had seen its people — a people whom I, like the rest of the world, had always thought of as pleasure-loving, inefficient, easygoing — I had seen this people, I say, aroused, resourceful, unafraid, and fighting, fighting, fighting. Do you wonder that they captured my imagination, that they won my admiration? I am pro-Belgian ; I admit it frankly. I should be ashamed to be anything else." I believe that, in the light of the testimony given by a writer, who, having originally been as nearly impartial as one may be to-day, and by the other fair-minded Amer- icans also quoted, the vast majority of my fellow-country- men will agree with Dr. Prince when he thus apostrophizes some of the more conspicuous German apologists : "No, Dr. von Mach, you and your fellow propagandists, Dr. Demburg and Dr. Miinsterberg, Dr. Albert and others, appeal in vain to the American people. You do not know the true full-blooded American of the twentieth century, Americans are governed by feelings of humanity, of pity, of mercy, of fair play, "Those are the ideals of our national conscience. Americana believe in a government for the people and by the people, not in a government by an autocratic military caste, without pity, without mercy, without regard for the rights of mankind. 116 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "If I read the signs of public opinion aright, if I correctly understand American ideals of human rights, Germany stands condemned by American opinion, America cares nothing for the 'necessities of war,' whether argued as an excuse for crimes against humanity by a German General Staff in 1914, or a 'Spanish Butcher' in Cuba in 1898; she cares nothing for fine- spun specious arguments as to why Germany was not to blame for the invasion of Belgium. She sees only a peaceful, unof- fending nation defending her inalienable rights to her own soil. And she sees the inhabitants, for this offense, shot down, and their houses, one by one, put to the torch ; she sees tens of thousands of homes desolate, and hundreds of thousands of in- habitants driven into exile, or starving and dependent upon American charity — all this, mind you, not as a sporadic in- stance in one city, but repeatedly, day by day, in many cities and towns; and not as unavoidable accidents from the shelling of the enemy in battle, but deliberately and systematically and unnecessarily, after the capture and occupation of the city, for the sole purpose of revenge, to overcome resistance by terrorism, as officially proclaimed and officially justified. It is for these reasons, if for no others, that Germany appeals in vain to American sympathy." I have thus far cited only Ataierieans, no Allies. But it may be permitted to offer evidence supplied by the Ger- mans themselves. In addition to the general orders above quoted (p. 100 et seq.), which are almost sufficiently damn- ing, we have many involuntary individual confessions in the shape of diaries found on German prisoners. There are large numbers of these and the Marquis de Dampierre is preparing a minute and exhaustive report upon them. In the meanwhile Prof. Joseph Bedier, of the College de France, has published a pamphlet which contains a selec- tion from those which first came to hand, with, in each instance, a photographic reproduction of the leaf or leaves quoted from. Nothing could be more direct and definite than this testimony. It is impossible to imagine it to have A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 117 been forged or in any way tampered witli. The extracts, which are quoted below, are in every case those of which the original German is photographically reproduced. (53) I translate a few only. Paul Spielmann (of Company I, Eeserve Battalion, In- fantry Brigade) describes a night surprise at a village near Blamont. He says : "The inhabitants have fled by way of the village. It was hor- rible. Blood is glued against all the houses; and as to the faces of the dead, they were hideous. They were buried at once, to the number of sixty; among them many old women, some old men, and a pregnant woman, all frightful to see; and three children who were cuddled up one against the other but were all dead. The altar and the arches of the church were demolished. "These people had telephoned to the enemy! And this morn- ing, September 2d, the survivors have been expelled; and I saw four little boys carrying on two sticks a cradle with a baby of five to six months. It is frightful to look at — everything is delivered to pillage. ... I saw also a mother with her tioo little ones, one of them with a great wound of the head, the other with an eyeball burst." Private Hassemer (of the Eighth Corps) wrote: "3-9-1914 — At Sommepy (Marne) — Horrible carnage — The village burned to the ground ; the French thrown into the burn- ing houses; civilians and all burned together." Lieutenant Kietzmann (Second Company of the First Battalion of the Forty-ninth Eegiment of Infantry) writes tinder date of August 18th: "Near Diest lies the little village of Schaffen. About fifty civilians were hidden in the church tower and thence opened fire on our troops with a mitrailleuse — all the civilians were shot." 118 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR This does not sound quite so "atrocious," given a state of war. But an interesting sidelight on this execution of "civilians" is thrown on this scrap of diary by a paragraph in the first report of the Belgian Commission of Inquiry. It says : "Killed at Schaffen, August 18th . . . among others . . . the wife of Frangois Luyckz, aged 45 years, with her little daughter, aged 12. They were discovered in a drain and were shot. The daughter, aged 9, of Jean Ooyen, was shot. Andr6 Willem, sexton, was tied to a tree and burned alive." This, to be sure, is Belgian testimony. But, taken in conjunction with Lieutenant Kietzmann's diar}'', it seems fair to conclude that some unpleasant things happened at Schaffen on August 18th last. A Saxon officer (178th Regiment, Twelfth Army Corps, First Corps of Saxony) writes, to his everlasting credit (unfortunately his name was not on his diary) : "August 26. — The attractive village of Gu6-d'Hossus (Ar- dennes), although it seemed to me innocent, was delivered to the flames. I am told that a cyclist had fallen from his wheel, his gun going off by accident, then some one had fired in his direction. Therefore all the male inhabitants have simply been thrown into the flames. It is to be hoped that such atrocities ( Scheusslichkeiten ) will not be repeated." Philipp , a private (of Kamenz, in Saxony, First Companj'-^ First Battalion, 178th Eegiment), on August S3d wrote : "At ten o'clock this evening the battalion entered a village that had been burned, lying to the north of Dinant. The sight made one shudder. At the entrance to the village lay about fifty villagers, shot for having from ambush fired upon our troops. In the course of the night many others, to the number A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 119 of more than two hundred were shot. Wotnen and children ■loere forced to hold lamps in their hands and thus assist at this horrible spectacle. Afterwards we ate our rice among the cadavers, as we had not eaten since morning." Private Schlauter (Third Battery, Fourth Eegiment of Field Artillery) wrote, August 35th: "In Belgium. ... of the citizens about 300 were shot. The survivors were requisitioned as grave-diggers. You should have seen the loomen at that time! But there was nothing else to do." Professor Bedier also gives three facsimiles of portions of an article by Under-Officer Klemt, published in the Jauersches Tageblatt, October 18, 1914. It is entitled: "A Day of Honor for Our Eegiment, 24 September, 1914." His description refers to an incident which occurred near the little village of Hannonville, when, after a skirmish, his soldiers came upon some wounded Ftenchmen lying in a little depression. He says they killed them by clubbing them or running them through. He goes on : "At my side I hear some peculiar crackings; they are Hows from a gun-butt with which a soldier of our 15Jf.th is striking the told head of a Frenchman; very wisely he is using for this work a French gun, for fear of breaking his own. The men with especially sensitive souls do the wounded Frenchmen the honor -of finishing them with a bullet; but the others hack and hew as hard as they can. Our adversaries had fought courageously . . . but whether they were wounded slightly or gravely our brave fellows saved for their Fatherland the expensive care which it would have been obliged to give to so many enemies." The accuracy of Klemt's narraitive was attested by his ISO A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR superior. Lieutenant von Niem. The eloquent author of the article asserts that His Eoyal Highness, Prince Oskar of Prussia, when he heard of the exploits of the 154th, said that it, and a grenadier regiment that made up the brigade, were worthy of the name "Konigsbrigade !" I can spare room for the reproduction of only one of the original pages of these diaries. (See opposite page.) I have selected my quotations almost at random. There are many more to be found in Prof. Bedier's pam- phlet and a much larger number that, as I have said, will be published later in fac-simile, after study and arrange- ment by an expert cartographer. It may be that someone who takes the trouble to read them will remain unconvinced. They seem to me conclu- sive, but may not seem so to everyone. But, I may ask then, what is the indisputahle German record as to Belgium? Thousands of civilians have been killed; tens of thou- sands have been rendered homeless and are living on charity; many miles of Belgian territory have been occu- pied by German invaders; the stories of Aerschot, Ter- monde, Louvain, Liege, ISTamur, Eheims are known to^ all ; fines of millions of francs have been levied as a punish- ment for resistance to a brutal breach, of neutrality. Is it, after all, worth while to seek for evidence of other atroci- ties? These are known to, and have been condemned by the whole civilized world. As David Starr Jordan has well expressed it: (54) "To 'hack a way througli' civilization is the sum of outrages, by whomsoever committed, or whatever the details of the method by which it is accomplished. To consider excuses or apologies for details is in some degree to condone the real offense. '^ <.'. v,^.vfV '/^*-v >4^4,^^ =. ^^^?^ "i- ^-rj^ From the Diary of Private Paul Glode. German Text. See facsimile on reverse side. "[Von der Wut der Soldaten kann man sich ein Bild machen, ■\venn man die zerstoi'ten] Dorfer sieht. Kein Haus ist mehr ganz. Alles essbare wird von einzelnen Soldaten vequiriert. Mehrere Haufen Menschen sah man. die standreclitlich erscliossen \vnrden. Kleine Schweinchen lief en umher und snchten ihre Mutter. Hvinde lagen an der Kette und liatten nichts zu fressen und zu saufen und iiber ilinen brannten die Hjiuser. "Xeben der gerechten Wut der Soldaten selireitet aber aucli purer Vandalismus. In ganz leeren Dorfer setzen sie den roten Halm ganz Willkiirlich auf die Hiiuser. Mir tun die Leute leit. Wenn sie audi unfaire \'\'aflen gebrauchen, so verteidigen sie doch nur ihr Vaterland. Die Grausamkeiten die veriibt wurden und nocli werden von seiten der Burger werden wust geriicht. "Verstilmmelungen der ^'erw'lmdeten sind an Tagesordnimg." Translation. "August 12, 1914. In Belgium. One gets an idea of the mad- ness of our soldiers when one sees the demolished villages. Not a single house intact. Everything eatable has been taken by the soldiery. I saw many heaps of human beings who had been sentenced and executed. Little pigs ran around among them, seeking their mothers. Dogs, without food or W'ater, were chained among the burning houses. Sheer vandalism was present as well as just anger. To villages already absolutely abandoned our soldiers arbitrarily applied the incendiary torch ( "den roten Hahn," "the Bed Cock" ) . The inhabitants made one sorry. If they did employ unfair weapons they were after all defending iheir Fatherland. The atrocities that those villagers commit or have committed are avenged in a barbarous manner. "The mutilation of the wounded is a daily routine." "[From the diary of Private Paul Glode, of the 9th Battalion of Pioneers ( 9th Corps ) ] ." A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 121 "The huge fact of the crushing of Belgium submerges all details. Our thought is expressed in these words of Emerson: 'What you are speaks so loudly we cannot hear what you say.' " An American paper (55) has well summed up this aspect of the matter. It says that even if we made the acquittal of the German private soldier as broad and sweep- ing as it could be made, there have, nevertheless, been atrocities, aside from those attributed to the individual, atrocities committed by the German Government. It con- tinues : "The German Government sowed the North Sea with mines and blew up harmless trawlers coming from the Scandinavian countries and Holland. The German Government sent airships over Antwerp, Paris, Warsaw, and many undefended and un- fortified towns and villages in France, Belgium, and Poland, and scattered death and destruction impartially on home, shop, and farm. The German Government dispatched warshipsi to the coast of England and killed women and children in Whitby, Hartlepool, Scarborough, and Yarmouth. The German Govern- ment revived the mediaeval custom of holding hostages and killing them if the population from which they came committed any infraction of the rules of war. The German Government held cities for ransom. The German Government has now com- pleted its record of atrocities by declaring a war zone arovmd England and putting the ships of every neutral nation on notice that if they venture into that zone they may be sunk with all on board! "These are the real atrocities. What difference does it make that exuberant liars in the early days of the war may have ascribed to the German private a ferocity that was not his? Probably he did not cut off the hands of Belgian women; prob- ably he did not spear French babies on his bayonet. But his superior officers had given him a lesson in ruthless brutality, in reversion to barbarity, to seek a parallel for which we should have to go to the Indian raids on the Colonies, and if he omitted to follow that suggestion it is vastly to his credit. The atroci- ties, if by that word we mean individual cruelty, may be dis- 132 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR missed; but how is the G'erman Government going to make its defense at the bar of the civilized world when it is arraigned on the charge of ordering atrocities on a vaster scale than it would ever enter into the mind of a private soldier, however, depraved he might be, to conceive? "There is an active German propaganda in this country. Its agents are tireless. But there is an agency far more powerful at work in behalf of the cause for which England and France and Russia are fighting. It is' the wireless telegraph station at Sayville, which receives and gives out the official reports and declarations of the German Government." A book (56), which Professor J. H. Morgan has just translated, the notorious "Kriegsbrauch im Landkriege^' or "German War Book," issued by the German General Staff, for the instruction of oflBcers, is in itself alomst suf- ficient evidence of their inhuman and barbarous methods. "It asserts the rules of war as they are understood by the Prussian military school, justifying by rote all those practices which have amazed the world at Aerschot, Rheims, and Louvain. The German General Staff, clause by clause, destroys in these pages every safeguard which through centuries of civilizing effort has been erected to soften the rigour of war so far as this may be done consistently with war's purpose. The pro- fession of arms is stripped of all honour. Under the terms of these German regulations the practice of war is not possible to an honorable man. The German officer is required to terrify the helpless into betraying their own people, to murder prisoners, to retain women and children under fire, to levy blackmail upon surrendered cities, to compel the civilian enemy to prepare works for the destruction of his country, to suborn incendiaries and assassins. Upon all these matters the German War-Book is explicit. . . . We will take two instances illustrating the German idea of war. On marching into the enemy- country the German officer is instructed to require from the inhabitants the services of native guides to enable him the more easily to locate and destroy the defenders. Should these unwilling guides lead the invader A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 123 astray they must necessarily be shot. The guide, we are told, 'owed obedience to the power in occupation.' He has been guilty of 'passive disobedience' by neglecting to locate his eomradesi in order that they might be destroyed: 'The leaders of the troops cannot do otherwise than punish the offender with death, since only by harsh measures of defense and intimidation can the repetition of such offences be prevented.' It does not seem to occur to the G'ermani War Staff that pro- ceedings which require that civilians shall be shot for refusing to betray their country are in the least blameworthy. Our second instance restores the practices of war as they were understood in the Middle Ages. It has always been held by the historians as a blot upon the fame of a great English King that four himdred years ago the women and children of a French town were refused a free passage through the lines. The Kriegsbrauch of modern Germany allows and glorifies an act which four centuries ago was felt to be needlessly inhuman. It is laid down in the German War-Book that the defender of a fortress must not be allowed to strengthen himself by sending away to a place of safety the women, children, old people, and wounded. To allow helpless non-combatants to pass through one's lines is 'in fundamental conflict with the principles of war.' Will not these women, children, old people, and wounded gravely embarrass the defenders? May not their slaughter by shot and shell induce the garrison to surrender a little sooner? 'The very presence of such persons,' says the German book of war, 'may accelerate the surrender of the place in certain circumstanes, and it would therefore be foolish of a besieger to renounce volimtarily his advantage."' As The Outlodk said about the raid on Scarborough: (57) "The victims were not soldiers, but civilians, and to a large extent women and children. What military advantage commen- surate with the effort and risk can come from such a raid is hard to say, but one great disadvantage has resulted. Germany is making a great effort to secure the approval of American sentiment. Such a raid as this nullifies the arguments of Ger- man representatives. Americans are not won by exploits that 124 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR end in the killing of women and babies; and all the reasoning in the world will not conceal the fact that the raid on Scar- borough waa an exploit of this kind." But the question that heads this chapter can hardly be adequately answered by consideration only of the atrocities of war. There are other forms of "atrocity," diplomatic and controversial for example. The best instance, because at this writing the most recent and most conspicuous, is the effort which Germany and the German apologists are making to shift the respon- sibility for the Belgian outrage to the shoulders of the Belgians themselves. This added German crime, this contemptible attempt to make it appear to the American people that Belgium has herself been "guilty" and "criminal" and is merely receiving just chastisement, is so significant that I do not want the opinion I have expressed to seem to be only a personal one. The matter is adequately dealt with by one of our American paper. (58) It begins: "It is an evidence, we suppose, of that admirable efficiency which marks the Teutonic character that Germany is still making relentless war upon Belgium — not only against the army, but against the people; not only to destroy the nation's independence, but to blast the good name it has won by heroic sacrifice. "Were it not for the testimony of Louvain and of the huge war levies extorted from the famine-stricken country, it would be incredible that a civilized government should deliberately seek to traduce a people whom it had already wronged and robbed. Not satisfied with bloody conquest, Germany is determined to strip her victim even of honor — would brand her as guilty of broken faith, the very offense to which Germany herself has ofiicially confessed. The persistence of this campaign makes A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 135 it necessary to keep the record straight before the American people. "The present attack started a couple of months ago with the announcement that the invaders, rummaging through government papers in Brussels, had found documents proving that 'Belgium violated her own neutrality' in 1906 by agreeing to the landing of British troops in case of war. "For weeks this odious charge was trumpeted to the world, with all the offensive comment that enmity could invent. Having exhausted the resources of unsupported slander, Germany has at last published the documents, with an adroit elucidation by Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, special publicity agent of Germany in this country." The editorial then cites the facts as to the violation of the treaty of Belgium and says that, as to them, there is no controversy, as the German Government had confessed its own guilt and pleaded "military necessity.^' The out- hurst of condemnation that followed its crime, however, caused this attitude to be abandoned, and the so-called "secret documents'^ provided a pretense for completing the crushing of Belgium, by denouncing her as a dishonorable plotter against Germany's security. "Kothing more revolting in its cold-blooded injustice was ever perpetrated in international controversy,'' the editorial continues, "but the studied effort to heap insult upon injury will make Belgium's case more than ever the cause of civilization." It then tells the story of the "secret documents," which need not here be set forth (see pp. 363-76), the charge which was falsely and maliciously founded upon them, and goes on : "When one thinks of the ruined cities and famine-haunted people of Belgium, of the sufferings endured by that nation to keep inviolate its pledged word, it is difficult to characterize adequately the malignant craft of this charge. 136 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "The veiy documents produced in its support, confidential as they were, recorded in plain terms Belgium's absolute deter- mination to stand by her obligations of neutrality — not only against Germany, but against France or England or any other country — and they as plainly reveal Germany as the sole menace to that neutrality, just as the event proved. "Yet Doctor Dernburg, who is of course the chief protagonist in this country, has the audacity to cite these memoranda as evidence of what he calls Belgium's 'guilt'! In the hope, no doubt, that Americans would read his preface and ignore the documents themselves, he delibrately suppresses paragraphs which prove Belgium's scrupulous insistence upon her neu- trality and Great Britain's steady recognition thereof. " 'Plans had been concerted,' he says, 'to invade Belgium, in 1906.' Here he accuses the British of plotting and the Belgians of consenting to a violation of the treaty of neutrality. He says, further: " 'The imperial Chancellor has declared that there was irref- utable proof that if Germany did not march through Belgium her enemies would. This proof, as now being produced, is of the strongest character.' "Doctor Dernburg makes his outrageous charge in the face of the following explicit passages in the papers: "'Colonel Barnardiston (the British attach^) referred to the anxieties of the General Staff of hisi country with regard to the general political situation and because of the possibility that war may soon break out. In case Belgiiun should be attacked, the sending of about 100,00(> troops was provided for. ... The landing of the English troops would take place on the French coast in the vicinity of Dunkirk and Calais. The entry of the English into Belgium would take place only after the violation of our neutrality by Germany.' "These provisos, carefully avoided by the German publicity agent, prove that the projected British 'invasion' was to take place only in the event of and following a German invasion. The arrangement was as creditable to Great Britain — a guar- antor of the neutrality treaty — as the tmprovoked assault last August by Germany was dishonorable. The 'guilt' of Belgium consisted in consulting the neighbors as to what should be done in case of an expected incursion by a burglar. "The event shows that the precaution was eminently justified, A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 127 and that Britain's offense lay not in plans of aggression, but in unpreparedness to fulfill her obligations to defend the neutrality she had guaranteed. "Exactly the same condition applies to the 1912 memorandum. Belgium therein gave notice that even to save her territory she would not yield to a British landing made without her consent. And that landing, also, was to be made only in case Germany had first forsworn her pledged word and had violated the neutrality for which she was in part responsible. "A third Dernburg paragraph almost answersi itself. The government that would speak of the 'guilt of Belgian' all but forfeits its place in the family of nations. "Germany's intention to invade Belgium instantly on the outbreak of war had been proclaimed and advertised and boasted for years in the published works of her military strate- gists. If Belgium had not 'concerted plans' with Britain and France to defend herself, she would have been guilty of supreme folly; and if Great Britain had not prepared for action to follow a German assault upon Belgium, she would have been false to her pledged word. "The complaint that Belgium did not 'approach' Germany in the same manner is surely the very acme of irony, for she had already received notice that Germany would tear up the 'scrap of paper' to which her imperial pledge had been given, and would invoke 'necessity, which knows no law.' "But abstract arguments and documentary evidence alike can be put aside when the world examines the actual events. No advocacy can explain away the facts that Belgium was true to her neutrality; that France did not violate it; that Great Britain did not, and that Germany did; that German armies had been for some time overrunning Belgium before a French or British detachment set foot on the violated territory. " 'Only our prompt action at Liege,' says Doctor Iternburg, with astounding hardihood, 'prevented the English landing and invading Belgium.' Evidently he thinks Americans never saw a map of Belgium ; the taking of Liege could not possibly inter- fere with a British invasion — as a fact, the city has been held by the Germans for months, yet the landing of British troops has never been interfered with. "Equally deceptive is the generality that 'all Belgium's fortresses are on the eastern frontier.' Namur is near the 128 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR Doraer of France, and could not possibly menace a German army unless that army had penetrated one-third way across Belgium. "Doctor Dernburg is more himself when he frankly states that 'the Belgian people had been told at the beginning of the war that Germany demanded that the Belgian force should fight with the Germans against the French and English.' This was the true German conception of neutrality and of the 'scrap of paper' to which her imperial word was attached. "We have given this much space to a renewed discussion of the Belgian question because it is, to Americans, the vital issue of the war. It embraces rights and principles which are fundamental to every nation's security and the very per- manence of civilization. And most neutrals will give small heed to German pleas about 'Russian barbarism.' 'French revenge' or 'British greed' while the corpse of Belgiimi's mur- dered nationality appeals for justice. "The violation of that country was a moral, a legal and an international offense for which there can be no excuse and no palliation. It was a barbarous wrong, a defiance to civilization, an act of perfidy without parallel in history; because it was committed in an age when the obligations of honor and decency are stronger than at any other period of human development. "There are issues of the war the responsibility for which must be shared with Germany by other countries. But concern- ing Belgium her guilt is unique and undivided. And it will grow more odious with every effort she makes to shift it to her victim, though she produces docixments enough to choke the Kiel canal." I do not apologize for the space I have given here and elsewhere to the ease of Belgium vs. Grermany. It is not only to Americans "the vital issue of the war" as regards things past. It is also of supreme importance in all its relations; in the cold-blooded perpetration of the crime, in the barefaced avowal that it was a crime, in the deceit- ful withdrawal of that avowal when the outraged moral sense of the world was realized, in the clumsy, blundering efforts to explain it away, in the barbarous atrocities that A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 129 followed it, and finally in this last contemptible attempt by the juggling of documents, the glossing over of essential sentences, the actual suppression of important paragraphs, to make it seem to the American people, that Belgium, if she is, by ill fate, destined to disappear from the face of the earth, does so as a shameful suicide instead of as the victim of a brutal international murder. The question at the head of this chapter is most cer- tainly and unhesitatingly to be answered in the negative. CHAPTEE V. In What Estimation Does America To-day Hold Belgium? If time had permitted that the opportunity be offered there would have been a thousand American contributions to the tribute paid to the King of Belgium, known as "King Albert's Book." Colonel Eoosevelt, for example, who is as well known to all peoples of the world as any living Ameri- can, and as much respected, does not appear as a contribu- tor. But he has, characteristically and unequivocally ex- pressed his views in his book, Just published: (59) "Luxembourg made no resistance. It is now practically incorporated in Germany. Other nations have almost forgotten its existence and not the slightest attention has been paid to its fate; simply because it did not fight; simply because it trusted solely to peaceful measures and to the treaties which were supposed to guarantee it against harm. The eyes of the world, however, are on Belgium because the Belgians have fought hard and gallantly for all that makes life best worth baving to honorable men and women. In consequence, Belgium has been trampled under foot. At this moment not only her men but her women and children are enduring misery bo dreadful that it is hard for us who live at peace to visualize it to ourselves." ****** "When once Belgium was invaded, every circumstance of national honor and interest forced England to act precisely as she did act. She could not have held up her head among nations had she acted otherwise. In particular, she is entitled to the praise of all true lovers of peace, for it is only by action such as she took that neutrality treaties and treaties guar- anteeing the rights of small powers will ever be given any value. The actions of Sir Edward Grey as he guided Britain's (130) A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 131 foreign policy showed adherence to lofty standards of right combined with firmness of courage under great strain." "There is one nation, however, as to which there is no room for difference of opinion, whether we consider her wrongs or the justice of her actions. It seems to me impossible that any man can fail to feel the deepest sympathy with a nation which is absolutely guiltless of any wrongdoing, which has given proof of high valor, and yet which has suffered terribly, and which, if there is any meaning in the words 'right' and 'wrong,' has suffered wrongfully. Belgium is not in the smallest degree responsible for any of the conditions that during the last half century have been at work to impress; a certain fatalistic stamp upon those actions of Austria, Russia, Germany, and France which have rendered this war inevitable. No European nation has had anything whatever to fear from Belgium. There was not the smallest danger of her making any aggressive movement, not even the slightest aggressive movement, against any of her neighbors. Her population was mainly industrial and was absorbed in peaceful business. Her people were thrifty, hard-working, highly civilized, and in no way aggressive. She owed her national existence to the desire to create an abso- lutely neutral State. Her neutrality had been solemnly guaran- teed by the great Powers, including Grermany as well as England and France. "Suddenly, and out of a clear sky, her territory was invaded by an overwhelming Grerman army." . "The Germans are in Belgium from no fault of the Belgians, but purely because the Germans deemed it to their vital interest to violate Belgium's rights. Therefore the ultimate responsi- bility for what has occurred at Louvain, and what has occurred and is occurring in Brussels rests upon Germany and in no way upon Belgium. The invasion could have been averted by no action of Belgium that was consistent with her honor and self- respect. The Belgians would have been less than men had they not defended themselves and their country." . . . "The prime fact as regards Belgium is that Belgium was an entirely peaceful and genuinely neutral power which had been guilty of no offence whatever. What has befallen her is due to the further fact that a great, highly civilized military power 133 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR deemed that its own vital interests rendered imperative the in- fliction of this suffering on an inoffensive although valiant and patriotic little nation." These writings of Colonel Eoosevelt represent the opin- ion — the fixed, unalterable, intense and practically •unani- mous opinion of all Americans, except that portion of the German-Americans that has been allowed to represent — ^or misrepresent — ^them in public. This opinion is no less well set forth by the following distinguished Americans who contributed to ''King Albert's Book." "Under the gallant lead of the heroic Belgian King, his downtrodden and afflicted people have been fighting for liberty, and to maintain the plighted faith of nations, which guaran- teed it to them. Those who were guilty of an awful breach of faith, confessed their crime while in the act of committing it, and pleaded necessity to absolve them from all law, a plea which the whole civilized world refuses to accept. "For their bold stand for right and duty, the Belgians, guiltless of all offense, have been overwhelmed by numbers, trampled in the dust, and reduced to starvation, their homes destroyed, their whole country devastated and converted into a human slaughter-house. "In this sad plight, they have deserved axid are receiving the sympathy and the helping hand of people of every civilized nation in this hour of their dire distress. "I am glad to know that my countrymen are sending material relief to the sufferers, and with it the hearts of our people go out to them and their brave king, in human sympathy, un- feigned and unrestrained. "As neutrals, by international law and by our own law, our hands are tied and will remain so. But our hearts go Avhither they list." — Hon. Joseph H. Choate. "BELGIUM "Ruined ? Destroyed ? Ah, no ; though blood in rivers ran Down all her ancient streets; though treasures manifold Love-wrought, time-mellowed, and beyond the price of gold Are lost, yet Belgium's star shines still in God's vast plan. A: A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 133 "Rarely have kings been great, since kingdoms first began; Rarely have great kings been great men, when all was told. But, by the lighted torch in mailed hands, behold Immortal Belgium's immortal king, and man." — Ella Wheeler Wilcox. "La Belgique ne regrette rien." "Not with her ruined silver spires, Not with her cities shamed and rent. Perish the imperishable fires That shape the homestead from the tent. "Wherever men are staunch and free. There shall she keep her fearless state, And, homeless, to great nations be The home of all that makes them great." — Edith Wharton. "The proposed tribute is part of the debt of honor and rever- ence which is due from the whole world to that most nobly heroic people and the prince who has shown himself worthy of them. The tragedy of their great little land is of a pathos matchless in the history of the past; and in the future when, as we all hope, the military spirit of Germany shall be brought low, I believe the Germans themselves will share our horror of the ruin they have wrought among its homes and shrines. — WilUam Demi Howells. "Belgium is rare; Belgium is unique. Among men arises on rare occasions a great man, a man of cosmic import; among nations on rare occasions arises a great nation, a nation of cosmic import. Such a nation is Belgium. Such is the place Belgium attained in a day by one mad, magnificent, heroic leap into the azure. As long as the world rolls and men live, that long will Belgium be remembered. All the human world owes, and will owe, Belgium a debt of gratitude such as was never earned by any nation in the history of nations. It is a mag- nificent debt, a proud debt that all the nations of men will sacredly acknowledge." — Jack London. "We have experienced so many emotions in America in the course of this terrible war that it would be difiicult, had not Germany violated the neutrality of Belgium, to assert definitely 134 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR what has been our dominant sensation. But, as it is, I think I can safely speak for my countrymen, and state that nothing has so horrified us and aroused our indignation and sympathies as the cruel fate of this valiant little country. "Above all, no chapter of the war, as yet presented to us, has so excited our admiration as well as our profound respect. We are the only country, owing to our geographical position as well as to our facilities, that has been able to look at all sides of the European imbroglio from the beginning; and propaganda has made no impression whatever upon us. We have had the opportunity to make up our minds, and wholly out of order as this would appear in certain quarters, we be- lieve ourselves to be quite equal to this feat without exterior assistance. We know, among many other things, that the magnificent resistance at Lifege upset all the long-matured plans of the German War Office, and that had Belgium proved either weak or ignoble, the history of the war would be very different reading to-day. "I venture to say that every town in the United States, big and little, has its Belgian Relief Society, even if it does not spread beyond the dimensions of the weekly sewing circle; and that the most consistent democrat in the country takes off his hat to King Albert of Belgium. The Americans are always alert to recognize a man, and are capable of being quite^ in- different to the niche presented to him by destiny. What he does in that niche is the point. If the result of this upheaval is a great European Republic (I refer, of course, to the Con^ tinent), I feel positive that if the people of the United States of America were allowed to vote, the popular candidate would be King Albert of Belgium." — Gertrude Atherton. This chapter might, by extracts from current American literature, be almost indefinitely prolonged. But quite sufficient additional American testimony will be found in Chapters III, IV, X and XI, and indeed, throughout the book, to justify the statement that everywhere in America to-day the words "1 am a Belgian" would, as in the Aus- tralian's thrilling war poem (p. 88), bring instant evi- dence of deep sympathy and profound respect. CHAPTEE VI. Is There Any Evidence Which Tends to Show Why the Present Time Was Selected by Germany to Precipitate the War? Professor Usher, the author of "Pan-Germanism" (where much interesting matter corroborative of the state- ments of Emil Eeich, as to Germany's megalomania, may be found presented in a more dignified way), has best answered this question in an article on "The Eeasons Behind the War." (60) In the first place, Austria for centuries has dreamed of dominating southeastern Europe, of ruling the Balkans, of possessing a seacoast on the Adriatic and ^gean. Only the control of Servia can give her fully and unreservedly what she desires. Moreover, under Servia's leadership, once she had recovered from her great losses in men and resources during the Balkan wars, a strong Slav state might have been established in control of all Austria's present approaches to the Adriatic. Her motives seem plain, and she was in precisely the position, after the mur- der of the Arch-Duke Ferdinand, to serve as a cafs-paw for her "ally" — and master. But why did the latter push her relentlessly into war at this time, when ample repara- tion was offered and further amends were easily procurable, as the evidence shows beyond all question? The Anglo- Irish difficulties, the Canadian-Hindu troubles, the sensa- tional disclosures in the French Chamber as to the bad condition of the army, the alleged deficiencies in the French areoplane squadrons, the only partial recovery of (135) 136 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Eussia from the effects of the Japanese war, the exhaustion of the Balkan States themselves from their recent wars, even the preoccupation of the United States with troubles in Mexico, all seemed to preclude the chance of a general interference. Professor Usher continues: "If such interference took place and a general European war resulted, there had not been in twenty years anything like as favorable an opportmiity for the Triple Alliance or one as disadvantageous for the Triple Entente. The stake was so immense, the results of success would be so stupendous, so out of proportion, in the case of the Triple Alliance, with what they might lose, that the issue of war might even be courted with some assurance. . . . "The schemes of the Pan-Germanists indeed reach to the creation of a vast confederation of states. . . . reaching 'from the North Sea to the Persian Gulf, from the Baltic to the Mediterranean,' as one of their slogans has it. . . . "Of this great scheme (supposing it to be, as many claim, the veritable policy of the Triple Alliance) the undisputed possession of the Balkans by the Triple Alliance is the most important single factor. . . . "As to a general assault upon the Triple Entente the Triple Alliance has long seen two obvious methods, both in the opinion of many, likely to be successful; the one, a long waiting game where the rapid growth of the population in Germany, Austria, and Italy, and the decline of the rate of growth in France, England, and Russia, would in time give the Alliance a real preponderance in numbers; the other, a short quick blow at some moment when the Triple Alliance could bring all its strength to bear and when the Triple Entente could not. The former meant, not improbably, many years of waiting, and in those years much might happen. "Thoroughly alive to the situation, the Triple Entente had already under execution the preliminaries of so vast an increase of offensive force, and showed such a determination to main- tain a naval and military preponderance, that there would be no alternative but waiting, once these schemes were perfected. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAE 137 The French, and particularly the Russian, army was to be increased, not only in size, but in efficiency and equipment; and an influential minority in England, with apparent popular support, was agitating conscription. The English navy was to be much increased in fighting force by manning at war strength in the near future a much larger proportion of ships than ever before. Chiefest of all, the Russians were building in the Baltic a really formidable fleet, capable of contesting the Baltic with Germany and of threatening the rear of the German fleet in the Atlantic to such an extent that united fleet action in the North Sea would become an impossibility. "If they [the Triple Alliance] were to fight at all, they musit fight now. Next siunmer might be too late. Now the actual offensive force of their rivals was proportionately less than it might be again for ten years, and their difficulties at home were collectively and individually greater than any of the three has seen for a generation. "So far as the fulfillment of the schemes of Pan-Germanism was concerned, the moment was more than opportune and might not return." Professor Usher seems to me to have sufficiently an- swered Question VI. CHAPTEE yil. What Are the Principles Represented by the Opposing Forces in This War? A. They are absolutism and militarism on the one hand and democratic liberty and representative government on the other. For a century a transference of political power from military despots to popular assemblies has been going on in Western Europe. In Russia and the Far East the same gradual shift of forces has been taking place. France and Portugal are republics. England is democratic. Japan has abandoned feudalism for democracy. China is an experimental republic. Eussia has her Duma. Servia has fought for self-government. The people of Italy have shown their real sentiments by keeping her from fighting against the Allies. Belgium has a growing and intelligent democratic minority of its population. At this critical tide in the affairs of the world the inmost feelings of the peoples involved, the beliefs and aspirations that are a living part of their very being are apt to dominate and often — ^though I admit, not invariably — determine their action. What is the alignment ? On one side Germany — ^with whose ideals and purposes we are familiar — Austria, not a real nation, but an arti- ficial conglomeration of heterogeneous peoples, the mere tool of Germany, and Turkey, now, as always, the type of a corrupt fanatic Oriental despotism. On the other, France, England, Belgium, Servia, Portugal, Eussia, Japan. (138) A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 139 And ranged on their side, so far as sympathy goes, are the democratic neutral powers, Denmark, Norway, Hol- land, Italy and the United States. The Outlook, which has admirably summed up the foregoing facts, says editorially: (61) "When in a chemical experiment certain molecules by a natural attraction combine, that fact shows that they have something in common. When, in such a war as this, France, England, Belgium, Portugal, Japan and Russia combine, that fact shows that these various peoples have something in com- mon. We believe that something in common is a passionate desire for democratic liberty. "The victory of Germany can be no other than a victory for militarism ; the victory of the Allies no other than a victory for permanent peace. If Germany wins she must maintain her armaments, if not increase them; for power obtained by force can be maintained only by force. If Germany is defeated, a diminution of her armaments as a condition of peace may well be demanded by the Allied Powers." Dr. Dernburg has, with great pains, tried to portray for the benefit of Americans, a Germany which will excite their admiration. He sneers (63) at Chesterton, Caine, Wells, Doyle and Bennett as "writers of fiction." If any one of them ever wrote a story or a novel less convincing than the "official" and "unimpeachable" documents of Ger- many and its representatives during this present war, we have failed to see it. As a writer of "fiction," Doctor Dernburg is himself entitled, in everything but interest and plausibility, to rank with any one of them. His ver- sions of the Chancellor's speech to the Eeichstag, and of Germany's "solemn declaration" to our Department of State, would alone suffice to class him with Hall Caine, "Germany," he asserts, 'Tias no special grudge against any- body." He forgets his Goethe : "Ein echter deutscher Mann 140 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR mag keinen Franzen leiden. Doch ihre Weine trinkt er gem." "Grudge" craps out of every sentence of his paper ; grudge against England, grudge against France, grudge against "poor little" Belgium (it is Ms sneer we quote), and against Eussia. If the United States escape such obvious ill will, this may be due to his extraordinary sense of ^^obligation as a guest." At least, as we have seen, he intimates that we have von Bernhardis in this country, and that he would shame us by naming them if he were free to do so ! The Germany described by Doctor Dernburg is one which few Americans will recognize. Grudgeless, "fighting morally for her freedom and her existence," "modest," wanting merely her oft-claimed "place under the sun"; "out for conquest on a peaceful line," "the line where the higher culture wins"; a "democracy," "'directed by the most liberal ballot law that exists, even more liberal than the one in use in the United States." Only the last of these statements deserves passing mention, and this because it might delude some American who had not time to inform himself. The "democracy" so eulogized is no more a democracy in our sense, or in the French sense, or in the English sense (despite the monarchical form of the British government) than it is a Court of Archangels. As Mr. Mencken says, it is not "a democracy in the American sense, or anything colorably resembling it. It was founded upon no romantic theory that all men were natural equals." Metzsche re- served Brotherhood for "shopkeepers, cows, women and Englishmen." It is a "democracy" in which the vote of one Prussian Junker is equal in political effect to the votes of many men of lower class. It is a "democracy" with 3,000,000 oflBcials for 14,000,- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 141 000 electors, or, roughly speaking, "one policeman to every five adults" (Price Collier). It is a "democracy" in which, as Sarolea said in 1913, every part of the empire has theoretically a proportional share in the administration, while Prussia really enjoys the ultimate political and financial control. It is a "democracy which Professor McElroy entitles a "half Slavonic military despotism, calling its war chief the 'anointed of the Lord,' and to maintain and extend which the Germans are giving their lives." It is a "democracy" with an "Overlord" who can seriously say: (Bremen, 1897) "If we have been able to accomplish what has been accom- plished, it is due above all things to the fact that our hoxise" (the Hohenzollerns) "possesses a tradition by virtue of which we consider that we have been appointed by God to preserve and direct for their own welfare the people over whom He has given us power." And still later, only four years ago : (1910, Konigsberg) "It was in this spot that my grandfather, in his own right placed the royal crown of Prussia upon his head, insisting once again that it was bestowed upon him by the grace of God alone, and not by parliaments, and meetings, and decisions of the people. He thus regarded himself as the chosen instrument of Heaven, and as^ such carried out his duties as a ruler and lord. I consider myself such an instrument of Heaven, and shall go my way without regard to the views and opinions of the day." Prince Henry of Prussia, the Kaiser's brother, declared that he was actuated by one single motive : "A desire to proclaim to the nations the gospel of Your Majesty's sacred person, and to preach that gospel alike to those who will listen and those who will not." 142 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR This (jerman "democracy" is blessed with a Parliament, concerning which so well informed a writer as Collier can say: "Wliy should the press or society take this assembly very seriously, when as the most important measure of which they are capable they can vote to have themselves dismissed by declining to pass supply bills, and when, as has happened four times in their history, they return chastened, tame, and amenable to the wishes of their master?" Mr. Collier affirms that after forty odd years the Germans are still without real representative govern- ment. It is a *^democracy" in which the battle cry is "World power or perish" ; in which there is an Overlord who says : "Only one is master of this country. That is I. Who opposes me I shall crush to pieces" ; in which for a genera- tion the toast of the ruling class has been "Der Tag," "The Day," when they should be let loose by their masters to work havoc and destruction ; the day for which the masses, the people, the "electors," had been more or less unwillingly preparing, and on which, as a reward for their toil and energy and self-sacrifice, they were allowed to become "cannon fodder" for the glory of the War Lord. This question of the democracy of Germany has a por- tentous significance from another viewpoint. As to one of the theoretical results of the war, by many still widely believed in and hoped for, viz., that after the German people realized the failure of the initial campaign and came to see the inner causes and springs of the hopeless war in which they are engaged, they would wrest authority from the hands of those who had misused it and found a New Germany, an American paper (63) has admirably expressed the unfortunate truth. Its editorial! historical summary is so enlightening at this juncture that I quote it almost in full, although I am not in accord as to one A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 143 point, viz., the "absolute unity" of the German people ''see pp. 461-71). '"One of the earliest predictions made concerning the war was that it would result in a revolution in Germany; that imperial- ism, militarism and autocracy would be submerged beneath the tides of an awakened democracy. "It was a plausible tlieoiy, and still has its hopeful support- ers. They will be likely to reject the opinion expressed in the Pall Mall Gazette: " 'The New York Times speculates on the possibility of a German revolution under the impetus of disaster. Prophecy is hazardous, but nothing in German history discloses either the initiative or the capacity to bring such a movement to fruition. Germany has always had her political shape and her political thought imposed upon her by strong wills and strong hands.' "Many who are familiar with world history will resent so harsh a sneer. They know that the very cradle of human lib- erty was in the historic land of Germany. . . . "It would seem the limit of absurdity and injustice to say that the German people of modern times are incapable of free- ing themselves from autocracy. "But the singular fact is that history declares the theory, up to this time, to be true. For three centuries the peoples of all the earth — except the Germans — have been struggling toward democracy. Literally, every nation worthy of the name — ex- cepting Germany — has had its revolts and revolutions, its over- turning of dynasties and tyrannical governments. The German people alone have been satisfied. They have warred with everybody but their rulers. Emperors, kings, petty princes and grand dukes by the score, by the hundred, have maintained their sway over contented populations. The house of Hohenzollern, now ruling the empire, has reigned over Bran- denburg and Prussia in unbroken line for exactly 500 years. There is not another royal family, probably, which can boast such uninterrupted domination. . . . "Glancing at the record of the last 300 years, we find that every other country in Europe, all of America and half of Asia have had their great, impulsive movements toward democracy, but that in Germany the liberal institutions which do exist 144 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR have been handed down by an autocracy which thereby has perpetuated its own power. "There has never been in that country a successful revolution, and no apparent desire for one. The history of Germany is a history of great sovereigns, great generals, great writers and philosophers; but there is in it no great liberator. The birth- place of religious and intellectual freedom, the cradle of the race that has carried democracy to the ends of the earth, it has itself never known political freedom. It can commemorate the glories of a Leipsic and a Sadowa, but not of a Lexington or a Yorktown. "The power of the Hohenzollern dynasty was really founded by the Great Elector, Frederick William of Brandenburg ( 1640- 1688), whose son Frederick was first King of Prussia (1701- 1713), and was succeeded by Frederick William I (1713-1740). Let us see what Europe was doing while the first of these sovereigns was creating a State, the second feebly living out his term and the third was winning immortality by collecting regi- ments of giant grenadiers. "In 1640 Portugal threw off the yoke of Spain, which it had worn for sixty years. Two years later came the great civil war in England, which was to last until, seven years later, a despotic king was put to death by the people whose rights he had invaded. "In 1688 the British spirit of freedom, inherited from Teu- tonic ancestors, drove the last of the wayward Stuarts from the throne. It was this revolution which reduced the power of the State in behalf of individual liberty and self-government, and not the French revolution, which extended the power of the State by destroying aristocratic privileges, that was the true forerunner of the American revolution. But it had no echo, then or at any other time, in Germany. "Passing over one of Poland's many revolts — in 1706 she forced her Saxon king to abdicate — ^we glance at the reign of Frederick the Great (1740-1786). Russia had a dynastic revo- lution, the reactionary Peter III being dethroned by Catherine II, whose vigorous sway introduced Western civilization, pro- moted commerce, founded schools and granted religious liberty. In 1772 the people of Sweden, led by Gustavus III, crushed the power of the arrogant nobles and established constitutionalism. "The enlightened despotism of Frederick lifted Prussia to the A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 145 rank of the first military power in Europe. He performed prodigies for the material and intellectual advancement of the kingdom; but its people gave no response to the epoch-making summons of the American revolution. In the year he died the patient Dutch dethroned an aristocratic monarch. "The reigns of Frederick William II, III and IV covered three-quarters of a century, 1786-1861. Yet only once during this, perhaps the most restless period in the history of politics, did the people of Prussia and the other German States reveal signs of discontent with the rigorous rule imposed upon them. "In 1787 Belgium freed herself from Austria and set up a republic, although three years later she accepted the old system, modified by a constitution. A little later came the cataclysm of the French revolution; and while it caused some aspirations in Germany toward freedom, its excesses were so alarming that German armies were sent to support the doomed autocracy in France. "Napoleon simply used the German States as counters in his titanic game of empire. He shuffled them as though they had been cards ; squeezed the 300 of them into 38 ; bestowed crovms as though they were tips. The very brutality of his iron sway resulted finally in arousing a martial spirit, and it was Prus- sian valor that at the last rose up and smote his empire to dust. "Yet it is to be noted that the German people were still faith- ful to their royal leaders. In 1795 Poland had risen under Kosciusko, and the Netherlands had established the Batavian republic, which lasted as long as that of France. Two years later Switzerland had also followed the inspiration of the great revolution. In 1809 Sweden deposed an unsatisfactory mon- arch; in 1813 the Netherlands expelled the French and restored the house of Orange, and in 1814 Napoleon was overthrown; but during all this time the inhabitants of the German States re- mained unmoved. "It was a time of tremendous literary activity; but among all the great writers — Goethe, Kant, Schiller, Fichte, Richter and a score of others — ^though the world was racked with the birth-pangs of democracy, there was none to inspire his coimtry- men with aspirations toward political liberty. Some of the German sovereigns were absolutists, some granted constitu- tions; but the mass of the people remained indifferent. The few who declaimed about freedom did nothing else to achieve it. 10 146 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "Between 1822 and 1830 Greece revived the glories of her ancient valor and won her independence from the Turk. The last-named year saw the Poles drive out the Russians, Belgium win her independence from Holland and France dismiss the last of the Bourbons. Spain indulged in a civil war in 1834, and two years later forced her sovereign to swear to maintain a violated constitution. In 1843 Greece extorted a constitution likewise from her Bavarian king. The stormiest year of the nineteenth century was 1848, with revolutions in France, Italy, Hungary and elsewhere. Then, for the first and only time, the German people revealed a vigor- ous sense of political independence. While France was de- throning Louis Philippe and setting up the second republic, Bavaria forced the abdication of her king, Baden produced a feeble revolt and Berlin a few days of barricades in the streets. The end of it all was the exile of the liberal leaders — some of whom became great Americans — and the establishment in Prus- sia and other States of constitutions which were merely tinged with democracy. "A little later began the era of Bismarck, creator of the German empire. Its rise has been one of the wonders of the world ; but no one, least of all intelligent Germans themselves, will pretend that it is democratic. "In 1852 France returned to the imperial idea. In 1860 Garibaldi began the struggle which unified Italy. In 1862 Greece deposed her Bavarian sovereign and gave the crown to a Danish prince. In 1868 Japan abolished feudalism and adopted Western ideas. Between 1868 and 1874 the Spaniards changed their government three times. And 1871 saw the es- tablishment of the French republic, that has proved its vigor against the vast armies of imperial Germany. The twentieth century, young as it is, has seen movements toward democracy in the Balkan States, in Russia, in Portugal, in Turkey and in China, two of these having become republics. But throughout all this period the German people have re- mained the willing subjects of a highly efficient but uncompro- mising autocracy. . . . "Grermany takes her greatest pride to-day, not in the valor of her troops, but in the absolute unity of her people. There is not one of them who by a word or breath v^U admit that a single act of the autocracy, from Austria's criminal ultimatum A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 147 to the extortion of blackmail from starving Belgium, has failed in the remotest degree in justice. "From the standpoint of patriotism this is admirable; from the standpoint of civilization it is ominous. Three-fourths of the world condemns the conflict as a needless and brutal crime of misgovernment ; yet in the whole German people there is no voice raised in behalf of humanity or in condemnation of the false and barbarous philosophy that exalts militarism and pro- vokes aggressive conquest. "There could hardly be more striking evidences of that habit of docility which yields veneration to autocratic power and sacrifices liberty to attain a machine-made efficiency. "The world's debt to Germany is vast; to her it owes music, philosophy, religious and intellectual emancipation. But as a nation she remains insensible to political freedom. "In this day of democrat^ the absolute surrender of indi- vidualism to an autocratic State, so that among a whole people there is not a single variation of thought or utterance upon the mightiest and most complex problem that ever confronted the world, is a painful spectacle, from which humanity will derive no inspiration and to which it will pay no admiring tribute." The following acute summary (64) of the Grerman views, ideals, ambitions and purposes of to-day sets forth at the same time the over-weening confidence and prepos- terous self-satisfaction of the German leaders : "The objects of Prussia's ambition — an ambition shared by every anemic bespectacled clerk and able-bodied tram conductor in the Fatherland — are 'cultural,' and the means of achieving them are heavy guns, quick-firers, and millions of ruthless war- riors. Efial German culture in all its manifestations — scien- tific, artistic, philosophical, musical, commercial, and military, accepts and champions the new principle and the fresh ideas which are to regenerate the effete social organisms of to-day. According to the theory underlying this grandiose national en- terprise, the forces of Christianity are spent. New ichor for the dry veins of decrepit Europe is stored up in German phil- osophy and poetry. Mediaeval art has exhausted the traditional forms, but Teutonism is ready to furnish it with new ones. Music is almost a creation of German genius. Commerce was 148 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR stagnating in the ruts of old-world use and wont until German enterprise created new markets for it, and infused a new spirit into its trading community. Applied science owes more to German research and ingenuity than to the efforts of all the world besides. And the race thus highly gifted is deserving of a field worthy of its world-regenerating labors. At present it is cooped up in Central Europe with an absurdly small coast-line. Its surplus population has, for lack of colonies, to be dumped down on foreign shores, where it is' lost forever to the Fatherland. For this degrading position, which can no longer be tolerated, there is but one remedy: expansion. But to be eflFectual it must be expansion combined with Germani- zation. And the only means of accomplishing this end is for Germany to hack her way through the decrepit ethnic masses that obstruct her path and to impose her higher civilization on the natives. Poland was the first vile body on which this ex- periment was tried, and it has been found, and authoritatively announced, that the Slavs are but ethnic manure, useful to fer- tilize the seed-fields of Teutonic culture, but good for little else. The Latin races, too, are degenerates who live on memo- ries and thrive on tolerance. Beef-eating Britons are the in- carnation of base hypocrisy and crass self-indulgence, and their empire, like a hollow tree, still stands only because no storm has yet assailed it. To set youthful, healthy, idealistic Ger- many in the high places now occupied by those inert masses that once were progressive nations, is but to adjust obsolete conditions to the pressing requirements of the present time — to execute the wise decrees of a just God. And in order to bring this task to a satisfactory issue, militarism must reign as the paramoimt power before culture can ascend the throne. Militarism is a necessity, and imreasoning obedience the condi- tion of its success." In a most excellent article Dr. Ellis Oberholtzer, of Philadelphia (65), reviews a portion of the same field, and shows the absolute domination of Germany by Prus- sia, the Hohenzollems, the aristocracy and the multi-mil- lionaires. He calls attention to the Dreiklassen system, by which all the voters in a district are divided into three .1 TEXT-BOOK OF TILE WAR lia classes according to their taxable wealth, and goes on: "Thus in the first class the very wealthy elected one-third of the members of a kind of electoral college, those in the second class, the less wealthy, elected a third, while the masses of the people, bundled into a class by themselves, chose another third. . . . "In this system no change has been made, though the consti- tution was promulgated more than sixty years ago. In Essen, when I lived in GermaJiy, Herr Krupp, the gunmaker, and Bismarck, who owned some property in that town, formed one class, a score or more lesser magnates another class. Their influence and power were as two to one against the thousands of woi-kingmen and small tradesmen thrown together into the third class." He says that there are districts in East Prussia in which 95 or even 99 per cent, of the people cast but one-third of the votes for a member of the Prussian Diet. He brings the matter home to us by saying that it is as if Pennsyl- vania had a king, "by the grace of God," who was also Emperor of the United States. He would choose his own ministers from a land-holding aristocracy. The Senate or upper house of legislature would be a House of Lords with the selection of whom the people would have nothing to do. The House of Eepresentatives would be made up of mem- bers chosen from time to time by the rich men in each district of the State. The government could not be changed except by consent of the king and of an hereditary noble hierarchy surrounding the throne. "In this," he says "do popular government and the parliamentary system consist in Prussia., which is two-thirds of the German Empire in population and three-thirds in the domination and control of German affairs." He speaks of the absence of anything corresponding to what we know as "freedom of speech" or "liberty of the press," and contiuues: 150 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "But an American or English editor could not patiently write for newspapers held in such restraint and exerting so little in- fluence upon public opinion. It is necessary for the publisher to carry a copy of every issue to the police station before the presses) run off the edition and to print in plain view the name of a verantwortliche redactewr, or responsible, answerable editor. This man, in the case of some of the Socialist papers, has been hired for the use. He goes to jail; another who takes his place follows him into durance vile, while the actual editor still continues daily to take his flings at the government. And not all the editors who have been imprisoned in these forty years have been Socialists. The more moderate radicals have sometimes been visited by the police to be withdrawn for a time from the sunshine. "What makesi the way of the journalist particularly difficult, although the general libel laws are harsh, is the unverletzliche, or inviolable character of the Kaiser, and he is holy twice over, once because he is the German Emperor and again because he is the King of Prussia. He is so much in the German scheme of government by force of law, and by hisf assumption of preroga- tives (through the exercise of many of the chancellor's powers since the dismissal of Bismarck), and his general meddling in all manner of questions by his pronunciamentos which he issues as a vicegerent of God, that free political discussion in the press is out of the question. A great excellency of the English democracy is found in the open and unceasing debate of the merits of public men. The one great public man in Ger- many is removed from the province of debate, unless it should be in the line of adulation. "The press has never reached any degree of respectable public influence in Germany. When it finally escaped actual daily censorship it found itself at the mercy of Bismarck, who used a so-called Guelph fund, belonging to the Duke of Cumberland, in the Prussian Treasury. He seized the income to bribe the press. With advertisements and subsidies, by withholding in- formation from one paper and giving it to another, by prose- cuting an editor who attacked him as chancellor and sparing another who lashed the enemies of Prussian policy, by feeding the 'reptiles,' as men called them, because they crawled at hia feet, he made the freedom of the press the travesty it has al- ways been. The newspaper as an organ of public opinion has not A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 151 succeeded in raising' itself to a much greater heiglit since the passing of Bismarck's extraordinary regime. "If the laws relating to l^se majeste fail, the police authori- ties can turn to the famous clause in the penal code relating to Grober Unfug, the committing of a gross nuisance. This term covers a multitude of sins — ^the objectionable yelping of dogs', the indecent public exposure of the human person and, by test in the courts of justice, the misbehavior of newspaper editors, touching subjects of government. So much for the liberty of the press in Germany. . "But the seat and center of the monarch's power is in the army. He is its absolute head. Under its influence at one time or another comes every male German fit to carry a gun. The recruit is put under drill sergeants, always chosen from the noble junker or monarchical classes, and trained for a term of years to military efficiency and implicit obedience of his com- manders. These soldiers are set down among the people in fortresses and barracks in every part of the empire. Not a town or agricultural district which is not under the constant surveillance of the army; not a road in the remotest parts of the empire which is untraversed by the troops, or a gawky peasant who is permitted to forget that war any day may be- come the business of his life. Here William II, imperator et rex, is omnipotent. . "The Socialists appeared in strength soon after the Empire was formed. 'We will give them all the Socialism they want,' said Bismarck, and the present Emperor has continued the policy. Rules and regulations cover the movements of the in- dividual from the cradle to the grave in every relationship of life. Great bureaus have been established to govern, cajole, protect and sustain the population. "Hundreds! of thousands of men, organized with almost sol- dierly order, stand under noble person-ages, named by the Kaiser and the princes around him, to the great all-comprehending civil service. If there were 'free institutions' anywhere in this German land they would sink imder the weight of the universal military organization and the bureaucracy created by State So- cialism. "Can it be supposed that thisi great system will soon be changed ? Can we conceive of the people rising up to change it ? Is there desire to sweep it away ? I have never heard a German 152 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR outside of the ranks of militant Socialism express a wish for anything better than what he has. The typical old-line Prus- sian, who thanks God that he is not as other men, hasi become the typical Gterman. He would have more seaports, more colo- nies and the like of that, but as for being rid of compulsory military service, or a king, or a bureaucratic system it is not much on his mind. 'Your America is corrupt,' he will tell you. 'Of course, you do not have an army. Yours is a new country, without enemiesi. Democracy has failed wherever it has been tried.' "This is heard with more or less patience. What is depress- ing is to see the entire vaunted university system arrayed on the side of the Prussianized military Germany. There was a day in 1837, when Sevan men — Gervinus, Dahlmann, the two brothers Grimm among the number — walked out of Gottingen for their political opinions; another day, in 1848, when Pro- fessor Kinkel, at Bonn, shouldered a musket, led his students out to fight for republican institutions, and rotted in a prison at Spandau, until one of those students, young Carl Schurz, by bribing a keeper, lowered the poet and sage on a rope and hur- ried him in the night to a schooner at Rostock, by which means they together escaped to England. "But the boldest man in our day has been Von Seydel at Munich, the Calhoun of Germany, who contended that the Empire under the Constitution is a Staatenbund instead of a Bundesstaat, and that Bavaria can secede from the Union, in the manner of South Carolina, whenever she has a mind to do so. About all of this nobody cares a rap. He would not have carried a gun to make so much come 'to pass. Every country university professor has before his eyes the blandishments of a well-rewarded post in Berlin, and this> keeps him soundly Hohenzollern in his sympathies. Treitschke, Wagner and Dam- bach were, in my day asi a student at Berlin, the types of men representing German scholarship in the political and economic sciences. They were Bismarck's own body servants. "There is a great potential rumbling of unrest, but it has re- mained as pointless as it is strong, because of the rigor of the political system and a military domination of the people of a character never before seen in any country under the sun. There have been the loudest demands in recent years in Prussia for direct equal manhood suffrage. The demonstrations have A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 153 been as violent as the laws will allow. Some Social Democrats have found their way into the Landtag, in spite of the seem- ingly impossible obstacles to be overcome, in expression of the popular dissatisfaction, but the Government has yielded not one jot or tittle to the spirit of democratic progress. ''In 1890, at the end of the Bismarck regime, the Social Demo- crats polled 1,427,298 votes (nearly 20 out of 100) and they elected 35 members of the Reichstag. Such advancement has there been that in 1907 they held 53 seats, and five years later, in 1912, 110, a total since somewhat increased in bye-elections. Out of more than 12,000,000 voters a third, or over 4,000,000, were Social Democrats. The Radicals polled 1,500,000 votes and the National Liberals 1,600,000, a total for the left, or opposition parties, of approximately 7,500,000, for which by a just apportionment, they would have 260 instead of less than 200 seats in a house of 397 members. "This Social Democratic uprising means something, but the Government is so amazingly constituted that the party is with- out any power to influence public policy. And now the Kaiser and his military men raise a cry of invasion from Russia, re- kindle the fires of hate for England and France and these So- cialists (with few exceptions) throw off their hats and go off to war behind the Prussian 'vons' and 'zus,' who direct the greatest military autocracy which mankind has ever seen. "Revolution in Germany, of which a good deal is said, is probably as far distant as ever; though possibly the way may be prepared for changes if the Allies shall win in this war. One of the most important works on the subject of govermnent is President A. Lawrence Lowell's "Governments and Parties in Continental Europe." He is of the opinion that there is no real wish for popular government in Germany, unless it be in the South, where the principles of the French Revolution made themselves felt in the 18th century, and no genius to institute it, conduct it and enjoy it. Just this lesson did the young lib- eral enthusiast, Carl Schurz, learn in 1848. 'The people,' says he in his Reminiscences, 'although highly developed in science, philosophy, literature and art, had always lived under a severe guardianship in all political matters. They had never been out of leading strings. They had never received or known the teachings which spring from the feeling of responsibility in free political action. The affairs of Government lay outside 154 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR of the customs and habits of their lives.' (Reminiscences, vol- ume I, page 124.) May not these judgments apply just as truly to the Germans of this present day ? "It may be a fact, as another respectable writer has said, that they are discontented because they have 'outgrown their insti- tutions'; that the aim of a great body of them is 'unfettered representative government.' I, for one, basing my opinion on observations during a long residence in their midst, cannot think that they have very much less political liberty than they deserve, or are fitted to exercise. That people which needs what is better usually finds the way to attain it. The proof or dis- proof of our theories may be at hand, possibly, in the course ofj or at the end of this great present war. , . . "These then are the 'free institutionsi' of Prussia and of all Germany. They belong to that period in England which pre- ceded the Revolution of 1688, that period in France preceding the fall of the Bastille. The German would fain believe that in these few past months he has extended the sphere of his influ- ence into Belgium and a portion of France. He had before proven his character as a ruler of captured lands in the un- happy provinces of Alsace and Lorraine. England and the rest of the world will fairly conclude that it is his design to impose these sentiments and systems upon other parts of the earth's isrurface, if he shall be the victor in this war. The German frau will throw up her hands several times in a day and ex- claim, 'Gott bewahre!' It is 'Gott bewahre' now for the non- Prussian world and the great cause of popular government. Shall democracy live on this planet, after two or three cen- turies of growth and development, or shall it be written by the historian of the future that in the first years of the twentieth century it went down before kaisers and princes and praetors, directing obedient legions armed to the teeth 2" Witli this convincing and enlightening testimony as to the Teal principles represented by Germany in this war, and this final reply to Doctor Dernburg's false description of Germany's "democrac/' and of her ballot-law, "more liberal than the one in use in the XJnited States," I must close this chapter. I wish I could get every intelligent A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 155 German-American in this country to read it, not, of course, for what I ha,ve written, but for what I have quoted. I think many of them, whatever their views as to the relative merits of the two systems of government, would find, as I do, something humorous in calling "democratic" a system under which civilians could be arrested by an army officer for ^^intending to laugh/' And yet that occurred as recently as December, 1913, and was proved at the trial resulting from the shameful, and now historic, Zabern occurrence, when, with other outrages, a helpless cripple was stabbed in the back. The Court, acting in this "democ- racy," acquitted the colonel in command "because he did not know that 'he had acted illegally." {66) CHAPTEE VIII. In Addition to the Evidence Already Presented as to tiie Mental Attitude of the Average German Toward His Own Race and Toward Other European Races, Are There Any Facts Tending to Show His Real Attitude Toward America? If in answering this I begin by coming back again to Bernhardi and Treitschke, it is because I believe it lias been shown that, in spite of eleventh-hour denials, they truly represent the Grermany of 1914 — the Germany of this war. How much of the mistaken ''devotion" of the German nation at this time is due to their teachings and to those of their class it is impossible to state dogmatically. But that they have greatly influenced their compatriots there can be no doubt. Let us see what these "Pan Germanists" have to say to their fellow-countrymen about America. Bernhardi says (67) that in our efforts at The Hague Congresses and, more recently in our attempts to conclude treaties for the estab- lishment of Arbitration Courts, we have not pacific ideals as the real motive of our actions, but "usually employ the need of peace as a cloak under which to promote" our own political aims. He goes on : "We can hardly assume that a real love of peace prompts these efforts. This is shown by the fact that precisely those Powers which, asi the weaker, are exposed to aggression, and therefore were in the greatest need of international protection, have been completely passed over in the American proposals for Arbitration Courts. It must consequently be assumed that very matter-of-fact political motives led the Americans, with (156) A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 157 their commercial instinctsi, to take such steps, and induced perfidious Albion to accede to the proposals. We may suppose that England intended to protect her rear in event of a war with Germany, but that America wished to have a free hand in order to follow her policy of sovereignty in Central America without hindrance, and to carry out her plans regarding the Panama Canal in the exclusive interests of America. Both countries certainly entertained the hope of gaining advantage over the other signatory of the treaty, and of winning the lion's share for themselves. Theorists and fanatics imagine that they see in the efforts of President Taft a great step forward on the path to perpetual peace, and enthusiastically agree with him. Even the Minister for Foreign Affairs) in England, with well- affected idealism, termed the procedure of the United States an era in the history of mankind." . "The United States of America, e. g., in June, 1911, cham- pioned the ideas of universal peace in order to be able to devote their undisturbed attention to money-making and the enjoy- ment of wealth, and to save the three hundred million dollars which they spend on their army and navy." .... "In America, Elihu Eoot, formerly Secretary of State, de- clared in 1908 that the High Court of International Justice established by the second Hague Conference would be able to pronounce definite and binding decisions by virtue of the pres- sure brought to bear by public opinion. The present leaders of the American peace movement seem to share this idea. With a childlike self-consciousness, they appear to believe that public opinion must represent the view which the American plutocrats think most profitable to themselves." "While, on the one side, she [America] insists on the Monroe Doctrine, on the other she stretches out her own arms towards Asia and Africa, in order to find bases for her fleets. The United States aims at the economic and, where possible, the political command of the American continent, and at naval supremacy in the Pacific." So much for Bernhardi. Treitschke says: (68) 158 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "To civilization at large, the Anglicising of the German- Americans means a heavy loss. . . . Among Germans there can no longer be any question that the civilization of mankind {Gesittung der Menscheit) suflfers every tinae a German is transformed into a Yankee." Delbriick says : ( 6 9 ) "It seems extremely questionable that, imder the prevailing loose political conditions and extraordinarily easy changes from one party to another, the United States should be in a po- sition to attain to a permanent military status at all. Their momentary proud position need deceive no one. The Americana have not yet stood any really severe test." No wonder that the Eidders and Miinsterbergs and Hil- prechts and Jastrows seek to belittle Bemhardi and Treitschke and their teachings as a preliminary to the con- ciliation of America. But I fear that the' transformation of the representative of "Kultur" into the despised Yankee takes place much less frequently than we had supposed. The reason it does not occur oftener is not far to seek, if one recognizes that our German-Americans are still un- der the influence of the "Fatherland." There can be no doubt that German and American polit- ical ideals are absolutely divergent. They have already come into conflict over South America, the Panama Canal and the Philippines. Calwer, a German socialist, says that preliminary to a socialistic economic organization of the world, "Capitalism must first bring the world under sub- jection," and adds: "It follows that capital — including German capital as well — must first go forth and subdue the world with the means and weapons which are at ita disposal," i. e., with fire and sword. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 159 The same sort of thing crops out wherever their bureau- crats write. Herr Schlettwein, a Government Colonist and an expert on colonial matters, when asked to instruct the Reichstag on the principles of colonization, said : "In colonial politics we stand at the parting of the ways — on the one side healthy egoism ... on the other exag- gerated hiimanitarianism. The Herreros must ie compelled to work, and to worh without compensation, and in return for their food only. Forced labor for years is only a just pwnishment, and at the same time it is the best method of training them." How long would an American governmental employe remain in public life after expressing that sentiment to Congress ? The German ideal is far remote from American ideals. Mr. E. S. Martin says: (70) "It is good in Krupps ajid chemistry, in manufacture, in trade, in civic government, in the regulation of life for the pro- motion of average comfort. It is had in art. It is not notable in the higher forms of literature. And as to the great point of making nobler types of men — has it done it? The Germans are notably efficient, but are they creative? are they inventive? and are they nobler than other men? They have told us that democratic France was decadent ; that democratic England was a pretense and an empty shell; that Russia was barbarous. They said nothing about Belgium. There ought to be a Nobel prize for nobility. If there were, would it go to Germany? One sees in Germany immense efficiency, courage, aggressiveness, capacity to suffer, but where, so far, has she been noble? In Belgium? At Louvain? At Rheims? "Her specialty is fighting, but man for man she can't handle the Belgians or the new French, and her superiority to the Russians is dubious, while as for the English, they are but a handful so far in this war, but it has been a handful for Germany. "No; get them out of their shops and laboratories and the 160 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR current Germans don't seem to be of an egregious nobility. The Belgians can give them odds in it, and they seem to have noth- ing on the lately decadent French. They must be learning a wonderful lot about the qualities of other people, and perhaps they are revising their self-esteem." They learn slowly. Months of war and the all but uni- versal condemnation of the civilized world have not shaken their confidence in their governmental methods, nor their admiration for themselves. In December Dr. Franz Junge wrote: (71) "But it isi a reflection upon the intelligence of trained ob- servers, native as well as foreign, to speak seriously of the effectiveness of popular government in practice. Nor is it con- sistent with the rule of reason, which governs the destinies of the United States, to introduce moral considerations of abstract justice into the settling of international disputes, with which the waging of war has never had anything to do. . . . "Now, if the absence of adequate rule in America offers so feeble a guarantee against the complete reversal of the funda- mental principles of government — from individualism to col- lectivism, and from democracy to plutocracy — not to speak of corruption in its various forms; if the enlightened people of America, working as they do tmder the most favorable auspices of heredity and environment, with all their political liberties', have been unable to preserve their economic independence, how can it be surprising that the German people hesitate to commit their country to the same policy of laissez faire? . . . "Why, after all, should the German people abandon their political system, which has proved successful to the Common- wealth, and adopt American institutions, which are notorious for the contrast or discrepancy between recognized political principles and actual political life?" And (Ibid) Dr. Ervin Acel continues : "I have kept myself from a discussion of the ethical questions involved in the stand taken by America. Germany did right A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR 161 or did wrong J it does not matter whicli. But, however that may be, the very interests of the United States require a vic- torious Germany and a humbled Japan and England. There- fore the American policy is a mistake, in view of the future, and a hlwider in policy is more vm,pardonable tluin crime. "As to Europe, every century has its caryatid which carries the weight of its culture. There was a time when the world's culture found its highest expression among the Greeks, among the Romans, among the French. Now we see this high-water mark of learning among the Germans. Her philosophers, engi- neers, scholars, merchants, all 'marche en la tSte de la civilisa- tion': they lead the army of civilization." Such colossal conceit would be unworthy even of ridicule were it not that both articles unintentionally, and there- fere the more significantly, betray a conception of inter- national morals which, if carried into effect in personal activities, would disqualify both writers for ordinary deal- ings with, their fellow citizens, at least in this country. The OutlooTc deals with the matter editorially as follows : "A passage from each of these two articles will suflSce to indicate to our readers how marked is the diflference between their point of view and the point of view of The Out- look. . . . The Outlook believes that it does matter a great deal whether a country does right or does wrong, and that it is in accord with the rule of reason to introduce moral considera- tions into the settling of international disputes." An article in a recent number of a magazine of high standing (73), should be called to the attention of Amer- icans. There are many living who could prove or disprove its statements, for which, especially as it is signed by a nomr-de-'plume, I can assume no responsibility. They are, however, so in accord with much of the recent German and Grerman-American behavior that they seem more credible 11 162 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR to-day than ever before. The article begins with the asser- tion that: "Germany has consistently followed a twofold policy toward the United States. Always reckoning with the possibility of a collision with England, she has endeavoured to be on good terms with the United States, counting upon their support in case of a great war. At the same time, German statesmen have seen in the Great Republic an economic and political danger and, while ostensibly maintaining excellent relations with the United States, they have stealthily endeavoured to weaken them by various ways, and especially by creating enmity between them and England. In leading German circles it has been an article of faith that the United States and England are natural enemies; that both countries bitterly remember the War of Independence and the quarrels which succeeded it. It has been an article of faith in Germany that Canada was coveted by all Americans; that the existence of that great English Dominion in North America was an ever-present cause of friction between the two Anglo-Saxon States; that the Americana would take Canada as soon as England was involved in a really serious war." It continues by citing Prince Bismarck's views as to the Monroe Doctrine, views which there is much reason to believe are those of official Germany to-day. They appeared in the Hamhurger Nachrichten on February 9, 1896 : "Some German newspapers continue discussing the so-called 'Monroe Doctrine,' in consequence of the events which have taken place in South America. We are of opinion that that doctrine, and the way in which it is now advanced by the American Republic, is an incredible impertinence [erne unglau- hliehe VnverscMmtheit) towards the rest of the world. The Monroe Doctrine is merely an act of violence, based upon great strength, towards all American States and towards those Euro- pean States which possess interests in America." A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 163 The author reviews the Samoan incident, and says of the Manila Bay controversy: "During the Spanish- American War Germany endeavoured to acquire the Philippines. While other countries had sent only a few ships to the Philippine Islands, Germany had, without any obvious reason, despatched there her Pacific Squadron — a force equal to that commanded by Admiral Dewey. The Ger- man Admiral Diedrichs endeavoured to foil Admiral Dewey's operations, and the relations between the German and Amer- ican fleets became so strained that a battle between the two was avoided only by the intervention of the English Commander, who backed up his American colleague." (p. 180) He continues; "In 1907, Mr. Emil Witte, a former Press attache at the German Embassy in Washington, published at Leipzig a book on his experiences at the Washington Embassy. For some reason or other, that book, which contains disclosures most damaging to the German Government, has remained practically unknown. It is so scarce a book that it seems possible that the German Government bought up and destroyed all the copies it could lay hands on. The following extracts from Mr. Witte's disclosures throw a powerful light upon Germany's diplomatic methods, and upon her American policy. Mr. Witte was, in spring 1898, one of the editors of the Deutsche Zeitunff of Vienna. At that time the Spanish- American War broke out, and practically the whole of the German and Austrian Press took the part of Spain and violently attacked the United States in accordance with official directions." (See pp. 216-17-18) He follows with a number of extracts from Mr. Witte's book, "Experiences at a German Embassy: Ten Years of German-American Diplomacy," by Emil Witte, late Coun- cillor of Legation, Leipzig, 1907: 164 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "The public learns from these pages for the first time the truth, and the whole truth, about German- American relations, the true state of which has been disguised and misrepresented on both sides of the ocean by a powerful and corrupt Press. . . ." " "Tliese Americans are, after all, incredibly simple. They swallow any bait greedily as long as it is sufficiently sugared and placed before them with a friendly smile.' I heard this phrase frequently from an intimate friend of Herr von Holleben, the German Ambassador at Washington, at the time when I had the honour to be attached to the German Embassy at Wash- ington in order to attend to Press matters. That phrase is characteristic of the view which prevailed among German dip- lomats towards the statesmen of the New World. These views have led to very gross errors. After a number of serious inci- dents, such as the Dewey-Diedrichs episode in the Bay of Manila, the unfortunate Samoa affair, the Coghlan affair, and the Venezuela imbroglio, the diplomats at Berlin suddenly remembered the old historic friendship which united Prussia and the United States since the time of Frederick the Great, and they assured the Americans that the great Republic pos- sessed no more faithful and sincere friend than the German Emperor. In order to give a practical demonstration of that historical friendship to the world in general and to the United States in particular, the American journey of Prince Henry was announced. . . ." "The Prince arrived, and he convinced himself and was able to report to his Imperial brother that he was in a country where one-third of the population was of German birth or of German descent, and was firmly resolved to stand faithfully at Germany's side under all circumstances. He convinced him- self of the truth of the statement, which Dr. von Holleben had made to a journalist at a time when German-American relations were in a critical state, that a war between Germany and the United States would assiune the character of a dvil tctor." . . . "Dr. A. von Mumm admitted to me at Washington that Germany was responsible for the unhappy Dewey-Diedrichs incident at Manila." . . A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 165 "The anti-German attitude of the American Press which was noticeable at the time when I entered upon my duties (January, 1899) was not unjustified. I was selected as Press attache to the Grerman Emabssy in Am^erica, to make up for the sins which the German Press had committed in its blind desire to please the men at the Wilhelmstrasse." . "When I entered upon my duties, I received the general instruction to do everything in my power to silence the journals hostile to Germany, and to convert them from determined enemies of Germany into friends and admirers of the Emperor. Besides, it was my duty to create the belief in American public opinion that the true enemy of the United States was not Germany, but England. . . . Thus I began my work." Further extracts are of great interest at this moment to every American who is striving intelligent!}'' to reach a fair conclusion as to the genuine German attitude toward our country. "The German-American Ambassador played a very delicate and dangerous part in the German- American movement. Mr. John J. Lentz, of Columbus, Ohio, a member of Congress, told me : 'Please tell the Ambassador to keep the German- American movement progressing vnth energy.' The Ambassador replied, when I gave him the message, that 'it was not unexpected.' I had met Mr. Lentz previously in the house of Herr von Stern- burg, and I met him frequently at the Embassy. As he was a member of the Committee for Military Affairs, and was there- fore acquainted with the most secret information, his inter- course with us was not approved of by American people." . . . "The vast majority of the German newspapers appearing in the United States could not conveniently exist if they did not save the wages of journalists and compositors by relying upon the factories which produce stereotyped matter. The producers of the stereotyped matter which is sent out to the German-American papers can make a living only by copying matter which has appeared in the German and Austrian journals and periodicals. They reprint part of their contents, cast plates, and sell these at a very low price to the German- American Press. The 'New Yorker Stoats Zeittmg asserts that 166 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR it is the only German newspaper in America which pays its contributors for belletristical contributions, but its payments are more than modest. The very difficult struggle for exist- ence forces the German-American newspapers to play a very htmiiliating part." . "Without doubting for a moment the often-asserted loyalty to the United States expressed by the members of the German Soldiers' Societies in the United States, and without dwelling on the reasons why they have been officially distinguished by the German Government by sending them flags, decorations, gracious letters, etc., it must be frankly stated that the rela- tions between official Germany and the emigrant subjects of the Emperor, whether they have become citizens of the Eepublio or not, may lead to serious complications between Germam/ and the JJmted States, p like a powder-mine. . . . Who is not for us is against us. And they were all, all against us, America the most furious. Search history as you will, you will not find a page that records the like of what appears in these days in the American press. They write with Indian arrowheads and for ink use viper's venom. Has ever one member of the family of nations ventured to em- ploy against another such a mode of speech, especially when that other was locked in a most sanguinary strife? "And America is a neutral State ! . . . Americana, with left-handed meaning, speak of the Kaiser as 'the War Lord.' And for the honest Yankee there is no more ghastly title than this. For it sounds better to play the peace waltz! On all the editorial organs they play now only one melody: Germany is the world's champion peace-buster {Allerweltsstorenfried), and when peace is broken the freedom of the people is beaten into fragments. ... A land, a people, a nation, is the prey of the American vulturesi of the press. For these conveyors of culture there is no such thing as honor of country, people, or nation." "The Eolnische Zeitimg also prints an article by a Dr. Charles Hexamer, of Philadelphia, who tells his readers that he is not proud of America. He accuses the United States of praying on Sundays for peace and supplying England and its Allies with war materials on other days of the week. This, he exclaims, is hypocrisy and would be more consistent were Amer- ica to relinquish her Star Spangled Banner and proud motto, 'E Pluribus Unum,' and supply herself with a flag inscribed: 'The dollar, no matter how you get it, so long as you get it.' " (79) Further quotations illustrating this subject will be found in Chapter X. Price Collier throws some light on the matter as regards the German Germans when he says: (80) '"In order to build up his patriotism the German has been taught systematically to dislike the Austrians, then the Frencli, A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 177 now the English, and let not the American suppose that he likes the American any better, for he does not." Pere Didon also helps when he writes: (81) "J'ai €ssaye maintes fois de decouvrir chez I'allemand une sympathie quelconque pour d'autres nations; je n'y ai rSussi." But the most illuminating comment is made in another portion of Collier's book, where he sums up his views as to the entire Germanic system: "There is no such thing in Germany as democratic or repre- sentative government. "The orderliness of the Germans is all forced upon them from without, and is not due to their own knowledge of how to take care of themselves. "German State socialism is, in a nutshell, the decision on the part of the rulers that the individual is not competent to spend his own money, choose his own calling, use his own time as he will or provide for his own future or the various emergencies of life. By minute State control they are rapidly bringing the whole population to an enfeebled social and political condition, where they can do nothing for themselves. . . . There are 3,000,000 officials, great and small, in Germany, and 14,000,- 000 electorsi, or, roughly, one policeman to every five adults. "I have said that the population is well fed, well clothed and well looked after. Of course they are. No slave owner so maltreats his slaves that they cannot work for him. But is man fed by bread alone ? . "The electors, now so flattered by the smooth phrases of their tyrants disguised as liberators, will one day be aghast to find themselves in a veritable house of correction paid for from their o^^^l savings. "The very barrenness of the soil, the ring of enemies, the soft moral and social texture of the population, have, so their little knot of rulers think, made necessary these harsh, artificial forcing methods. The outstanding proof of the artificiality of this civilization is its powerlessness to propagate. Germans transplanted from their hothouse civilization to other countries 12 178 A' TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR cease to be Germansi; and nowhere in the world outside Ger- many is German civilization imitated, liked or adopted. "Autocracy, bureaucracy and militarism are triplets of straw, not destined to live. They are precocious children, teaching the pallid religion of dependence upon the State and enforcing the anarchical morality of man's despair of himself. "Germany has organized herself into an organization, and is the mos-t overgoverned country in the world. Life is to live, not to think, after all. This is where the metaphysician invari- ably fails when he mistakes thinking for living, when he mis- takes organization, which can never be more than a mold for life, for life itself. "Germany has shown us that the short cut to the govern- ment of a people by suppression and strangulation results in a dreary development of mediocrity. She has proved again that the only safety for either an individual or a nation is to be loved and respected; and in these days no one respects slavery or loves threats." Another American writer, after making this quotation, adds: (83) "Such is the true meaning of the system which has produced the modern Germany of machine-like efficiency, of a govern- mental philosophy foimded upon force, of universal submission to undemocratic ideals. It is a picture to sadden all admirers of the race which has wrought such benefits to mankind. "Yet this is the system which patriotic Germans in America insist is necessary. The fruits of German energy and genius, they say, are due not to racial capacity, but to the crushing out of individualism and the surrender of national liberty to the purpose of creating a glorified State. "In plain terms, they declare the astonishing theory that the German people are incapable of progress under democratic institutions, but have become great in the mass only because they have subordinated the nation's will to an intelligent offi- cialdom and ordered their lives to the commands of a mili- taristic discipline." "The most startling among Bernhardi's doctrines are ( 1 ) the A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 179 denial that tliere are any duties owed by the State to humanity, except that of imposing its own superior civilization upon as large a part of humanity as possible, and (2) the denial of the duty of observing treaties. Treaties are only so much paper. "To modern German writers the State is a much more tre- mendous entity than it is to Englishmen or Americans. It is a supreme power with a sort of mystic sanctity, a power conceived of, as it were, self-created ; a force altogether distinct from, and superior to, the persona who compose it. "Let us see how these doctrines afifect the smaller and weaker States which have hitherto lived in comparative security beside the Great Powers. "They will be absolutely at the mercy of the stronger. Even if protected by treaties guaranteeing their neutrality and inde- pendence, they will not be safe, for treaty obligations are worth- less 'when they do not correspond to facts,' i. e., when the strong Power finds that they stand in its way. Its interests are paramount. "If a State has valuable minerals, as Sweden has iron, and Belgium coal, and Rumania oil ; or if it has abundance of water, power, like Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland; or if it holds the mouth of a navigable river, the upper course of which belongs to another nation, the great State may conquer and annex the small State as soon as it finds that it needs the minerals, or the water-power, or the river mouth. "It has the Power, and Power gives Right. The interests, the sentiments', the patriotism and love of independence of the small people go for nothing. "Civilization has turned back upon itself. Culture is to expand itself by barbaric force. Governments derive their authority not from the consent of the governed, but from the weapons of the conqueror." (83) Among the uneiiviable peculiarities our German-Amer- ican citizens have developed is one already alluded to, a determined effort to arouse anti-British feeling by refer- ence to all the occasions when there has been war or dispute between the two countries from the time of the Eevolution down to the Venezuelan incident. 180 A TEXT-BOOK OP THE WAR But this is as clums}'-, as ineffective and, I think, as distasteful to most Americans as their equally uncouth attempts at flattery. They forget that America has never been the home of "grudges"; that every important incident they cite, even the most recent, belongs to the period of generations that have passed away. They forget that the greatest war of the last century, between two sections of our own country, has been, so far as continued rancor and bitterness are con- cerned, as completely forgotten as if it had occurred in the time of the Crusades. They forget that the ideals of the English-speaking people the world over are at once the most democratic and the nearest to successful realization that the world has ever seen, and that our brothers in the French Republic have their faces steadfastly set toward the same goal. They forget that our present differences are in essence trivial and superficial, while our likenesses are flesh of our flesh and bone of our bone. They ignore the fact that the fairest and most penetrating analysis of our country, our methods and our people ever written was from the pen of a Briton, Viscount Bryce ; and that the most sympathetic and impartial story of our War of Independence was told by an English historian. Sir George Trevelyan. They are stupid enough to forget the incident in Manila Bay in 1898, when the German Admiral Von Diedrichs, after a series of petty and pro- vocative infractions of the blockade established by Admiral Dewey, approached Captain Chichester, in command of the British fleet, to learn what he would do if further dis- regard of Dewey's orders were shown. But the American people have not forgotten Captain Chichester's reply to the effect that he "would do whatever Dewey wanted him to do." A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 181 Kor have they forgotten that at that very time Germany was endeavoring to bring about an "understanding" among European Powers that would result in interference on behalf of Spain. Our German-American quarrel malcers do not know doubtless, but many of us know, that in the "Strangers' Eoom," of the chief Liberal Club of London, a room where all visitors are shown, there hangs in the place of honor over the mantel a framed facsimile of our Declaration of Independence, while above it is a medallion with the super- imposed silhouettes in low relief, of Washington, Lincoln and Grant. In the same room the Magna Charta occupies a less conspicuous position. Fortunately, they are about as likely permanently to disturb or seriously to affect the relations between England and this country as their "Eatherland" is to realize its insane dream of "World Power." (See pp. 23, 38 et seq.) They are circulating the speeches of some unimportant irreconcilables like Ramsay Macdonald in opposition to the war. Why don't they quote the communications of the German Humanity League, of Berlin, to the British Humanity League, in which the Kaiser is characterized as the "uncurbed tyrant, surrounded by parasites, and now directing the most desperate, devilish and selfish campaign ever waged against himianity," and as "the despot whose insatiable egotism is drenching Europe with the blood of its workers and wage earners?" (84) Perhaps Miinsterberg's book, "The War and America," best illustrates the fatuity of the German-American apolo- gists as well as their awkward and stupid mixture of unpalatable flattery and unfriendly criticism. The book has been admirably dissected by a recent re- viewer. (85) Professor Miinsterberg has received so much undeserved attention from our American journalists 182 A> TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR that it is worth while to quote portions of this review. "His method of argument seems directed at a singularly untrained public. . . . His major premises he never takes the pains to substantiate. Instead, he reiterates them as axio- matia 'Culturally, Russia is Asia,' Russia desires to blot out Western European civilization, hence Germany is fighting for civilization against barbarism, in an inevitable conflict. These fundamental notions are drummed in with Prvxssian thor- oughness. But these are just the postulates that a thoughtful reader wants to haye proved. . . . Aside from bandying big impressive antitheses — Teuton and Slav, Europe, Asia, etc. — Professor Miinsterberg varies his tactics by condescending flattery of America; and by occasional excursions in pure senti- ment. The whole melcmge is highly seasoned, and posisibly grateful to the literary palate of the very simple reader for whom it is concocted. "The omniscient tone of the plea is characteristic. . . Such a generalization as that Europe means thought while Asia means feeling, and accordingly one must cut the other's throat, is admirably calculated to solve the vexed problem of West and East — in any corner grocery store. And for whom does Professor Miinsterberg limn the picture of an idyllic, scholarly, industrial, unaggressive, and wholly pacific Germany reluctantly kept under arms by bellicose neighbors? Plainly, for a reader who has not heard of the partition of Poland, the seizing of Silesia, the grasping of Schleswig-Holstein, the annex- ation of Hanover, the retention of Alsace and Lorraine, and, only yesterday, the premature incorporation of Belgium into the German Empire. "Then what kind of a reader is asked to swallow whole the theory of a ruthlessly aggressive Russia menacing all Western Europe? Evidently, a reader who does not loiow that, first, Russia set conquered Germany on her feet, then Austria threatened by the Hungarian revolution — a reader who does not know that in a hundred and fifty years, when Russia was strong and Central Europe a congeries of weak states, Russia showed no exceptional aggressiveness against European Powers. . . . "We must note the kind of philosophical thought that underlies the surface rhetoric. It is a philosophy not overtly A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 183 expressed. It would hardly bear ventilation in America. You may sense it in the sharp distinction between 'routine agree- ments like the neutrality treaties,' and a 'pledge of interna- tional honor' like the Triple Alliance. Why is there no pledge of honor in a neutrality agreement? Plainly because it is made with and in behalf of a weaji Power. Honor first begins among peers. Thus is honor made in the Germany of Zabern. "Again consider the system of international morals implied in the following: " 'It was the ethical duty of the Russians to strain every effort for the expansion of their influence, and it wasi the ethical duty of the Germans and Austrians to strain every effort to prevent it. In the same way, it was the moral right of France to make use of any hour of German embarrassment for recapturing its military glory by a victory of revenge. And it was the moral right of England to exert its energies for keeping control of the seas and for destroying the commercial rivalry of the Germans. No one is to be blamed.' "International morality, that is, consists in the insensate inevitable clash of national egotisms, which, being national, are holy. . . . "We have left dangling the very interesting question: For what kind of a reader is this skillful blend of dogmatism, innu- endo, sophistry, and gush intended? Fortunately, Professor Miinsterberg has the candor to make the matter clear. It is addressed to 'the American mind' which has an 'unusual degree of imitativeness and suggestibility.' It is addressed to the individual American who, when excited, tends to become 'a mere automatic mechanism in which the thoughts and feelings and impulses of his neighbor control his mind.' . . . 'There is a lack of individual resistance to prescribed opinions which produces in excited states a colorless wholesale judgment which may be entirely different from the natural stand of the sober single individual.' Elsewhere we learn that in all European matters the American is moved chiefly by a provincial prejudice against the paraphernalia and nomenclature of monarchy. He takes mere names for real things. "Professor Miinsterberg has produced a book that is precisely adapted to impress the sort of 'American mind,' he thus defines, but no other sort." 184 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Even in his latest text-book of Psychology he evinces the same insufferable belief in essential racial superiority, sa)ang: (p. 334) "The Southern peoples are children of the moment; the Teutonic live in the things which lie beyond the world, in the infinite and the ineffable." Mr. E. S. Martin (the editor of "Life") has paid his respects to Miinsterberg as follows: (86) "Your book must convince any un-German reader that we shall never see the case as you see it. The idea which you offer of simple, honest Germany taking a few indispensable military precautions against the ravening wolves of Europe, and especially against the impending hug of the terrible bear, is comic to us, Herr Doctor. We can't help it. With all due respect, Ave remember Frederick William and his tall grenadiers, Frederick the Great and Maria Theresa, Bismarck's Prussia and Austria in '66, and then what you call 'the war of 1870 recklessly stirred by the intolerance of Imeprial France,' and since 1888 the Kaiser and his Krupps, and we smile, Herr Doctor; we just have to. "Blood and iron is a great medicine, but Germany, as we see it, has overdosed herself with it. She has not made a friend in Europe since Bismarck died. They say he was overruled when Alsace and Lorraine were detached from France. They tell us the Kaiser was tricked into this war by the Prussian warhogs. Alas, Professor Miinsterberg, it is not the Americans who are the enemies of Germany. You will find in due time that they do not hate the good Germans. The enemies of Germany have been men of her own household, the men who have not only dreamed, but published to the world what you scornfully describe as 'the fantastic dreams of the so-called Pan-Germans.' Why, since 1870, has Germany confidently expected another great war? Why has she ceaselessly trained men, built fort- resses, cast guns, hoarded money and organized to the last detail a campaign against the rest of Europe? The reason, as we see it, is that the small class that guides the destinies of A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 185 her industrious millions has had 'God with Us' for its motto and 'Rule or Ruin' for its policy. Germany is a great country gone wrong. She is getting what her rulers have earned for her. They have made her an impossible nation; a menace to mankind. She has put her trust in force, alienated her natural allies, dishonored her treaties. Now her appeal to force has gone to judgment. If she conquers Europe ruin will find her in victory as it found Napoleon. If Europe conquers her she will get off easier; but either way she has terrible sorrows ahead of her and is a fit object of pity for all kind people." One more extract from a thoughtful reviewer (John Cowper Powys), (87), of the Miinsterberg book must suffice. "With this end in view Professor Miinsterberg sweeps aside all the reports about German brutality and German vandalism and concentrates his attention upon two main propositions: First, that Germany's preparations for the war were purely defensive; second, that Germany's defeat in the war would mean a devastating blow for 'culture,' and a disastrous set- back to the best interests of humanity. With regard to those acts of German vandalism which he sweeps out of his path, Professor Miinsterberg has only one word to say: 'Is there any truth in all this? Yes; one truth, which is imdeniable, which is sad, which is awful, namely, that war is war.' To this interesting acknowledgement that war is a game with no rules, Professor Miinsterberg adds the following charming example of airy and graceful humor: 'When the big head- lines tell the reader again that the German soldiers slaughtered babies yesterday in the town which they captured, he will conjecture for himself that in reality they probably slaughtered some chickens for which they paid in full.' In spite of his use of the term 'war is war,' as an answer to all critics of German war-methods, our Professor cannot resist the temptation to make certain 'side-issue' appeals to proverbial American opinion. 'The Americans,' says he, 'did not like Japan's mixing in on the side of England. This capturing of Germany's little colony in China by a sly trick, when Germany's hands were bound, had to awake sympathy in every American. 186 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR But this was outdone by the latest move of the campaign which hag brought Hindus from India and Turcos from Africa into line against the German people. To force these colored races, which surely have not the slightest cause to fight the German nation, into battle against the Teutons, is an act which must have brought a feeling of shame for the Allies to every true American.' "How naive indeed must be the Professor's sense of Amer- ican intelligence! Without the least disparagement to the attractive negro population in America, no one would for a moment think of comparing them to the cliildren of the imme- morial traditions of India. To introduce such a comparison at all with this invidious expression, 'colored races,' is only to throw the shadow of special pleading across the whole of hia arguments." All the most recent activities among the German-Amer- icans confirm the view that at least their spokesmen are, at heart, Germans, with German ideals and aspirations ahso- lutely incompatible with those of every far-seeing Amer- ican. One of our leading papers (88), under the heading "A German-American Menace," discusses the situation as follows : "Citizens of this country, whatever the land of their birth, have a perfect right to organize for any benevolent purpose that they approve. They can form societies, if they please, in order radically to alter our form of government or to induce it to change its foreign policy. If they are actuated by patriotic American motives, no one will object, however, he may disagree with the aim. But when this organizing is plainly in the interest of a foreign Government, and would inevitably result in dividing all Americans into two camps over an issue foreign to this country, those who undertake it are playing with extremely dangerous fire. It will tend to inject hatred and bitterness into our treatment of questions relating to our foreign affairs, at the worst possible time for such a display of partisanship. If ever there was an hour when patriotic A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 187 citizens should refrain from acts likely to embroil this Grovern- ment at home or abroad, it is the present. "Our Gennan-Amei-icans who are citizens, and not merely sojourners among us, were supposed M^hen they took out their naturalization papers to have abandoned their allegiance to Germany, and to have sworn fealty to our institutions. Now many of them are acting as if they were never Americans at all, but merely Germans who live here for convenience. They ai-e looking at this whole question, not from the American point of view, but the German. When they demand that all ship- ments of arms to Europe be stopped, it is because they favor Germany, and are working in her interest. When they say they desire to elect Congressmen who shall 'compel the Admin- istration to enforce strict neutrality,' they mean that, since the laws, by reason of British control of the sea happen to favor the Allies, they wish those laws changed. If they hap- pened to favor Germajiy we should hear not a word from the German-Americans. They are judging thus upon what will help Germany; how it affects the United States they care not at all. They are, for instance, outspoken not only against England, but against Japan ; for Germany's sake they are play- ing upon the string of racial prejudice and are apparently quite willing to intensify the misunderstandings between the United States and the Mikado's people, without thought of the peril. "For the first time they have raised the question of the loyalty of foreign-born citizens, not their loyalty in time of war, but that deeper, firmer, and nobler allegiance to our institutions which we have a right to expect of true Americans. For it ia impossible to uphold German autocracy and American repre- sentative Government at the same time; they are too utterly dissimilar to make it possible. At bottom there are the same fundamental differences that existed when the men of 1848 fled to this country for political asylum. But those who are trying to raise up a German national party here in the reflected heat of the great struggle abroad overlook all this, as they do the probability of their opening serious cleavage between themselves and the other American citizens which will last for years to come. With the outcome of the war for Germany they have, strictly speaking, no more concern than the hun- dreds of thousands of Americans who are indebted to her for one cause or another. What they ought to be praying for is 188 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR an outcome which will so remodel German institutions as to make them more nearly like our own. What they ought to be striving for is to so bear themselves that at the end of the war they will have won golden opinions on this side of the water for their forbearance, for their tolerance, and their Amer- icanism. "Instead, the course they are threatening to pursue leads straight towards bitterness, sectionalism, and disorder in our political life. It is as if they sought to make themselves feared and disliked. As ex-President Taylor, of Vassar College, has put it: "This is not patriotism; it is pure alienism." In spite of everything I cling to the hope that the sup- port at present nndoubtedly given to the German cause by our German-American citizens is a temporary manifesta- tion of the strength of the ties of blood, and that they as a class are not fitly represented by their present spokesmen. I cannot believe that, however they may have been influ- enced by heredity, by the poisonous teachings of the Bern- hardis and Treitschkes and by the flamboyant but spurious patriotism of the Mlinsterbergs and Bidders and Hil- prechts, they will permanently espouse a cause which is based upon the idea that "there is no room in Germany for a president" for the reason that "the idea of a president is that he draws his power from the will of millions of indi- viduals." It must be impossible that the kindly, sociable and lovable friends I have among the Germans here and abroad, can subscribe to the ethics of the Kaiser as ex- pressed to the German soldiers despatched to China in 1900 : "When you meet the foe you will defeat him. No quarter will be given, no prisoners will be taken. Let all who fall into your hands be at your mercy. Just as the Huns, a thou- sand years ago, under the leadership of Etzel (Attila), gained a reputation, in virtue of which they still live in historical A TEXT-BOOK OP THE WAR 189 tradition, so may the name of Germany become known in such a manner in China that no Chinaman will ever again even dare to look askance at a German." (89) The reference to Attila was commonly suppressed, but the rest of the quotation was circulated on postcards throughout Germany. (90) Two days later the modern Attila preached a sermon on board the HolienzoUern. (91) I may, of course, be mistaken, but until the mistake is demonstrated I do not intend to include in my condemna- tion of the present "German-American" attitude any but those who have publicly put themselves on record. As for them, they should abandon the pretense of being even "hyphenated" Americans. CHAPTEE X. What is the Extent and What Are the Aims of the Organized German Propaganda in America? For the last four or five months the country has been showered with pro-German pamphlets, leaflets, speeches, addresses, newspaper and magazine articles and political tracts. It has been argued with and lied to. It has been coaxed, fawned upon, wheedled, flattered, cajoled, impor- tuned, bullied, and threatened. For example: "A mixed audience of G'erman-Americajis and Irisli-Ameri- cans, who packed Terrace Garden to-night at a meeting called by the New York Irish Volunteer Committee, cheered to the echoes the name of the Kaiser, hissed the New York newspapers, but did not cheer when the Stars and Stripes and the Govern- ment at Washington were mentioned. "Wild applause followed when one of the speakers said that *a imion of the 20,000,000 German-Americans and 13,000,000 Irish-Americans in the United States would make it easily possible, to change the attitude of the newspapers and the Federal Government toward Germany and the German cause.' "The principal speaker of the evening was Dr. Kuno Meyer, of the University of Berlin, who has been in this country ■several weeks lecturing and speaking in behalf of Ger- many. . . "The programme opened and ended with music, but 'The Star-Spangled Banner' was not among the times played. Lar- kin was the first speaker. He immediately started to denounce England. He referred to John Redmond as a supporter of 'the blood-stained flag of England.' '"There are 20,000,000 German- Americans and 13,000,000 Irish-Americans in the United States,' Larkin shouted, 'and if you act together you can make the United States and the news- (190) A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 191 papers do as you like. I am not a citizen of the United States, and if they want to deport me to-morrow they can do it." (92) In a report of the same meeting another paper (93) says : "When the 'Waeht am Rhein' was played by the orchestra, Joseph P. Sheridan, Jr., who was reporting the meeting for the New York City News Association, was attacked by the First Lieutenant of the Irish Volunteers, who jabbed him in the stomach several times with the sheathed end of his sabre be- cause Sheridan did not consider it his duty to stand up. . . . "In Sheridan's own account of the assault made upon him, as sent out by the New York City News Association, he said that he was busy writing when he was suddenly struck with the sword, the Irish Volunteer Lieutenant who struck him shout- ing: " 'Stand up, you scoundrel!' " Commenting on this shameful incident, still another New York paper (94), says editorially: "No friend of England or France, no sympathizer with Bel- gium will protest if Professor Kuno Meyer, of the University of Berlin, and 'Jim' Larkin, of the docks of Dublin, continue each night to give further spectacles of a fusion between Kultur and Anarchy, such as they supplied in Terrace Garden last night. "Any regret, protest, distress that such spectacles produce must come from Germans and their friends who realize how completely fatal to their own cause are such incidents, such insults to American colleges, newspapers, public opinion. Do these agents seriously believe that they can make Ameri- cans Pro-German by becoming Anti- American themselves?" The following day, in continuance, and speaking of Dr. Meyer, the same paper said: (95) 193 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR "It is regrettable that he is not now among us as an exponent of learning, that he is now infesting this neutral country as a passionate alien, seeking to inflame partisans of Germany. It is particularly sad to see so distinguished, a victim of the epi- demic furor professorius. "It appears from the Berlin professor's remarks at the Ter- race Garden last Thursday night that his engagement to lecture at Harvard was cancelled because the president of that uni- versity, having read the address to be delivered, decided that 'it would violate the spirit of neutrality which this coimtry is trying to maintain,' which Professor Meyer is resolved that it shall not maintain. It is easy to believe that Professor Meyer cannot keep King George's head out of his remarks; but he conceives that freedom of speech has been trampled upon at Cambridge : " *I could not live or breathe in an atmosphere so close and dense asi that which seems to prevail at Harvard. Free utter- ance between man and man has always been the breath of my nostrils.' "No considerations of propriety or politeness or respect for a neutral country occur to him. He assumes that academic freedom is violated because he cannot inject his political venom into a literary speech. "How much freedom of speech would he enjoy at Berlin if he tried to incite an audience, say of Poles and Jews, to ally themselves against a Government friendly to the German Em- pire, against, say, 'the blood-stained flag of Austria' ? What would the Prussian police have had to say to such a demonstra- tion as that of Terrace Garden? "He must have breathed asthmatically at this Clan-na-Gael- German-American riot, where a reporter was prodded divers times with a sheathed sabre by a lieutenant of Irish Volunteers for not rising with due observance and reverence when the 'Wacht am Hhein,' apparently the new American anthem, was struck up. "There's 'freedom' for you. In Berlin the sabre would not have been sheathed." It is a source of contentment that the vast majority of the press and a similar proportion of the Intelligent people A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 193 — in whose hands the destinies of America will ultimately rest — have remained unshaken in their belief in the justice and right of the cause of the Allies, which belief they reached within a fortnight of the opening of the war. That they have thus steadfastly believed, in spite of the absence of any inspiring and steadying leadership from the present national Administration, and in the face of so widespread, vigorous, artful and unscrupulous a pro-German and anti- British campaign, is a legitimate cause of pride, and of confidence in the underlying common-sense of the Amer- ican people. JTevertheless, some of us have felt anxious as to the possible effect upon the millions who, somewhat removed from the main currents and counter-currents of world- thought, have been day by day, or week by week, bombarded with German sophisms and German sermons, German half- truths, and German falsehoods. There are in the United States great numbers of news- papers that may, without derogation, be called "provincial" or "country." As a rule, they are a source of strength and a means of education. Their editors are often the leaders of thought in their respective communities. Their teachings, while, of course, varying widely as to political questions, and representing opposite sides of political controversies, are, as a rule, devoted to the fundamental principles of true Democracy, as we understand it in America. Their owners or proprietors, who are often the editors themselves, are compelled to be satisfied with very moderate financial returns for their labors. They are, to an extent, like teachers and professors, obliged to find in certain collateral advantages — the dignity of their profession, the influence they can exert, the social position they acquire — a counter- balancing recompense for their meagre earnings. 13 194 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR To these papers have been sent, by the thousands, pages of matter — technically known as "patent insides" — already put in journalistic form, together with papier- mache moulds (from which type may be easily and inex- pensively cast) — ^the so-called "boiler-plate" — all abso- lutely without cost to the papers, but with the fixed proviso that the stuff thus sent shall be used "entire or not at all." A facsimile of one page of such proffered material, actually sent to a Philadelphia paper, is herewith given together with its translation. For the arguments which the Germans based on this and other documents found at the same time, and the replies thereto see p. 124. What the effect may be ultimately upon the hundreds of thousands of persons thus reached no one now can accu- rately determine. The resulting change of view, if there were any, would be slow in manifesting itself. But the possibility of such change cannot be denied or ignored, and it is a grave question whether the Allies, or their friends here, are wise in regarding this persistent and continuous effort as entirely negligible, I am not unmindful of tlie advice of Charles Francis Adams to his English Friends, and to England, (96) "As respects the war and the attitude of Great Britain, the situation is very clearly understood in America, and the cur- rent of public opinion is all one way, and in your favor. You can safely leave the course of events and the trend of opinion to the representative Germans in this country, including more especially the Ambassador at Washington, von Bernstorff, who strikes me as being utterly unfit for hia position. He has done the German cause immense harm, and brought himself into great discredit. This, by indiscreet and unnecessary talking. Tlie man apparently does not realize that foreign nations do '• * w ~ jk '■«- -CSIMILE OF A PAGE OF "BoILEK-PlATE" MATRIX SENT TO AMERICAN NEWSPAPERS BY THE "German Information Service." ver) German Circular Letter. With the matrix (or '"mats") goes in each case a circular letter. In this instance it was as foUoAvs: "To THE Editors — The mats inclosed are facsimiles of papers found amono- the documents of the Belgian General StafI' at Brus- sels, referring- to arrangement between the Englisli military attaches and the Belgian Minister of War regarding British intervention in Belgium. "Tliey are accompanied by proofs of translations of the dncu- ments and by the explanatory remai'ks of Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, Privy Councillor of the (lei'man Empire and former German Min- ister to the Colonies. "The mats and articles must be used in their entirety, or not at alb "German Information Service." Translation of Facsimile Sent Therewith. '"Confidential: "The British Military Attache asked to see General Jungbluth. The two gentlemen met on April 23rd. "Lieutenant-Colonel Bridges told the General that England had at her disposal an army which could be sent to the Continent, composed of six divisions of infantry and eight brigades of cavalry — together 100,000 troops. She had also everything which is necessary for her to defend her insular territory. Everything is ready. "At the time of the recent events, the British Government would have immediately effected a disembarkment in Belgiimi (chez nous), even if we had not asked for assistance. "The General objected that for that our consent was necessary. "The Military Attache answered that he knew this, but that — -since we were not able to prevent the Germans from passing- through our country — England would have landed her troops in Belgiimi under all circumstances {en tout ctat de cause). "As for the place of landing, the Military Attache did not make a precise statement; he said that the coast was rather long, but the General knows that Mr. Bridges, during Easter, has paid daily visits to Zeebrugge from Ostende. "The General added that we were, besides, perfectly able to prevent the Germans from passing through." For full consideration of the charges based on this and accom- panying documents, see pp. 263 to 276. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 195 not like to be everlastingly instructed as to their obligations, their duties, and the direction in which their sympathies should go forth. They are apt to think that, not being wholly devoid of common sense, they are competent to form their own opinions. They therefore invariably resent the schoolmaster and the propagandist. . . . "Moreover, as I have already intimated, the representative Germans over here are doing the cause of their 'Fatherland,' as they are pleased to call it, infinite injury. The sophistries and perversions of fact to which they have recourse are creative of even more amusement than disgust, and that is saying much. Under these circumstances you Englishmen, so far as America is concerned, can safely leave well enough alone. The current is all running your way, and the best thing you can do is to let it alone. The 'Scrap of Paper' episode, the brutal violation of Belgian neutrality, the destruction of Louvain, the bom- bardment of the cathedral at Rheims 'did the job' here most effectually, so far as the Germans are concerned. They are regarded now generally as a nation of neo-vandals." But even if Mr. Adams is right, and I am disposed to agree with him, his advice does not, and should not, apply to Americans writing for Americans. That the existence of an organized G-erman propaganda here, as well as in other countries, is widely recognized might be further evidenced, if any more evidence were necessary, by hundreds of quotations from current periodi- cal literature. The subjoined extract from an editorial in an American paper (97) proceeds, it will be seen, on such an assumption, and is selected for use here, because it gives an interesting explanation of the apparent failure of the pro-Germans to influence American opinion. It is headed : '^'Thinking' German and Other." "Maximilian Harden, in his Berlin newspaper, the Zuhunft, has had the courage to tell his eoujitrymen the real reason why the opinion of neutral nations bears so strongly against Ger- many, It is not, he says, that 'they are not told the truth.' In 196 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR admitting this, Harden abandons as hopeless the whole German propaganda abroad, especially in the United States. It was based on the assumption that Americans had been fed upon lies, and that as soon as Germany should be able to get her case before them, they would at once change their mind. This was the theory of campaign of the German professors:, of the indi- viduals and the associations in Germany that began to flood the American mail with letters and publications, and of the various Germans who, officially or otherwise, have undertaken the defense of the German cause in this coimtry. That the whole effort has come to nothing is obvious. American opinion remains what it was. Nor was it built upon falsehood. All this mighty attempt to set us right has not produced a single fact, a single document, a single argument which was not known in the United States from the beginning. The trouble was, aa Maximilian Harden now states, not that we did not have the truth, but that we were 'unable to think as Germans do.' "This is both frank and philosophic. It goes near to the root of the difficulty. Something of the same thought was expressed by President Eliot at the New England dinner when he said that the ideals of Germany were different from those of the United States. We Americans cannot bring ourselves to think, in all this matter of war, in the terms which are native to the German mind. What happens to an Amerioaji when he tries to do it, is rather pathetically shown in a little pamphlet which has just reached us from Munich. It is from the pen of George Stuart Fullerton, well known as a professor of philosophy in Columbia University. He writes as 'An American to Ameri- cans,' and entitles his pamphlet, 'Why the German Nation Has Gone to War.' "Now, will it be believed that in the entire production not a solitary explanation is offered of Germany's reasons for going to war. All that Professor Fullerton has done is to give a sympathetic interpretation of German militarism. He knows and loves the Germans, and seeks to make it clear how it was that a peaceable, scientific, music-loving people should have felt it necessary to arm to the teeth, to become a Volk in Waffen. All this is done intelligently and interestingly, but the war itself is described merely as 'inevitable.' Professor Fullerton says in so many words : A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 197 " 'I make no reference to the neutrality of Belgium, nor do I think it worth while to touch upon the question who first formally declared war on this side or on that. In the light of what the world now knows, these have become wholly trivial matters.' "But what is all this except a demonstration of the fact that when an American sets himself to thinking about the war as the Germans do, he instantly makes negligible what to the Ameri- can mind has all along been and to-day continues central and vital ?" The question thus summarized as " 'Thinking/ Ger- man and Other/' i. e., so far as we are concerned, the radical difference between the outlook on life of the average German and that of the average American, is not to be lightly dismissed. Indeed there are Americans who con- sider it to be the underlying factor of the war, most worthy of study and investigation. I subjoin the best summary of this portion of the German controversial output that I have seen (98). It also expresses, I believe, the impres- sion made upon this country by current German opinion as set forth in their own newspapers, and intended, there- fore, not for American, but for home consumption, "Among the great fundamental forces operating in the world war there is one which completely overshadows all others in importance and influence — the thought, the guiding purpose, of the German nation. No problem of the mighty conflict, whether touching its beginning, its conduct or its conclusion, can be studied without first taking into account this factor. "Wliat is that thought? What is the German viewpoint, the spirit which unifies and inspires the nation in its tremendous undertaking? Is there an authentic voice of the German people, whose utterance will reveal its own authority and carry its own conviction? "The empire has not lacked spokesmen; the flood of current literature respecting Teuton politics is of astonishing volume. 198 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Names which a few months ago were knoAvn here only to schol- ars or technical experts have become household words. "He is a poor disputant who cannot quote from Heinrich von Treitschke, who dominated the great Prussian school of his- torians; from Metzsche, the bewildering philosopher of nega- tion, whose influence has saturated German teaching; from Von Bernhardi, the apostle of militarism; to say nothing of Von Buelow, diplomatist; Von Gwinner, finajicier; Harnack and Dryander, theologiansi; Lamprecht and Von Schmoller, political economists; Eucken and Haeckel, scientists, and a score of other noted leaders. "But it is a curious fact that the most distinguished of these writers are quite ignored by advocates of the German cause; indeed, they are politely but firmly repudiated. It is said that Nietzsche has no considerable following; that General von Bernhardi is a military jingo whose extravagances were never taken seriously, and the greatest of German historians is gently dismissed by an eminent German- American in Philadelphia as *a man named Treitschke.' So, for the purpose of this discus- sion, at least, we shall not turn to these familiar sources of German interpretation. "By far the most effective representative of the cause in America has been Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, whose skill in advo- cacy is due not only to wide knowledge, but to the suave dignity of his controversial manner. That his mission is authoritative is not to be doubted, for his appearance was a signal for the retirement of those industrious but rather inept champions, Professor Mtinsterberg and Ambassador von Bemstorff. But Doctor Dernburg's writings are for non-German consumption only. They present an able defense of the national aims, but they do not pretend to voice the inner sentiments which move the people and their rulers. He is an attorney, not an inter- preter. "To get at German thought to-day, therefore, Americans must turn to Germany itself, to the publicists who address their coun- trymen and not aliens, and the newspapers which make and por- tray public opinion upon the issues of the wax. In citing char- acteristic quotations, it will be our purpose to offer only enough editorial comment to serve as mortar between the bricks of German statement and argument. "Making a random selection, we find Herr Basserman, leader A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 199 of the National Liberals, outlining in a speech to the Reichstag a popular view of the policy toward Belgium, France, and the world in general: " 'Let us retain all the territory we already occupy, and also what we shall yet conquer and think necessary to keep. "Through bloody war to glorious victory" is our motto.' "In the Deutsche Tageszeitung an article by a leading Berlin clergyman discusses war as a Christian duty in these terms : " 'Again and again we read that warlike spirit, warlike en- thusiasm and warfare in general are inconsistent with the spirit and teachings of Christianity. This view is superficial. Accord- ing to the Christian viewpoint, history is guided by Him who shapes the destinies of nations. For those who believe this even war is the work of God. " 'If this war is permitted by God, then warfare is a duty. . . . Such a duty and such fulfillment are not only consist- ent with Christianity, but are demanded by Christianity.' "Hermann Sudermann, the noted dramatist, assures his countrymen that 'the "alleged" violation of Belgium's neu- trality has been proved to be our legitimate right,' and there- fore is able to urge solemnly: " 'German militarism can never be misused for desires to attack and to conquer, and is only thinkable as an instrument of defense.' "In Das Frei Wort, a Frankfort review. Count von Hoens- broech argues that Belgium must not be annexed. Justice and the imperial designs would be served, he says, upon these easy terms : " 'AH Belgian fortresses, except Antwerp, to be razed ; Ant- werp to have a German garrison; the Belgian monarchy to be replaced by German regents; the Belgian parliament to be re- stricted to economic matters; payment by Belgium of a "for- midable" war indemnity and a yearly tribute; abolition of the Belgian army; cession of the Congo colony; Belgium's diplo- matic affairs to be handled by German consuls and ministers.' "A few weeks ago Dr. Adolf Lasson, an imperial privy coun- cilor, wrote to a prominent Hollander a letter in which he said : " 'Foreigner means enemy. No one can remain neutral to the German State and people. A man who is not a German knows nothing of Germany. We are morally and intellectually superior beyond all comparison as to our organizations and institutions. 200 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR . . . We Germans have no friends anywhere, because we are efficient and morally superior to all.' "Major General von Disfurth, in the Hamburg Naohtrichten, thus answers complaints against German war methods: " 'Frankly, Ave are and must be barbarians, if by this we un- derstand those who wage war relentlessly and to the uttermost degree. We owe no explanations to anyone. Every act of what- ever nature committed by our troops for the purpose of dis- couraging, defeating and destroying our enemies is a brave act and a good deed. Our troops must achieve victory. What else matters ?' "Doctor Lenard, a member of the faculty at Heidelberg, is quoted in the Hamburger Fremdenblatt in these words: " 'Down with all consideration for England's so-called cul- ture ! The central nest and supreme academy for all hypocrisy in the world, London, must be destroyed. No respect for the tombs of Shakespeare, Newton and Faraday!' "Dr. Friedrich Naumann, editor of Hilfe (Berlin), thus frankly disposes of the neutrality issue: " 'Even assuming that there had been in Belgium an honor- able sentiment of neutrality, the question remains whether a small individual State can have a right to stand aside from a historical process of reconstruction. . . . However friendly and sympathetic one's attitude may be toward the wishes of neutrals, one cannot, in principle, admit their right to stand aside from the general processes of centralization in the leader- ship of humanity. In economics we constantly see small con- cerns trying to remain outside the trusts. Often they succeed, often they do not. The same thing happens also in the sphere of world politics.' "Maximilian Harden is called the Bernard Shaw of Germany. But while his literary agility suggests that of the Irish drama- tist, his genius is of infinitely greater brilliance, and his popular influence was proved when he smashed a corrupt ring that had its headquarters in the very palace of the Kaiser. Let him answer those who plead that war was forced on Germany : " 'Cease the pitiful attempts to excuse Germany's action. . . . Not as weak-willed blunderers have we imdertaken the fearful risk of this war. We willed it, because we had to will it and could will it. May the Teuton devil throttle those whiners A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 301 whose pleas for excuses make us ludicrous in these hours of lofty experience! " 'We do not stand, and shall not place ourselves, before the court of Europe. Our power shall create new law in Europe. Germany strikes! If she conquers new realms for her genius, the priesthood of all the gods will sing songs of praise to the good war. " 'Do not lapse into dream si about the "United States of Europe." ... To the Belgians we are the arch-imp and the tenant of the pool of hell. We would remain so, even if every atone in Louvain and in Malines were replaced by its equivalent in gold.' "The Deutsche Tageszeitiung, in a long editorial, demands that German shall replace English as the world language, so as to end the 'fearful brutalizing influencesr" that appear 'in every land where the English language is spoken.' "In the vocabulary of the Berliner Tagehlatt, the Japanese are 'yellow Britons' and 'the monkey relatives of Sir Edward Grey.' The Kreuzzeitwng tells its readers that British soldiers go to war 'without any thought except of shillings with which to purchase whisky.' Here is a glimpse of the popular mind respecting the war: " 'We would see every monument, every picture, utterly de- stroyed rather than that the glorious work given to the German race should be hindered by so much as one hour's avoidable de- lay. The world can be revitalized, society ennobled and refined, only through the German spirit. The world must, for its own salvation, be Germanized.' "From the FramJcfwrter Zeitung : " 'Belgium, uselessly tortured and befooled by meaningless treaties and promises, is done with. Its ministers are still talk- ing of victory, and even of a greater Belgium, but these are mere words of intoxication.' "It is from such passiages in the common literature of the day, rather than from writings of historians and philosophers, that one may derive an idea of popular German thought. There is a concentrated fury in its expression which is very striking; it is as if the words half strangled those who seek to utter them. "With characteristic efficiency the Germans have classified and named this spirit. They call it the 'furor Germanicus,' and exult that it is so widespread and powerful. This, far 203 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR more than the ambitions designs of statesmen, is the ruling force in the war; it is this, rather than howitzers and subma- rines, that has witlistood the might of Germany's enemies and may change the course of civilization." The peculiarity of present-day German mental processes is also held iip to scorn in tlie following editorial: (99) "Among other documents lavishly distributed to the Ameri- can public by the energetic German Press Bureau is a quarterly 'War Chronicle,' containing arguments and exliibits to prove the justice of the German cause, letters from soldiers at the front and pictures of British warships and other objects destroyed on sea or land. Not the least interesting feature of the latest issue is a map of Louvain intended to show the exact damage done to the city. The 'unshaded and undamaged portion' has an impressive look until examination reveals the fact that it does not include the center of the city, where naturally the Avorst destruction was wrought. It is as if Philadelphia from the City Hall to Independence Square had been wrecked; the area would seem small on a map of the whole city, but the injury would be none the less appalling. "The inscription under this map of Louvain — ''The lined por- tion only was damaged in the fight forced upon us' — is the chief matter of psychological interest, because it illustrates so aptly the exirious working of the German mind. After all the absolute evidence to the contrary, Bolgimn in the role of agent provocateur remains an ineradicable obsession. And on the principle so lucidly laid down in 'The Hunting of the Snark,' that 'what I tell you three times is true,' Germany goes on presenting her case to the world as if this evidence did not exist. 'The fight forced upon us!' Does the idea still persist at Berlin that Americans are fools enough to believe that?" It would seem quite incredible to Americans that any attempt to secure newspaper support on a large scale by bribery ^vould be made, or if made, could be successful. But Anton Oskar Klaussmann, in Der Tilrmer (Stutt- gart) attributes the general dislike for Germany to system- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 203 atic bribing of the foreign press. He includes us in his theory, which is apparently that all papers — except those of Germany — have been bribed, or are bribable. He says: (100) " 'Thia misuse of the foreign press against us is part of the policy of the Iron Ring — England, France, and Russia, They have systematically depreciated us in the eyes of the world. They have "influenced" the foreign press. The almighty rouble, the world-conquering pound sterling, and the French franc have created accomplices, and for decades everything unpleasant that has happened anywhere in the world has been laid at our door by the press. This German-baiting has been conducted at the expense of reason and logic. They have charged us with things so senseless and foolish that one would have thought that even a half-witted person would be able to see the fallacies.' "In spite of all the absurdities of the campaign against Ger- many's virtues, the writer acknowledges that it has been a suc- cess, and proceeds to take the Government to task for not having initiated a counter-campaign of press bribery: " 'To be sure it would have cost millions to influence the for- eign papers, for we should have had to bid higher than our ene- mies. But these millions would not have been wasted; they would have proved an excellent investment when that dark plot against us was hatched, and we found out, with despair, that we had not a friend left in the world. We should not have had to bear those hours of anxiety when we saw our so-called friends in America, in Sweden, in Denmark, in Spain, in Rou- mania, and in Italy overwhelming us with accusations and cry- ing out to heaven that we had broken the peace, that our ra- pacity alone had caused the war.' "Now that the war has started, he thinks it is a waste of time to attempt to influence the hostile papers, but he notes with some satisfaction that the powers in Berlin are no longer blind to the advantages accruing from a friendly press and have taken steps to insure support in certain quarters : " 'Wliat a hostile attitude was assumed by certain Italian papers during the early days of the war! In Berlin the names of these papers that suddenly dropped their hatred of Germany and wrote in our favor are well known, and it is quite under- 204 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR stood here that an ass with a load of gold has climbed over the wall of hatred for Germany.' " This is most interesting and instructive. It seems to him impossible that the world generally could have disre- garded G-erman claims to ■world-power, disapproved of Ger- man ideals, and disliked German methods and measures, unless it had been influenced to do so by a venal press. Of course his view is confirmatory of all that has been said of German megalomania and of German insolence and stupidity also. Anything, to them, is believable rather than that, on her merits, Germany should be widely and spontaneously disliked. For a further and more detailed illustration of the German-American methods, let me instance the case of the three Congressmen — with the apparently pertinent names of Bartholdt, Vollmer and Lobeck — ^who, the evidence shows, first tried to secure aid for Germany by the trans- parent device of prohibiting the sale of munitions of war to any belligerent; and who next undertook to fool the House of Eepresentatives as to the German citizenship law. Mr. Maurice Leon, of New York, has ably and vigorously dealt with this matter. He characterizes the legislation proposed by these Congressmen — forbidding all shipments to belligerents — as such an unequivocal espousal of Ger- many's interests as to call for immediate exposure, inas- much as publicity in such important matters affects the vital interests and even the permanent safety of the Amer- ican people. He gives his views of the activities of Con- gressmen of German descent as follows: (101) "Representatives Bartholdt, Lobeck and Vollmer, when they speak of forcing an end to the war by cutting off all supplies from belligerents, know well that no supplies in any case can A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 205 reach Germany. Therefore, by 'belligerents' they mean 'Allies.' "Thisi is a characteristic German maneuver. I have no doubt but that these three Congressmen are carrying out the ex- pressed wishes of Count von BernstorfF, the German Ambassa- dor to this country, and Dr. Bernhard Demburg, the German publicist. "In view of the activities of Representatives Bartholdt, Lo- beck and Vollmer, it is important to consider whether the alle- giance of these gentlemen is primarily to the United States or to Germany. Their silence is transparent. They are acting as agents of the German Government in Congress. What they do dovetails with the activities of the German Ambassador. "A true explanation of the whole matter is foxmd in the principle laid down in the German imperial and State citizen- ship law, Article XXV, Paragraph 2. "This law sanctions the following practice: A German desir- ing to exercise the franchise of this country goes to the Ger- man Consul and from him obtains the written consent of the German authorities to retain his German citizenship notwith- standing his naturalization. "Having done that, he goes before a court in this country and takes an oath of allegiance which, according to our laws, requires him expressly to forswear allegiance to the German Empire. But that oath is not taken by him in good faith. He is not engaged in reality in becoming an American citizen, but in ac- quiring the right to use the American franchise although re- maining a German subject. "In this way the German Government connives at wholesale deception of the American Government and does so with the sanction of a law duly adopted by the Reichstag and bearing the signature of the German Emperor. "The attitude of mind which this situation has engendered is admirably illustrated by two recent articles of Dr. Dernburg. In the current issue of the North Amerioan Review he shows Germany in the attitude of injured innocence protesting that she has nothing to gain and wishes to gain nothing by the war, while in the Independent for December 7th Dr. Dernburg dis- cusses the terms upon which Germany would make peace, men- tioning that Germany merely wants the Baltic provinces, Ant- werp (which Dr. Dernburg, although formerly a Colonial Sec- retary, locates on the Rhine), customs control of Belgium, 206 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Morocco, a sphere of influence in Asia Minor from the Persian Gulf to the Dardanelles and, as presents to Germany's friends, Egypt for Turkey and Finland for Sweden. "If it is the same Dr. Dernburg who writes both of these articles, he must have a dual personality comparable to the dual nationality of the German-Americans represented by Herr Bartholdt, Herr Irf)beck and Herr VoUmer," This publication was met by vociferous denial from the Congressmen concerned, the character of which is suffi- ciently explained by Mr. Leon's further reply: (102) "All the vituperation of Messrs. Bartholdt, VoUmer and Lo- beek will avail them nothing. Such epithets as 'liar' and 'scoundrel,' which they find it convenient to utter in the shelter of the House of Representatives, have become a sort of Iron Cross which Pan-Germans bestow upon their opponents, and which are gratefully accepted as such. It is amazing to find that these Pan-Germans in Congress have been driven to such desperate devices as actually to try to deceive the House of Representatives concerning the tenor and effect of the German citizenship law. The text of that law, which was adopted by the Reichstag and Bundesrath and signed on July 22, 1913, by the German Emperor at Balholm on board the yacht Hohenzol- lern, is found in the supplement of the American Journal of International Law of July, 1914. Paragraph 2 in Article XXV of that law reads as follows: " 'Citizenship is not lost by one who, before acquiring foreign citizenship, has secured on application the written consent of the competent authorities of his home State to retain his citi- zenship. Before this consent is given the Grerman Consul is to be heard.' "That same law has provisions whereby one who, like Mr. Vollmer, was born in Iowa of a German father, may secretly contract (German allegiance without establishing a German residence. These provisions are contained in Article XIII, sanc- tioning the re-Germanization of 'a former German who has not taken up his residence in Germany,' with the proviso : 'The same applies to one who is descended from a former German or has been adopted as a child of such.' A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 307 "There is reason to believe that the law merely sanctioned an existing practice. Now these Congressmen even deny the exist- ence of such a law, "According to the newspapers Mr. Bartholdt made yesterday the following statement concerning the effect of that law: " 'The facts are simply these : Germany, like every other country, has a law which makes it possible for those who are away from the Fatherland to retain their citizenship by report- ing within ten years to a German Consul, but when so reporting they must make oath that they have not acquired or taken steps to acquire citizenship in any other country.' "Let unhyphenated Americans compare Mr. Bartholdt's words with the words of the law and judge for themselves whether Mr. Bartholdt was or was not endeavoring to deceive his colleagues in the House of Representatives concerning a matter of vital consequence to the American Government. "Mr. Bartholdt makes a denial that he has been conferring with the German Ambassador, a charge that has not been made, but he cannot and does not deny the fact that his activities as a Congressman dovetail with those of the German Ambassador. "The newspapers have published during the last week items to the effect first, that the German Ambassador has charged American manufacturers with delivering dumdum bullets to the British Government by the million; second, that the American manufacturers named by the German Ambassador have abso- lutely denied that there is any truth in his assertion and have invited him to retract it or furnish proof; third, that the Ger- man Ambassador replied that he had the proof, but has not fur- nished it. While this was going on Representatives Bartholdt, Vollmer and Lobeck were actually engaged in their endeavor to line up the German-Americans behind the attempt to force through Congress legislation, the effect of which would be prac- tically to enlist the services of the United States as the ally of Germany, Austria and Turkey. It is a fact of public notoriety that in that endeavor they are enjoying the active support of Mr. Viereck, editor of an organ which may be regarded as the mouthpiece of an invisible government established by Germany in these United States to rule over the German- American popu- lation, the head of which is Mr. Bernhard Dernburg, former German Cabinet Minister, now acting as a sort of local viceroy 208 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR over numerous organizations in this country embraced in the Deutsche Americanische Verbund." The following editorial (103) on the question of Ger- man-American Citizenship," is representative of the feel- ing of all real Americans. After noting that under certain circumstances a German may obtain citizenship in a foreign country without forefeiting his citizenship in Ger- many, and re-quoting the law of July, 1913, it continues : "There is no question of Germany's entire competence and right to make this arrangement for her sons domiciled in for- eign lands. The conservation of her political interests is a matter for her own wisdom and prevision. But the effect of such a law on the citizenship of this country is a subject that must engage our earnest study, and if necessary cause the re- vision of our naturalization system to prevent the erection within our citizenship of a class of fraudulently hyphenated Americans unlike any heretofore existing. "Under our liberal practice an invitation is given to all men of good disposition to acquire citizenship. The alien, on filing his declaration, must take oath that it is bona fide his intention to become a citizen of the United States and to renounce for- ever all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign State or ruler, and particularly to that one of which he may be a citizen or subject. Similarly, on the application for admission the alien must make oath that: " 'He will support the Cons>titution of the United States, and that he absolutely and entirely renounces and abjures all alle- giance and fidelity to every foreign prince, potentate. State or sovereignty; and particularly, by name, to the prince, poten- tate. State or sovereignty of which he was before a citizen or subject.' "It will be seen that this oath is as searching and inclusive as it well could be. The renunciation is forever, absolute and entire. No provision is made for a temporary or limited re- nunciation; the possibility of a dual citizenship, or subject- citizenship, is not contemplated by the law. Such a division A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 209 of loyalty, sucli a commingling of allegiances, as the retention of foreign citizenship in company with American citizenship, as might be accomplished by a German under the terms of the law quoted by Mr. Leon, would be repugnant to American institu- tions, subversive of American interests and against our public policy. "That an honorable man could subscribe to the oaths re- quired while reserving his original citizenship through formal arrangement with his native government is incredible." I have, of course, had to select one incident ont of many to illustrate in detail the German and German-American activity in America at this time. I chose this one because the three German- Americans who figure in it are law-mak- ers and legislators for the American people, and because, for that reason, their sayings and doings acquire an adven- titious interest quite apart from any other claim they might possess to occupy the attention of the public. The Courrier des Etats Unis, of March 17, 1915, pub- lishes the subjoined item: "The Frankfort Oazette publishes the following letter ad- dressed to a German lady by Mr. Richard Bartholdt, a member of the United States Congress: "Committee on Foreign Affairs, Chamber of Congress, United States, Washington, January 31, 1915. " 'Dear Madam : My best thanks for your letter. Unfor- tunately, I have not the time to inform you at length upon the situation. The German-Americcms are all faithful to the old country. For the last five months I have been occupied night and day in spreading the truth. Yesterday took place here a conference of representatives of all the German associations of America. It was the first time that all the Germanic elements in the Republic thus united in one assembly. I was elected president of this central association. " 'We shall know how to make ourselves heard. " 'With you I wish a definite victory for Germany over per- fidious England, and beg you to accept, etc., etc. 14 'Richard Barthouot.' ' 210 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR If this is not authentic it should obviously be promptly disavowed. If it is authentic, comment upon such a letter, written on official paper, by a member of the House Com- mittee on Foreign Affairs, seems superfluous. I would simply ask for the incident the thoughtful attention of all Americans. The Mr. Viereck, editor of the ''Fatherland" which, by the way, is the journal that objected to America's sending food and clothing to the starving and homeless Belgians — was also good enough to suggest that we could "make a Christmas present to the world'' by declining to sell to the Allies any munitions of war. Mr. Viereck is dealt with as follows (104) by a well-known American, Mr. Horace White. "The interview in which Mr. Viereck, the editor of the Gfer- man paper, the Fatherland, shows how the war in Europe might be brought to an end in sixty days or less, contains more enlightenment than appears on the surface. He says that the American people can work this miracle by stopping the sale of arms and ammunition to the Allies. Germany, having made war, and preparations for war, the chief concern of human ex- istence, is presumably well supplied with guns and ammunition and manufactories thereof. She has the great Krupp works with 90,000' men working night and day and she has taken the Belgian arms factory at Lilge and turned it to her own service against Belgium, with probably 10,000 men more. Now, if she can prevent France from getting arms from this side of the water, she can conquer her enemies in sixty days or less. That is what Mr. Viereck means by bringing the war to an end. He means ending it successfully to the country which began it. The American people are to enable the Germans to march into Paris in sixty days, or less ! "This achievement, Mr. Viereck thinks, would be the best Christmas present that the United States could make to the world. Put an end to the war within sixty days! But what then? Simply begin again da capo. Germany would levy con- tributions in cash and territory to suit herself, and, having thua A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 211 planted the seeds for future wars, would begin to prepare for them, and would still call them defensive wars. It is needless to say that the people of the American hemisphere are not con- templating any such Christmas gift, either as givers or re- ceivers. They do not want this war to end merely as an armistice, to break out again as soon as the chief belligerent can get his second wind. The reasons which compel reflecting men and nations to think that an indecisive conclusion would be a calamity to the world are well presented in the last At lantio MoiUhly Magassine, in an article by Lowes Dickinson, which shows that these ever-recurring holocausts can be con- trolled only by an international police force capable of throt- tling any unruly member, and that the real workers of the world must take into their own hands the issues of war and peace, and no longer leave those mighty questionsi to be decided by diplomats and brigadier-generals alone. The enlightenment which Mr. Viereck casts upon the situa- tion is that Germany is beginning to feel insecure in the situa- tion in which she has placed herself. She needs some outside help in addition to that of the tmspeakable Turk. She cannot see any new reinforcement, but if she can cut off the purchase of arms and ammunition by the Allies on this side of the water she can prolong the war or perhaps win victory in the end, so that the Christmas present would be all her own. And it would be called by the plausible name of neutrality. . . • Any new legislation which introduces a change of practice in favor of one belligerent and against another is a breach of neutrality. That is what Mr, Viereck proposes. His Christmas present is a change of law favorable to the Germans and adverse to the Allies. Much more might be said on this subject, but let us conclude by asking who is going to find bread for the 100,000 or more American wage-workers who are now earning their own living in our arms factories, if we pass a law to prohibit the exportation of their products?" Americans should also ask : "Are the prohibitory laws we are urged to pass desirable or proper not only in this crisis but as the basis for a permanent policy?'^ The Outloole (105), after having answered the first part 212 A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR of this question in the negative on ethical and other grounds, proceeds to deal as follows with the effect of such laws as a precedent for future action on the part of other countries : "Is the prohibition of exporting ®uch supplies an act that we should regard as friendly and neutral if, the case being reversed, we were at war and wished to purchase supplies from a neutral power ? At such a time as this the Uinted States must make its decision, guided not by present sentiment and feeling alone, but by its convictions as to what it regards as the policy of perma- nent validity imder all circumstances. Suppose the United States were at war with Great Britain and had swept the British navy from the seas (a supposition plainly contrary to any conceivable fact), and we were confining our operations to defense along the Canadian border; should we regard it as a friendly act on the part of (Germany and France and Russia and the other European Powers if they jointly and severally refused to sell us clothing for our soldiers on the ground that they wished to be entirely neutral and to even matters up be- cause England had lost her fleet ? We do not think that Ameri- cans would consider that as a sign of neutrality and friendliness. If it would not be a sign of neutrality and friendliness on the part of Russia and France and Germany under those conditions, it would certainly not be a sign of neutrality on our part to do likewise under present conditions. "We do not think, therefore, that the prohibition of the ex- port of munitions of war can be justified on the ground of ethics, on the ground of neutrality, or on the ground of a con- sistent permanent policy." In illustration of German-American methods, I may add another editorial from an American newspaper. (106) It voices the sentiments of thousands of Americans, whose sympathies are with the Allies, but who disagree with me either as to the propriety, or as to the effective possibilities of our interference. They may be depended upon at least to insist on genuine A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 213, neutrality and to resent bitterly any attempt to set a trap for us, which, would leave us embroiled with Great Britain — the chief hope and the main object, so far as we are con- cerned, of the Pan-Germanists here and abroad. "That Germany is deliberately trying to foster trouble be- tween the United States and Great Britain should occasion no surprise. Tactically it is the logical thing for Germany to do, the thing that the precedents of ages recommend, the thing that England expected Germany to attempt. For months Ger- many has been looking for some pretext that could be so exag- gerated as to arouse resentment in this country against the Allies. And, quite naturally, failing to find such a pretext, she will do her utmost to create one. A Board of Strategy that neither balked nor gagged at letting loose all the Moslem fa- natics and dervishes upon the Christian world would hardly hesitate to break the one hundred years of peace that have ex- isted among the English-speaking nations. "Forewarned should mean forearmed. The Administration cannot be xmaware of the motives and hopes that lie behind and control the stage at the present international situation. Presi- dent Wilson's neutrality must be as impartial and real in effect as it was prompt and emphatic in enunciation. The United States has too much at stake, is too essential to the work of world reconstruction after the war is over, and is far too wise and just to be drawn into a false position by the designs of any of the European combatants. America is genuinely committed to neutrality and must not violate it on any terms." The Fatherland, a pro-German weekly, published in English in this country, goes, as I have already noted, far beyond the prohibition of war materials. It said: "Every nation in war has the right to crush the spirit of its enemy and starve it into submission if it can. We (the Ameri- cans) are denying this right to Germany, for we are sending food by the shipload to the enemies of Germany in order that they may go on fighting and killing." 214 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR The meaning of this is that Americans are violating the principles of neutrality, are actually aiding the enemies of Germany, by sending food to keep life in the homeless, famished people of Belgium — not the army, but the help- less non-combatants. From the point of view of the Fath- erland — a sympathetic title ! — we do wrong to interfere, even by means of charity for helpless victims of war, with the German purpose to starve the women and children of an enemy. This does not seem to require further comment except to note that this cheerful suggestion comes from the same German- American, who was so anxious, in the interests of humanity, to stop the sale of arms and amimunition to "belligerents." There is a serious side to the pro-German agitation that has been well brought out recently, apropos of an exhorta- tion addressed to German-Americans by Herr Eidder, through his paper the New York Stoats Zeitung: (107) "It is well for those Americans of German extraction to ponder on the many grave problems which confront them owing to the war," writes Mr. Ridder, who is convinced that "the drift of public opinion, driven by a press unfriendly toward Germany, requires a closer bond of sympathy between the friends of Ger- many." The day draws near, he declares, when "the Allies, hard pressed, forced by their necessities, will demand of the United States even a more active co-operation than they are receiving at the present time," and "against that day we must be organized to fight." He continues: "Each single and individual German residing in the United States or the descendant of a German must play his or her part in preaching the gospel of German justice and German fair play. Let an endless chain of discussion help to swing the bal- ance back in favor of th3 cause we know to be just. There must be no shirkers, no drones in this campaign. The responsi- bility lies evenly on every one of you. We cannot resort to con- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 315 seription, but must rely upon universal service of a voluntary character, . . . "There are over two thousand German societies of one kind or another in Greater New York. Practically every German- speaking American, as well as thousands residing in New York, are members of one or more of these societies. Similarly in each great town the Germans and their descendants have proved loyal to the traditions upon which their lives are based. These societies form strong rallying-points for a campaign of educa- tion. . . . "There have been no traitors to the German cause either among the 66,000;000 Germans in Germany or the many millions of Germans and their descendants in the United States. . . . "I am not preaching sedition. I am preaching the highest form of loyalty that I know. We are a mixed people in the United States. We have come from the ends of the earth. We have all given our mite to the building up of this great country. We all deserve equally of it and it of us. There is no reason, therefore, why its destinies should be swayed more by the people who think as England thinks than by those who think as Germany does." Replying to Mr. Ridder through the columns of the New York Sun, Mr. Maurice Leon vrites: "Organize for what? What is expected of German- Americans by Mr. Ridder and his associates? Here is the essence of the clarion call — 'There have been no traitors to the German cause either among the 66,000,000 of Germans in Germany or among the many millions of Germans and their descendants in the United States.' "There in a nutshell is the Pan-German policy in the German citizenship law of July 22, 1913. Under that policy the 66,- 000,000 Germans in Germany and the many millions of Germans and their descendants in the United States are expected to stand as one man for the German cause, and Mr. Ridder now pro- claims that anyone in this country coming under the all-inclu- sive description of the German Citizenship Law who does not stand by the German cause as steadfastly as the invaders of Belgium, northeast France, and Poland must be stigmatized as a traitor. "Taking in this connection the Pan-German campaign con- ducted by German members of Congress under the convenient 216 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR cloak of a peace propaganda, gains a significance which has been clear so far to comparatively few of our citizens. It even leads one to suspect that the Los Angeles Times might be well informed in its disclosure of the preparations for a raid against Canada by a German force mobilized in California, "Mr. Ridder'S( call to 'organize' is intended to be understood as meaning 'mobilize.' This mobilization is not to be largely military in character, at least for the present, but rather political. Dr. Dernburg, as boss of an enormous German po- litical machine, is to be enabled to dictate to the American Government so that it will recognize the annexation of Belgium by the Kaiser. Once that is achieved, our Minister and Con- suls in Belgium will be treated as meddlers concerning them- selves improperly with matters affecting German subjects if they continue their activities in behalf of a prostrate people to whom the United States still stands as the symbol of human justice and pity." I hope every American who is enough interested in this book to read it at all, will take time to think over the possibilities — not of danger, but of serious annoyance — dis- closed by the above quotations. The endeavor to arouse anti-British feeling has in venom and unscrupulousness been predominant, and obviously seems to the pro-German conspirators in this country their most promising line of effort. They continue to refer to every dispute or misunderstanding between this country and Great Britian, but particularly emphasize the attitude of the British governing classes at the time of our civil war. I shall digress here long enough to call attention to the fact that they might henceforth, in their efforts to get a "fair and moderate view of the situation," use the follow- ing quotations, taken from the files of one Philadelphia paper (108) in 1898 during our recent war with Spain. "The Tagehlatt : 'For a long time such an important enuncia- A TEXT-BOOK OF TEE WAR 217 tion of the head of a State has not met with such general dis- approval. President McKinley's humanitarian phrases render the disagreeable impression even more lasting. The concluding passages are the least satisfactory of all.'" (April 18th.) "The Vossische Zeitung: 'American policy in Cuba has been characterized by violence and hypocrisy, and has not a single ennobling feature.'" (April 22nd.) "The Kolnisohe Zeitmig: 'To expel Satan by Beelzebub can hardly be described as a result of genuine philanthropy.' " (April 23rd.) "The organ of Prince Bismarck, The Hamburger 'Nachrichten, insists that Germany must follow the policy which will be the most useful to her o^vn interests. 'It is wholly indifferent to Germans,' says the newspaper, 'whether Cuba remains a Spanish colony or becomes an independent American republic. But German- American interests must be watched and attention must be paid to the feelings of Germans in the United States.'" (April 25th.) "The Nachrichten, however, characterizes the action of the United States as 'an insolent piece of presumption against the rest of the world; an absolutely unjustifiable outrage quite analogous to the interference by Greece in Crete,' but adds, 'Germany's theoretic opposition to Monroeism can only be practically enforced when German interests are directly con- cerned, which is not now the case. Therefore, The Nachtrichten councils the strictest neutrality, saying: 'It must be left to Spain, individually, to resent American insolence.'" (April 25th.) "The Schleswche Zeitung: 'While, individually Germany may view with indignation the jingoistic rapacious, pharisaical game now playing at Washington, the same indignation must be felt in regard to the Spanish reign of terror in Cuba. The German Government has merely to guard the welfare and the interests of the German people. These bid us to let events, take their own course.'" (April 25th.) "The Vorwdrts. 'The enemies are too unequal to admit of any supposition but that the war will end in the utter exhaus- tion of Spain. To Spain's loss, however, there will be no cor- responding gain to the United States. Thus the war, no matter how it ends, means a great disaster, and even the dollar crazy Americans will hardly be able to call it 'good business'!" 218 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "Cologne Volks Zeitung: 'We do not favor intervention in this war; but we are of the opinion that the European Powera ought to exert strong diplomatic pressure at the first oppor- tunity in order to shorten the war. The Yankees are already swollen with pride. If they win another decisive victory hardly any European country will be able to consort with them diplo- matically. In view of the unfriendly sentiments entertained in the United States toward Germany, and the many economic differences existing between the two countries, it is very pos- sible that Germany may be the next victim of American impu- dence.'" (May 9th.) "Prince Bismark condems the war outright: "The whole course of the Washington Administration has been insincere." "My views are well understood. I have always held that war is only defensible after all other remedies have failed." "The result of the war cannot be wholesome either to Amer- ica or Europe. The United States will be forced to adopt an intermeddling policy, leading to unavoidable frictions. She thus abandoned her traditional peace policy, and, in order to maintain her position, she must become a military and naval power, an expensive luxury which her geographic position rendered unnecessary." (May 19th.) "America's change of front means retrogression, in the high sense of civilization. Thisi is the main regrettable fact about this war." (May 19th.) "Tagliohe Rundsclum: 'The British lion would rather roar than fight. It sounds well and costs nothing. But England finds herself confronted with the question of her very existence. Consequently the nation of shopkeepers suddenly raises the cry of "A kingdom for an alliance!" and behold an ally appears in the shape of Brother Jonathan. America with its mish-mash of waste pieces of nationality, millions of emigrant murderers, English tongue, and black, red and yellow skins suddenly becomes an Anglo-Saxon race.'" (May 23rd.) "The MilUar-Wochenzeittmg, the leading army organ: 'Any attempt by the United States to effect the landing of large bodies of troops in Cuba before the raw and undisciplined hordes have had at least six months training will inevitably result in disastrous and wholesale slaughter. It is even very doubtful whether these so-called citizen soldiery will stand their ground against the veterans of Spain next fall. We only A TEXT-BOOK OP THE WAR 219 need recall the first battle of Bull Run to become aware of the absence of staying qualities in these militia, badly led and worse drilled.' " (May 30th.) A well-known and highly respected citizen of New York, Dr. George Haven Putnam, has sent to the New York Times a copy of his reply to a request to join the so-called German University League — another of the num- erous aliases of the pro-German propaganda in this coun- try. After pointing out his full appreciation of much that Germany has done, Mr. Putnam gives his reason for his detestation of her present attitude. Americans believe, he says, "that the preparation for this war had been made by Germany j'^ears back, and that the Servian incident merely served as a convenient occasion for the outbreak. "We believe that the main purpose of the war is the destruc- tion of the British Empire and the taking over of her Colonial possessions, to which Germany has long expected to become the heir. France stands between Germany and England and, to use the German words, 'France must be crushed this time so thor- oughly that she shall never again stand in the way of Germany.' The unauthorized invasion and the devastation of Belgium iseem to have been considered by the German ruler as but trivial incidents which should carry no weight in connection with this larger policy. "I am myself an old soldier, and I have looked with increasing indignation at the manner in which Germany is conducting this war and at the barbarous precedents that in this 20th century are being made under German official orders. The destruction, by order, of Belgian cities, the taking of hostages; and the making of these hostages responsible for the actions of individuals whom they were not in a position to control; the shooting of many of these hostages; the appropriation for the use of the armies of the food which had been stored in Antwerp and elsewhere, so that the people in Belgium, now officially classed as 'subjects of Germany,' are dependent upon American charity to save them from starvation ; the imposition upon these 320 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR starving and ruined communities of crushing indemnities — all these things impress Americans as contrary to the standards of modern eivillization. The ruin brought upon Louvain can, it seems to us, be paralleled in modern history only by the destruction of Heidelberg by the troops of Louis XIV, but this instance of French, barbarism is nearly 250 years back and ought assuredly not to have been imitated in this 20th century. "We find ground, also, for indignation at the use of vessels of war and of Zeppelins for the killing of w^omen and children and other unarmed citizens in undefended places. Such killing, which has nothing whatsoever to do with the direction of the work of campaigns, can only be classed as murder. With these views I can, therefore, not at this time at least, accept the companionship of German-Americans who are prepared to ap- prove, defend, or excuse these actions." And from Philadelphia went another reply to the same request : "Dr. Hugo Kirbach, recording secretary. The German Uni- versity League, New York. "Sir — The circular letter from your league directed to my father, the late Dr. Horace Howard Furness, has come to my hands and has been opened by me, one of his executors. Were he still alive I am confident that his heart would be Avrung by the sad spectacle of the degradation of Germany and the Ger- man people that he knew and loved when he was a student in 1854-56, and that honored him with a degree from Halle in 1878. That Avas the German life, and there were then the German ideals that inspired admiration. Now I am sure his every fiber would cry out against the grievous wrongs that this Prussianized people have perpe- trated before the eyes of the civilized world. How can they expect fair play, giving none? Where obtain trustworthy ma- terial bearing on German affairs that will not tend to plunge Germany deeper and deeper in the mire and make humane men and women avert their eyes in horror? No sophistry can excuse the breaking of solemn pledges between nations ; no argu- ment can justify the devastation of Belgium. False patriotism alone makes the American-Germans condone the sacrifice of the A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 331 flower of their fathers' country, and the agony of tears of the mothers and wives on the altar of commerce. Germany and Austria-Hungary are the invaders and have been from the start. "Feeble though my influence may be I shall never move my pen nor raise my voice to justify or uphold German aims or ideals as exhibited in the present ghastly catastrophe; I con- demn them from my heart of hearts. Yours, "William Henbt Fubness, 3d." One single illustration of the extent of the pro-German — and anti- American — propaganda must suffice; but it is of extreme significance. The Japan Times (109) says editorially: "Thisi is no time for a kid-glove policy or for mere veiled hints at some indefinite 'influence' of which we must beware. We have had enough of kid-gloved 'publicity'; enough of innuendo and of suggestion. "Some years ago a very great statesman, the Marquis Komura, then Minister for Foreign Affairs for Japan, in a carefully prepared, formal speech, denotmced 'The forces of Evil.' . . . "On the occasion of this memorable speech and reference to 'The Forces of Evil,' the Secretary of War for the United States was the guest of the Minister for Foreign Affairs. The speech was short, but it was very sincere. The reference to 'The Forces of Evil' was carefully and deliberately made. It was no offhand, after-dinner, courteous expression of regard from host to guest. It was not a balloon sent up to make a little whispering for an hour in the smoking-room. Marquis Komura intended that his reference to 'The Forces of Evil' should be heard throughout the world and it was so heard. Within a few hours of the delivery of the speech — consisting of less than one hundred and fifty words- — it was read by millions of people in America and in Europe. 'The Forces of Evil' which were seeking and are seeking to soav discord between America and Japan were known to Marquis Komura as they are knovi'n to his successors and to the Government of Japan. It is with 222 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR these forces of evil that the friends of Japan have been at death grips for the last six years. It was to these German 'Forces of Evil' that the Marquis Komura issued his notable warning when he spoke across the table as courteous host to welcome guest and as good friend to good friend. It was an earnest warning to America of which, alas! but few took sufficient cognizance. But it toas noted in Berlin. . . . "The error of indifference and of 'laissez faire' has had ex- tremely grave results. Germany and its agents, in Japan and in America were startled, and kept silence for a time. The warning was heard and there was a marked inactivity among the mercenaries hired to sow discord and make a casus belli if possible between Japan and America. But the one warning was insufficient and soon 'The Forces of Evil' took heart of grace again. . . . "For years the German 'Forces of Evil' in Japan, in China, in America and in Europe have intrigued and lied with the one end in view. 'Discord, discord and war,' has been the slogan of the German 'Forces of Evil.' Their agents have been our own neighbors and our friends — our own familiars and our guests. They have spied and lied and slandered in the press, in the home and in the club. They have bought men's souls and honor. They have paid well the prostitutes who wore the garb of de- cency and were received into our homes as of our own. In Japan and in China for the last six years this subornation of treachery has continued at a heavy cost to the treasury in Berlin, it is true, but alas ! at still heavier cost to Japan and to America. "Even to-day while Japan is treating the Germans resident here and non-combatant with a remarkable leniency, the Ger- man agents of 'The Forces of Evil' are at work. 'Discord, dis- cord and war' is still their slogan. "In America the agents of these same 'Forces of Evil' are desperately working to the same end. "True 'Forces of Evil' are the Germans that have been all- pervading for the last ten years in America and for the last five in Japan. There are signs of an awakening in America and there is some hope that simultaneously both Japan and her good neighbor across the Pacific will awake to a realization of the extent of the havoc being wrought to good repute and neighbor- liness by the German 'Forces of Evil.' A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 323 An extract from a letter to me written by a prominent and influential American residing in Yokohama is evidence that the feeling and suspicion expressed in this editorial are not confined to newspaper offices : "On the outbreak of the war with Russia, a friend of mine, coming down from Miyanoshita, saw at all the railway stations between there and Yokohama the people of the towns and sur- rounding villages gathered together to watch their troop trains going to the front. In the little hoods of all the little babies he saw crossed miniature Japanese and United States flags ! . . . " The association of our flag with theirs was the spontaneous outburst from the hearts of the multitude. In the hour of utmost peril to their national existence it was their all-time friends they thought of! To whom is it due that in the space of less than nine years after this demonstration each country has been made to look on the other as an enemy to be looked out for? To whom can be traced all the reprehensible, senseless agitation in California against the Japanese — the ♦Yellow Peril'? "See the name of the reptile in the enclosed clipping! Not to speak of the fiendish work of the same kind done elsewhere to us, what more do we want for a casus helli? How long, O Lord, will we stand for this sort of thing? "(Yokohama, Japan.)" The clipping which he enclosed was the following : [Asahi Service.] "New York, Jan. 15. — Secretary Scharenlerff, oi the Federated Labor Party in California, brought before the State Legislature on January 15th a draft bill depriving Japanese from the right to lease land. As the Government party of the committee of the Legislature are opposed to the introduction of anti-Japanese bills, his bill will probably be killed in committee." The Outlook (110) severely criticises an attempt of Admiral von Tirpitz, who in an interview spoke of Japan's 224 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR intention to make China a vassal and then militarize it, adding, "Then it will be time for America to look out." He also declared that Germany will "never abandon the white race." The Outlook continues : "The use of the words 'white man' in connectiop. with Asia is the crux of the whole diflSculty. It stands for an ingrained sense of racial superiority and is the expression of a racial inso- lence which must be extirpated root and branch ; it is a gratui- tous and insulting reflection on the character, history, and ability of the great races in the East. Any attempts to stir up American feeling against Japan is distinctly a violation, if not of the rules of war, at least of the rules of honor. To poison the wells of national feeling is just as discreditable as to poison the wells from which men drink." It says elsewhere: (111) "The country does not yet understand that it is in danger of too readily accepting as truth propaganda in the interest of Germany and inimical to Japan; that its ignorance of Japanese sentiment and opinion is being used by rumor-mongers un- friendly to both Japan and America. Since Japan's participa- tion in the war Americans have been warned many times from German sources to beware of Japan. Recently, indeed, a writer defending the Austro-German cause in the pages of The Outlook went so far as to point out the peril to which this country was exposed from an invasion from Canada led by Great Britain and supported by Japanese and Indian troops! This is an in- stance of the extent to which the Teutonic hostility to Japan may be carried. Many similar tales are being told in this coimtry." At this writing the pro-German and anti-British propa- ganda is going on as vigorously, as unscrupulously, but I think, as unsuccessfully as ever. They are, I believe, making more enemies than converts. They are arousing antagonism instead of sympathy, and distrust and suspi- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 235 cion iu place of confidence. I cannot see that they have made the least impression on the country outside of their fellow German-Americans, although, as I have said, (p. 194), it is difficult to estimate what effect, if any, their campaign through the country newspapers will have. In my judgment the vast majority of non-German Americans agree with the editorial opinion well expressed under the caption: "Advice to German- Americans" : (112) "Representative Bartholdt and his associates are doing Ger- many no good, and they are doing themselves much harm, by their pernicious pro-German propaganda. "When they threaten to carry Germany's case to the polls and make the German cause an issue in American politics, they are playing with dynamite. The American people will not tolerate such a campaign of alienism, and the chief sufferers will be the so-called German-Americans who plot it. "Germany is the only country engaged in this war which has officially undertaken to manipulate American opinion. It is the only belligerent which maintains a lobby in the United States to incite public sentiment against other belligerents with which we are friendly. The only foreigTi element in this country which is assailing the President of the United States and seek- ing to bulldoze the Government of the United States is the German element, and that sort of thing can be easily overdone. "When the representatives of German- American societies pub- licly pledge themselves in effect to oppose all candidates for office who will not sacrifice American interests to German in- terests, they are straining American patience to the breaking point. "Long after this war is over Mr. Bartholdt and his associates will have to live in this country. Few of them will volimtarily return to Germany to help pay the cost of the conflict. Their real interests are all in the United States, and the sooner they reconcile themselves to being Americans the better. "This country once had an alien law on its statute books. It might be very reluctant to enact a similar statute, but every 15 226 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR day such German-Americans as Richard Bartholdt are breaking down this reluctance." The whole subject of the German-American propaganda has been reviewed, summarized and commented upon by the Philadelphia paper, whose editorials I have so often quoted. It contains in logical and readable form a synop- sis of the history and present condition of the movement, and it expresses clearly and forcibly current representative American opinions. (113) "When President Wilson issued his famous admonition to his coimtrymen to be 'neutral even in thought/ it was generally recognized as futile, if not foolish and unpatriotic. It served no good purpose to advocate a course that could be followed only by persons mentally unsexed or paralyzed. Every intelli- gent American has, and should have, opinions on the war. "Those who regard it as a conflict in behalf of the sanctity of treaty obligations, the security of small nations and the de- fense of democratic principles against autocracy and militarism should have decided views and should be able to support them with evidence. "No less is it legitimate for Americans to hold opinions directly opposed to these. Those who are German or Austrian or Turkish, in blood or sympathy, have a perfect right to de- clare that these countries were imjustly attacked; that they are fighting for the highest ideals, and that militarism and autocratic institutions are necessary to the development of an eflScient civilization. "American newspapers have done right in discussing these questions with the utmost freedom and in opening their col- umns to the advocates of both sides. The supporters of Ger- many have violated no obligation of citizenship in upholding her cause and condemning her enemies. Pro-German meetings, with cheers for the Kaiser and the singing of German songs, have revealed a curious devotion to im-American theories of government, but otherwise have not been objectionable. "But all these rights have been conceded upon the assumption that the issue is between one group of belligerents and another. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 227 It was taken for granted that no American citizen, however strong his sympathies for his fatherland, would falter in loyalty to this comitry or would put the interests of a foreign nation above those of America. "In the early days of the war, while the German advance on Paris was under way, there were few signs of divided alle- giance. But when the German retreat began there was a change, and it soon became clear that these citizens were ready to take sides, not only as between the belligerents, but as be- tween one belligerent and the United States. "The first evidence of this spirit was bitter denunciation of American newspapers for 'lying reports'; the news of the Ger- man retreat was assailed as a malicious invention, and the papers were accused of selling their columns for British gold. Then came savage criticism of American public opinion as ig- norant and prejudiced. "Later President Wilson and Secretary Bryan fell under dis- pleasure as exponents of a neutrality that favored the Allies. This was particularly absurd, since the administration was so rigidly neutral that it failed even to register a diplomatic pro- test when international agreements to which it was a party were shamelessly violated. "From this attitude developed a demand that the United States take the grossly umieutral action of forbidding the export of munitions of war, the only nations to be affected being those fighting Germany. Gradually the propaganda be- came marked by abuse and intimidation of public officials, and finally has taken shape in the formation of an organization which purposes to make the German cause an issue in the in- ternal politics of this country. "The National German-American League, formed at a secret meeting in Washington on January 30th, declares its aim is to 're-establish a genuine American neutrality and to uphold it free from commercial, financial or political subservience to for- eign powers.' The statement would have more force if it were not for the fact that the promoters are all passionate advocates of Germany, while every act urged would involve an American move against Germany's enemies. "When Congressman Bartholdt, Doctor Hexamer and the other 'neutrals' demand 'a free and open sea for the United States and unrestricted traffic in non-contraband goods,' they 228 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR mean that this government should attempt to nullify the Allies' control of the sea and should insist upon delivering cargoes to Germany. "When they 'favor, as a strictly American policy, the imme- diate enactment of legislation prohibiting the export of arms and munitions of war,' they mean it as a strictly German policy, since it would directly favor Germany and directly injure her opponents, and would amount to active intervention in the war. "When they urge 'establishment of an American merchant marine' they have in mind the purchase by the United States Government of $40,000,000 worth of German ships which took refuge in American ports to escape the consequences of the war ; and they advise this course regardless of the fact, as stated by Senator Root, that the government 'would buy a quarrel with every ship.' But the real purpose of the organization is made clear in the final paragraph of the statement of principles : " 'We pledge ourselves, individually and collectively, to sup- port only such candidates for public office, irrespective of party, who will place American interests above those of any other country and who will aid in eliminating all undue foreign in- fluences from official life.' "This declaration against 'foreign influences,' from men whose activity in government circles on behalf of a foreign power has been an ofi'ense and a scandal, is rather ludicrous. But that does not save the movement from being unpatriotic, mischievous and dangerous. "The theory has been that this country was a 'melting pot' for the incoming members of all races; that in the crucible of its free institutions old patriotic instincts and prejudices Avould be fused into an Americanism that would ring true at every test. For the first time that belief has been tinged with doubt. For the first time we face the possibility that instead of a united nation, made up of loyal men of many bloods, this may become a people made up of groups of foreigners, whose first allegiance is not to the land which gave them shelter, but that which gave them or their fathers birth. "Already the poisonous propaganda has been carried to ex- traordinary lengths. Its promoters are not satisfied with giving sentimental and moral support to one of the belligerents, as is their right, but they are endeavoring to foment American hatred A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 239 toward the others and to force this government into menacing controversies abroad. "They not only denounce the Allies, but they decry America, assail its government and traduce its people. A well-known German-American of Philadelphia wrote recently to the Kdl- nische Zeitung that he was 'not proud' of this country, and that its flag should be stamped with the dollar mark as a symbol of national hypocrisy. The Cologne Gazette has printed a two- column a'rticle from its correspondent on this side, declaring that German- Americans are 'in danger of their lives' because of the 'bigotry and fanaticism' of Americans. "The 'neutrality' meetings, as we have seen in Philadelphia, are neither neutral, nor American, nor German- American, but wholly German. The limit of sarcasm now is the phrase, 'as neutral as Pennypacker.' They even denounce the sending of food -to the starving Belgians as an act unfriendly to their be- loved fatherland and a violation of neutrality. "Their activity in Washington is wholly in behalf of Ger- many; and we have seen the astonishing spectacle of members of the American Congress calling at the embassy of a foreign power to discuss legislation designed for the exclusive benefit of that power. Every action they propose would compromise American neutrality and endanger American peace and pros- perity. All too plainly they have adopted the view urged upon all good Germans by Professor Adolph Lasson, of the University of Berlin: " 'A foreigner is an enemy until he proves that he is not. One cannot rest neutral in relationship to German and the German people. Either one must consider Germany as the most perfect political creation that history has known, or one must approve her destruction.' "The national design is foreshadowed by action taken a few days ago by the German-American Society of Passaic, N. J., which 'aims to support all endeavors in the interest of German- ism,' and issues this appeal: " 'Come, all of you, German societies, German men and Ger- man women, so that, united offensively and defensively, with weapons of the spirit, we may help our beloved Germany on- ward. . . . We ask your speedy decision, in order to per- mit of an effective participation and lead in the spring cam- paign of 1915.' 230 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "Such open repudiation of the first principles of American citizenship is startling enough, in view of the oath which every naturalized German must take, that: " 'He absolutely and entirely renounces and abjures all alle- giance and fidelity to every foreign prince, potentate, state or sovereignty, and particularly to Wilhelm II, German Emperor, of whom he was before a subject.' "But the spirit becomes imderstandable when it is recalled that the German Government encourages Germans to remain Germans wherever they go. It allows any one of German blood to become a citizen of Germany, even though he has never seen Germany and has no intention of taking up his residence there; and, since January 1, 1914, German emigrants have had the privilege of dual citizenship. The law effective from that date provides : " 'German citizenship is not lost by one who, before acquiring foreign citizenship, has secured, on application, the written con- sent of the competent authorities of his home State to retain his citizenship.' "The leaders of German thought have seduously taught that Germans leaving the fatherland should remain faithful to the empire and serve its interests before all others. During the Spanish-American war Die Grenzboten, the most influential political weekly in Germany, declared editorially: " 'The number of Germans in the United States amounts to millions, but many of them have lost their native language or their native names. Nevertheless, German blood flows in their veins; and it is only required to gather them together under their former nationality in order to bring them back into the lap of their mother Germania. " 'We have to consider that more than 3,000,000 Germans live as foreigners in the United States who are not personally interested in that country. A skillful German national policy should be able to manipulate that German multitude against the shameless American war speculators.' "Von Treitsehke, the noted historian, warned his country- men: "To civilization at large the Anglicizing of the German- Americans means a heavy loss. ... Among Germans there can no longer be any question that the civilization of mankind A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 231 suffers every time a German is transformed into a Yankee. "And the incomparably frank Von Bernhardi writes: " 'The isolated groups of Germans abroad greatly benefit our trade, since by preference they obtain their goods from Ger- many. But they may also be useful to us politically, as we dis- cover in America.' "How far they are ready to go in being politically useful to Germany, Americans are now discovering. Of all the nations at war, Germany is the only one that maintains an organized literary and press bureau in this country; and of all our naturalized aliens, German-Americans alone have undertaken to make the war a political issue, to shape the policies of the government in the interest of a foreign power and to intimidate American officials in the performance of their duty. "Happily, there are some of them whose conception of their duty as Americans is higher than this. There is no more val- iant advocate of Germany against the Allies than Dr. Ktmo Francke, of the faculty of Harvard, where he is head of the Germanic museum. But while his sympathies and convictions are with the empire, his honor is pledged to the United States ; and his fine sense of patriotism should be inspiring to all of us. Declining to join in the pro-German political movement, he writes : " 'My sympathies are wholly and fervently on the German side. But they cannot make me forget what seem to me my duties as an American citizen. I believe it would be against my duties as an American citizen if I were to take part in a propaganda the purpose of which will be thought to be to force our government into a hostile attitude toward England. . . . As a man of German blood, I might welcome the help which would accrue to Germany by such a conflict. But as an Ameri- can citizen I cannot possibly support such a policy.' . . . " 'Let us refrain from political organizations which would set Germans in this country apart as a class by themselves. It would foster hatred instead of sympathy; and only by gaining the sympathy of the majority of the American people can we German-Americans help the cause of our mother country.' "The movement is deplorable in every aspect. The German- Americans who are attempting to separate themselves from their countrymen should realize that, while their sympathies 233 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR may properly lie Avith a foreign nation against its foreign ene- mies, their interest and their loyalty lie with America, and that a German defeat would be for them far less a calamity than their segregation from the rest of the American people." An analysis of this German-American movement, which is worthy of the most careful attention from every Ameri- can citizen and which appeared (114) directly upon the announcement of its plans and purposes, is further evi- dence as to the way in which genuine Americans should and do regard it: "There has been organized in Washington a league for the 're-establishment of real American neutrality, and to uphold it free from commercial, financial, and political subservience to foreign Powers.' The initial meeting of the new organization was presided over by a Congressman from Missouri, and three of his colleagues gave approval to the purpose of the meeting by their presence. What the league stands for is shown by the following resolution which it adopted as its platform: " 'Resolved, That we, citizens of the United States, agree to effect a National organization the objects and purposes of which may be stated as follows: " '1. In order to insure the possession of an independent news service we favor an American cable controlled by the Govern- ment of the United States. " '2. We demand a free and open sea for the commerce of the United States and unrestricted traflSc in non-contraband goods as defined by law. " '3. We favor as a strictly American policy the immediate enactment of legislation prohibiting the export of arms, ammu- nition, and munitions of war. " '4. We favor the establishment of an American merchant marine; and " '5. We pledge ourselves individually and collectively to support only such candidates for public office, irrespective of party, who will place American interests above those of any other country, and who will aid in eliminating all undue for- eign influence from official life.' A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 333 "Since this league seeks to justify its existence by claiming to be an American institution for the promotion of neutrality, it will be fair to judge it according to the standard of its pro- fessed ideals. Is it American ? Is it neutral ? "An American citizen might very properly, so far as interna- tional relations are concerned, plead for Government ownership of the cables just as he might plead for Government ownership of the railways. The wisdom of such a plea as an argument for neutrality in war time is entirely another matter, and since the introduction of wireless telegraphy seems particularly irrele- vant. "The second article quoted above contains two misstatements of law and fact. American commerce in American bottoms is as free to-day as commerce can be in time of world war. American commerce in foreign bottoms, due to the preponderance of the English navy, is very much freer than it would be were the sea forces of the Powers at war evenly balanced in strength. Furthermore, by no international law has the question of con- traband been given the exact seal of legal definition. Precedent, custom, and the needs of nations at war furnish the only exist- ing rules for contraband. To meet an emergency as it arose the United States, in a military order, once included in the pro- scribed list escaped slaves. To meet another emergency, Ger- many or England has an equal right, or rather a better right, to prevent the importation of copper or picric acid or gasoline by an enemy country. Naturally, this right is dependent upon the possession of power to enforce it. "The third proposition put forward by the League would in- deed deserve to be ranked as a 'strictly American project/ for it is absolutely without precedent in international law or custom. Article VII of Convention 4, adopted at The Hague in 1907, specifically affirms the right of citizens in neutral nations to sell arms and ammunition to any belligerent. If so well-estab- lished a principle of international law is to be altered at all, it must be done in time of peace. To alter it now would in itself be a highly unneutral act in so far as it deprived any belligerent of a military advantage secured by sacrifice of treasure and life. ... "If this programme is, as it ought to be, judged by its inevi- table effect, two things stand out very clearly: 234 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "1. A definitely unneutral project is brought forward under the specious guise of promoting neutrality. "2. Under a pretense of removing one foreign influence from American life it is proposed to throw the Government frankly under the influence of another, and this proposal is hacked by a threat to employ racial politics in the domestic affairs of the American nation. "This programme has apparently received the support of many respectable and intelligent German-Americans. The measure of its failure will be the measure by which American citizens of German birth succeed in understanding and realizing their duties toward the spirit of the American nation." Further evidence as to the Germaii-Americaii attitude is to be found in some of my own recent experiences. As soon as the first edition of this little book appeared I began to receive, by mail, abusive communications ; most of them were anonymous ; the large majority gave internal evidence of Teutonic authorship. The names, real or fictitious, ap- pended to a small number of them, were in all but a few instances, German in type. The personal abuse and the personal threats are of too little importance to inflict upon my readers, except where they have more general significance; moreover, they were often too vulgar to be printable. The interesting feature was in the frequent recurrence of sentences like these : "If your plan should succeed, and America intervenes, you will find that you will have more on your hands than you an- ticipate. There may even he mobilization!" ". . . the intelligent portion of our people, including the millions of German-Americans and Irish-Americans, will know how to stop the desire of our Anglo-phile jingoes to drag this country into war." "You re-hash what your venomous and lying press has printed and re-printed since the beginning of the war. . . . The A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 235 American press has given voice to English statements from the beginning; has reported German atrocities which were really Belgian atrocities." "You are fomenting discord and rebellion. You are helping to bring on civil war." "We -will show you before long what a liar you are and will give you something to remember us by." "Don't forget, when the tinve comes, that there are millions of us in this country, and that one man fighting within the in- trenchments is worth ten in the open field." These will serve as samples. They are exceedingly un- important, but illustrate a certain phase of Grerman-Amer- ican activities. Of course, some of them were amusing. One excited German-American, after calling me "infa- mous," "treasonable,'^ '''abominable," and "shameless," says that I "am violating in open-faced manner" (as if I were a, Waterbury watch) "the neutrality of the United States." He continues : "Professor White will yet hear more of his handicraft." He adds: (115) "I heard from good authority that Professor White is the closest friend of Sir Treuves, the physician of King George, and visits him rather frequently. Now, may I ask Professor White what it was worth to him to be persuaded by his friends, George and Sir Treuves, to stir up the Americans by false and lying statements? May I ask what was the price?" This precious document was signed K. Hentschel. I do not intend to tell him the price. That is a secret between Sir Treuves and me. It must not be forgotten that the German- Americans, who hold meetings and pass resolutions of sympathy with "the Fatherland," also continue to try to palliate and ex- plain away the outrage upon Belgium. They profess at one and the same time loyalty to the Kaiser and Germany, 336 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR and to the country of their adoption; to the apotheosis of militarism and officialism and to real Democracy; to the German Eagle and the Stars and Stripes. Congressmen (with German names) try to introduce legislation to pre- vent this country shipping supplies of any sort "to any belligerent" — this while the Allies control the seas. But when the obvious effect of their preposterous attempt to help Germany is exposed, and they are held up to ridicule, they rend the air with protestations of devotion to "one country and one flag." They all remind me of the woman described in the old song of the lumberjacks : "There was a woman in our town — In our town she did dwell. She loved her husband tenderly And another man twicet as well." Two of the leading citizens of Philadelphia have ex- pressed their views as to one phase of the German-Amer- ican propaganda, the organization of so-called "neutrality leagues" throughout the country. In response to an invitation to be a vice-president of a meeting of the "American JSTeutrality League," the Epis- copal Bishop of Pennsylvania wrote: (116) "From information which has come to me lately, both in Washington and here, I have learned that most of the agitation at present being made to prevent the shipping of war materials from this country to belligerent nations, is being made, not really in the interest of neutrality, but in hostility to the allied nations, and with the hope of helping Germany and Austria in their campaign. Is the proposed meeting here fairly chargeable with the same purpose? and if not, is there any available evi- dence to the contrary with which you can provide me? "As an American citizen, pledged to uphold American ideals, I am altogether against Germany and Austria in this war, on A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 237 the ground that they are threatening, and would destroy, as far as they have opportunity, those political and personal liber- ties and rights which we Americans have made the foundations of our Government. "Feeling as I do, you will readily understand that I cannot have part in any meeting or movement which has for its real object, whether or not explicitly avowed, the support of a cause to which I personally am resolutely opposed. "Very sincerely yours, "P. M. Rhinelanbee, "Bishop of Pennsylvania." The ex-Attorney General of Pennsylvania declined the same invitation as follows : Noting that the meeting was for the purpose, among other things, of advocating the pas- sage of laws to prevent the shipping of munitions of war to any belligerent nation, he continues: (117) "Inasmuch as no munitions of war can be shipped to Ger- many, would it not be more appropriate if the purpose of the meeting was stated to be the passage of laws to prevent the shipment to either England or France of munitions of war? It is true that such laws might be construed as unfriendly acts to both England and France, but what difference would that make if thereby aid and comfort could be given to the Germans, who are making such a magnificent fight for the perpetuation of the principles of representative democratic government? "Personally I have no patience with talk about a neutrality that will give aid or comfort to a Germany which is repre- eented by the Hohenzollern family, who have more than once broken their plighted word to give the German people a form of representative government which would have enabled them to be heard and be a ruling force in the nation. Do you for one moment suppose that this most imrighteous war would ever have been begun if the German masses had been consulted ? If you do, you are blind to the Social Democratic forces in Germany, which are a growing menace to Hohenzollern absolu- tism. In my opinion the continually increasing strength of the 238 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Social Democratic party in Germany was one of the causes of this Mar. "Irrespective of this view, however, is there any reason why a body of American citizens should unite in a public meeting imder the guise of neutrals to urge the passage of laws that can only injure England and France and aid Germany, the destroyer of Louvain and the Cathedral of Rheims? "Very truly yours, (Signed) "M. Hampton Todd." On the evening of the "neutrality" meeting, which these gentlemen declined to attend, "Die Wacht am Ehein" and "Deutschland iiber AUes," were sung by the assembled crowd ! Sometimes a concrete example of one's individual experi- ence serves better to bring home the realization of a general situation than do many impersonal arguments. For this reason I reprint here part of a communication I sent to a Philadelphia paper, (118), which it published under the caption: "American Irritation at German Apologists." "One of the causes of the existing and wide-spread irritation on the part of Americans toward some of the Grerman- American apologists is illustrated in letters from Professor Morris Jas- trow, Jr., and Mr. George Haven Putnam to the New York Evening Post (December 19, 1914) in reference to the transla- tion, or mistranslation of 'Deutschland iiber Alles,' the now famous German war song. "Mr. Putnam in a 'Foreword' to an, American edition of Treitschke's Essays' alluded to 'Deutschland iiber Alles' as implying the supremacy of Germans over all other peoples. "Doctor Jastrow says that every German schoolboy knows that the proper translation is 'above everything else, Germany,* and adds that 'the subsequent lines of the song clearly show that the phrase expresses the same sentiment as 'My Country, 'Tis of Thee.' He further discloses his own sentiments by A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 239 remarking that 'at present, to be sure, it would be more appro- priate for the Germans to sing 'Alles iiber Deutschland.' "Mr. Putnam in reply says that 'the interpretation given it in the past years has been, as Professor Jastrow and other good Germans point out, an expression simply of patriotic devotion to the Fatherland.' Here, in the words I have italicized, he, consciously or unconsciously, put his finger on the cause of irri- tation to which I have alluded. If that characterization were accepted by the 'Grerman-Americans,' who write to our papers and appeal to our people, many of us, however radically we disagreed, might find excuse or palliation, even for views that seem subversive of all American ideals. Much could be for- giA^en to 'good Germans.' But that, during this period of stress and tension, persons obviously German in sympathy and belief should profess to be impartially representing America seems intolerable. Their right to express their views must be con- ceded, but the effort which, almost without exception, they make to be regarded as calm, judicial, philosophic, fairminded Amer- icans should be resented. "Professor Jastrow, for example, {Public Ledger, September 27, 1914), issues an article under the caption, 'An American Appeals for Fairness and Moderation Toward Germany.' Per- haps he had nothing to do with the head-line, but as throughout he uses 'we' as synonymous with Americans, the title is to that extent justified. It is not tmfair to say that this 'appeal' was, in effect, a plea for Germany, containing a stab at England, a slur on America and an attempt to palliate the Belgian out- rage. "Later (The 'Naxtion, November 12, 1914) we find Professor Jastrow writing a sarcastic letter, in which — still using the 'we' for Americans — he tries to hold this country up to ridi- cule for the attention recently paid to the writings of Bern- hardi and Treitschke, for the prevalent view of the actions and character of the Kaiser and for the widespread belief as to the possibility of German aggression, if Germany should win in this war. "It is strange how he falls into the same error as do the paid agents of the German-American propaganda who 'trip up,' as Professor Jastrow would say, and continually sneer at and offend the very persons whose good will they are sup- posed to be soliciting. 340 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "If AVe return to the subject of 'Deutschland iiber Alles' another source of irritation may be examined, viz., the way in which facts — often even trivial facts — are distorted for Ameri- cans upon the apparent assumption that we are either too care- less or too unintelligent to recognize inaccuracies. (See pp. 256, 282.) "He and his eo-conspirators against American sympathy with the Allies — at first spontaneous and instinctive, now rea- soned and immutable — neglect to pay us even the perfunctory compliment of assuming that we have ordinary elementary information. But then Bernhardi says: 'The whole realm of human knowledge is concentrated in the German brain.' "The Truth about 'Deutschland iiber Alles' ( see p. ) , which was written in the 40's, seems to me to have been well defined by Mr. Putnam (The Evening Post, December 19, 1914,) : 'Under the war spirit, which has developed steadily since 1871 up to the outbreak in August, 1914, the terra 'Deutschland iiber Alles' has (and very naturally) come to express the present war spirit of the Fatherland; a spirit which, as openly avowed, is connected with the necessity of breaking up the British Empire. "Doctor Dernburg's description of it as 'a song of modesty' has elements of humor that some of his more serious misstate- ments lack. "Professor Jastrow, in his correspondence with the Post, classes Mr. Putnam with those 'who write on Germany with the predetermined resolve to hold that country up as the plague-spot on the earth,' and says that they — whoever they may be — do not go to 'the sources' for their information, and therefore 'trip up.' "In Professor Jastrow's communication to the Puhlic Ledger (September 27, 1914,) he accused Colonel Roosevelt and a portion of the American people of 'advocating warfare as essen- tial to the full strength of the nation.' In the same paper, on December 20, he retracts this, and acknowledges that it was a 'misstatement.' "In TJie Nation of November 12, he said, in a defense of the German professors who have been accused, and truthfully accused — of helping to spread the teachings that brought on the war, that Professor Eduard Meyer, the historian, 'can have very little time or energy to devote to public agitation.' In A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 341 The Nation of December 10, Professor Lang, of Toronto, showed that a meeting of the International Students' Union of Berlin, held in Febx-uary, 1913, developed into what an American clergyman, who was present, declared to be 'the most disgrace- ful scene he had witnessed in the course of many years' resi- dence in Berlin/ and that this was largely due to Professor Meyer, who made a bitter attack on England, exalted the Machtpolitik, boasted that for Germany 'the time had not yet arrived' (he, of course, referred to Der Tag), and altogether made a great tunnoil for one who was without 'time or energy to devote to public agitation.' It would look as though Pro- fessor Jastrow had on occasions neglected to go to 'the sources.' "Professor Jastrow, in his most recent article, published to-day {Public Ledger, December 20), says that the difference between his 'friends' and himself is that the majority of them 'show a kind of secret glee' in condemning Grermany, while he is 'exceedingly sorry for her.' I am not sure what sort of furtive pleasure is represented by 'secret glee,' nor can I imagine any one afraid to show openly to Professor Jastrow, or to any of the other 'good Germans,' any merriment one could extract from the tragic situation. But if the sorrowers for poor Germany would keep some of their sympathy for Belgium instead of .seeking — as does Doctor Jastrow — for 'extenuating factors' to excuse her devastation there would be less distaste in the American mind for their perverted arguments. When simple counsels of common sense and self-preservation — justified a thouifand-fold by subsequent events — are denounced as 'secret agreements' between England, France and Belgium; when injustice is condoned and brutality is ignored, how can we Americans obey Doctor Jastrow's behest and 'extend the hand of sympathy and good-will to all the unfortunate and warring nations ? "In his September article (the Public Ledger, September 2) Professor Jastrow devoted some space to sarcastic insinuations as to England's 'altruism' (which had not been claimed by her) and said that by the historian of the future 'the neutrality of Belgium will be regarded as a very minor factor, perhaps entirely negligible.' "In December (the Public Ledger, December 20) we find him 16 243 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR regarding 'the English type of culture aa representing on the whole the most harmonious combination of traits of mind and character,' though even yet he cannot help seeking for 'extenu- ating factors' — mythical though they may be — ^to justify the rape of Belgium. "Perhaps in another three months he will be able once more to discharge the proper function of a scholar — 'the function of detached criticism, of cool consideration, of insisting that facts, and all the relevant facts, be known and faced. "Professor Jastrow overflows with admiration for Germany's 'high ideals' and dilates upon our debt to 'German culture, German learning, German thought.' He repeatedly speaks of what his friends say to him on the subject of the war. What his real friends should say to him is what Professor Lovejoy of Johns Hopkins, has said : 'To not a few Americans the spec- tacle presented of late by the leaders of German science and philosophy seems scarcely less than what a sincere lover of Germany has called it — 'the greatest moral tragedy of the That I am not alone in being irritated is shown by numerous articles in our most influential journals. The attention of Americans is called, for example (119) to the bitter comment of the Kolnische Zeitvng, the semi- official organ of the German Grovemment, upon the full statement issued by our Department of State, reciting all the official international activities of our government since the beginning of the war. It was clearly convincing as to the absolute neutrality that had been observed in regard to all the matters dealt with. But the German paper de- scribed it as the work of "the mouthpiece of the brutal British standpoint," added that "American neutrality is only a thin veil, behind which is concealed eagerness to do England a good turn," and concluded: "If America re- spects only brute force, then we shall give full play to brute force." The threat is insulting, but not surprising. Giving a A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 243 "full play to brute force" would require no change in Ger- man methods or German doctrines. Our American paper which not^s the above incident (120), continues: "Our German friends, both in this country and abroad, ought to consider the question whether, in addition to being irritated themselves, justly or otherwise, they do not irritate others. They cannot drive Americans out of neutrality, but they may make it hard to be both neutral and non-irritated. This result may be brought about in various ways. One of them would be an effort to band together German-Americans as a group entirely apart from their fellow-citizens, swayed more by race than by patriotism. Professor Ostwald, of Leipzig, early in the war expressed the view that it was the mission of Germany to 'organize Europe.' For this he was rebuked by the univer- sity authorities, who repudiated his suggestion. At any rate, the United States does not wish to be 'organized' in any such way, as some German- Americans have proposed ; and foolish talk about it is distinctly irritating. So is such a fantastic exag- geration as that fallen into by Dr. Dernburg in his speech at Minneapolis last week. He, in general, has been the most discreet, as he has been the ablest, of the men in charge of the German propaganda in this country, but on this occasion his hand lost its cunning. He gravely argued that the Allies were really making war upon the United States. And then he went on to explain that, if we did not do something to help Germany win, Germany would learn how to get on without American exports. In place of wheat, she will eat ryej for lumber, she will substitute steel; instead of copper, she will make use of 'alloys of cheaper metals,' and, finally, dropping cotton, she will go back to the use of flax! Americans cannot help laughing at this, but there is necessarily a certain tinge of irritation in the laughter. "Italy is another neutral country in which the German cam- paign of apology, defence, and resentment has not had the happiest effects. An Italian colleague rather roughly handles, in the Corriere delta Bera, the embattled German professors. It is Professor Piero Giacosa, of the University of Turin. He passes in review the various deliverances of Professors Eucken, 244 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR Harnack, and Wundt, and gives particular attention to the famous 'round robin' of the eighty-nine 61ite of the German universities. This has been writ in Italian — far from 'choice,' Professor Giacosa asserts. Upon it he makes very much the comment uttered by President Hibben, of Princeton, that it ia surprising to find eminent philosophers signing a statement so full of logical contradictions and unverified assertions. Science, declares the Italian professor, should be the same thing in war as in peace. He adds that 'truth cannot be mobilized.' If there is any justification of vs^ar, it must be truth and right; but 'this truth and right ought to be human — not purely German.' "A German professor has sought to explain the ferocious exhortations of the Kaiser, addressed to the German troops setting out for China, as due to a 'momentaneous nervosity.' The German propagandists should pause to refiect whether their exertions are not producing among all neutrals a nervosity something more than momentaneous." As this book goes to press there appears (131) a sum- mary of American opinion, that covers the entire country and which I therefore quote, in part, as a final contribution not only to this study of the extent and the aims of the German propaganda, but also as evidence of the way in which it is impressing the average American : "Although the nation-wide organization launched in Washing- ton on January 30th by fifty-eight representative German- Americans declares its chief aim to be the re-establishment of 'genuine American neutrality,' its critics do not hesitate to de- nounce it as an attempt to coerce the United States Govern- ment into taking an actively pro-German stand. 'The wicked- ness of the scheme lies in its purpose to create friction between England and the United States,' declares the Boston Transcript. The men behind the movement, says the Springfield RepuhUoan, reveal themselves as 'more German than American,' and the New York Times is convinced that 'never since the founda- tion of the Republic has any body of men assembled here who were more completely subservient to a foreign Power and to foreign influence, and none ever proclaimed the un- A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 345 American spirit more openly.' 'The sole object of the promoters of this movement is to drive the United States from its present position of neutrality,' aflBrms the New York Herald. The position they ask us to abandon, says the New York Sim, is 'historically, legally, and morally correct,' while the course they urge upon us amounts virtually to 'the enlistment of the Ameri- can people under the flag of Germany.' These men, declares the New York World, 'are doing Germany no good, and them- selves much harm, by their pernicious pro-German propaganda.' The movement, in the opinion of the Philadelphia Public Led- ger, represents 'a pro-German plot,' and the Brooklyn Eagle suggests that the activities of its promoters bear a close re- semblance to treason. . . . "A German-American protest against the program of the Washington conference is voiced by the New York Yolkszeitung (Labor), which denounces the movement as 'a dangerous agita- tion' which 'seeks to embroil the United States in a war with England.' 'Under the hypocritical pretense of preserving America's neutrality, this organization would actually imperil it,' declares this workers' organ, which calls upon 'every Ger- man-American workingman in this country' to oppose the move- ment 'with all his strength.' "On the other hand, the majority of the German-American papers that have reached us are in accord with the New York Staats-Zeitung, the St. Louis Westliche Post, and the Chicago Staofts-Zeitung in their hearty indorsement of the movement launched by the Washington conference. In his signed editorial in the New York Staats-Zeitimg, Mr. Herman Ridder declares that the conference 'was dominated by Americans and was designed to promote a policy which may be tritely described as "America for Americans" ' — a fact, he says, which will be made clear by 'an intelligent and unbiased perusal of the reso- lutions adopted.' . . . "Among the men who fathered these resolutions we find Dr. C. J. Hexamer, president of the German- American National Alliance of Philadelphia, an organization already claiming a n^embership of 2,000,000; Congressmen Ba.rtholdt, Vollmer, Barchfeld, Lobeck, and Porter; Professors William R. Shep- herd, of Columbia; Edmund von Mach, of Harvard; A. B. Faust, of Cornell; John Devoy, editor of the New York GaeUo 346 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR American; and many editors of German- American papers and heads of German-American societies. "Herman Ridder, in his New York Staats-Zeitung, declares that 'any newspaper in the United States which will not sub- scribe to these resolutions may be branded offhand as un- American.' The call, he says, 'was only for the freedom of the United States from the subtle machinations of Great Britain and the subserviency of our present Administration to Great Britain.' "Turning to another organ of German- American opinion, the New York Fatherlcmd, we find an outspoken editorial signed by George Sylvester Viereck, one of the delegates to the Washing- ton conference on organization. Mr. Viereck, like Mr. Ridder, is convinced that the platform adopted is one on which every American can stand. In fact, he goes further, and declares that 'no man who refuses to stand upon it is an honest AmeTrfcan.' If the resolutions really reflected German- American opinion, he says, 'they would be ten times more emphatic!' We learn from Mr. Viereck that the patience of the German- Americans 'is at an end,' and that henceforth they 'will fight as a unit.' 'If you say that we are not Americans,' he declares, 'then you will have to change your conception of American.' He goes on with these frank statements: " 'We are tired of playing the part of Cinderella in American politics. We claim our seat at the banquet-table. If you say that we are not Americans, then you will have to change your conception of American. We refuse to be strangled by the dead hand of the past reaching from the graves of the Pilgrim Fathers into the living present. We shall rewrite the word American, to the extent of our power, in terms of our own ethnic complexion. . , . " 'We have suffered much without complaint. But our pa- tience is at an end. . . . " 'You have sown the storm, you shall reap the whirlwind. You have refused to listen to our reasoning. You were deaf to our pleas. We shall go into the arena of polities. We shall try to beat you at your own game. One hundred and seventy members of Congress are of Irish extraction. There is no rea- son why they should not be joined by one hundred and seventy of German extraction. There is no reason why we should not labor for the election of men of our own blood who are in accord A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 247 with our principles, which are also the principles of true Americanism. " 'We are with America, right or wrong, at all times. But we prefer America right to America wrong. We now propose to set America right.' "President Wilson is quoted in Washington dispatches as saying that the efforts of organizations to influence this Gov- ernment's action in regard to the war are 'extremely embar- rassing,' and that it is the duty of all citizens of this country to 'think of America first.' He is also credited with the remark that 'the present international situation should not be capi- talized by standpat Representatives to play petty politics.' But if we may judge by the comment of the St. Louis Mississippi Blatter, political embarrassment for the present Adiministra- tion is part of the new league's program. Says the St. Louis paper : " 'This move will work a revolution, as the candidates at the next election will stand for neutrality and will not dance to the tune of the pipes of the State Department at Washington,' "A long-distance but interested observer of the situation, the Berliner Tageblatt, is confident that 'when the German- Ameri- cans and the Irish hold together they are a power in the United States which, in certain circumstances, can decide the Presidency.' And it is generally believed in Washington, ac- cording to the correspondent of the New York Sun, that the league will be 'a formidable factor in the approaching Presi- dential primaries and the 1916 campaign.' This aspect of its proposed activities comes in for special condemnation at the hands of our press. This movement to take international ques- tions into national politics 'is obviously intended to serve the interests of Germany only,' remarks the Philadelphia Public Ledger, and the Brooklyn Eagle describes it as 'unfurling a foreign flag at Washington.' The attempt to 'line-up' the 'so- called German vote' and use it as a club in American politics, says the New York Herald, is 'foolish, futile, and dangerous.' To the New York Sun the effort represents 'presumptuous stu- pidity and arrogant disloyalty.' The new organization can best 'aid in eliminating all umdue foreign influence from American life,' remarks the Springfield Republican, 'by promptly dis- banding.' Its program in regard to candidates for public office. 248 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR says the New York Olole, is an effort to coerce by political boycott. The same paper adds: " "The present attempt will be rebuked if it gathers enough headway to be a menace. The political boycott that the reso- lution proclaims will be futile. It will attract votes to the proscribed. Those who wish to increase pro-German sentiment in this country have committed a great bhmder by a threat which will be generally and properly interpreted as indicating a desire to put the interests and the ideals of another country first.' " It is difficult, in spite of all this evidence, to believe that there is any real danger from persons who, when their "Fatherland" is in deadly peril, pass resolutions in regard to it, and remain at a distance of three thousand miles to sing about it vociferously. Many of us are asking the questions propounded by Miss Eepplier: (122) "If the German-Americans are consumed with love for their Fatherland, and for their Fatherland alone, why, we wonder, did they not stay upon that sacred soil? This pleasure and privilege might have been theirs without the asking, and they resigned it as alacritously as though paternal rule and military service foimd no favor in their eyes. Why, when they came to the United States, did they not remain German citizens, and liable to be summoned to their country's aid, instead of hasten- ing to swear allegiance to a Constitution which they regard only as a convenience and a protection? Why, when the decla- ration of war foimd them in Munich, or Frankfort, or Berlin, did they scuttle home as fast as ships could carry them, clam- orously declaring themselves American citizens in Germany, and singing the 'Wacht am Hhein' with ever-increasing fervor as they neared the friendly shores of New York? Why, instead of forming political parties to support 'with weapons of the spirit [a fancy name for votes] all endeavors in the interests of Germanism.' — which is a denial of neutrality and citizenship — do they not go bravely back and strike one honest blow in open battle for their imperiled Fatherland? A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 249 ''The trenches of Flanders and the siiowfields of Poland await these loyal sons of Germany, and, while many dry eyes will wit- ness their departure, we owe and give mifaltering respect to men gallant enough to lay down their lives for their country." CHAPTEE XI. How Much Reliance is to be Placed Upon Statements Emanating from Germany at This Time? We have been deluged with complaints of the "unfair- ness" with which Germany's case has been presented to the world, the "lies" that have been told about her, the "dou- ble facedness" of many of our newspapers. Even the Ger- man Chancellor — ^the same chancellor who on July 28th was, according to Mr. Beck, guilty of a "pitiful and insin- cere quibble," and whose Secretary of State on July 29th he says told a "stupid falsehood" — on September 2d, by authority of the Emperor, took the trouble to convey to the American people his confidence that it would not ^^allow itself to be deceived through the war of falsehood which our enemies are conducting against us." We know what to think of the Chancellor's veracity. The small fry — ^the Miinsterbergs and Hilprechts — are shrill in their clamorous accusations of unfairness and mendacity, includng all their opponents and some of us. Dr. Hilprecht, Heaven save the mark, calls Sir Edward Grey an "arch deceiver," and accuses (123) "all our four principal enemies, against whom thus far battles have been fought — the Belgians, the English, the French and the Russians — government, soldiers and population alike, of having wilfully, cowardly and cruelly, broken the sacred pledges given by their representatives at The Hague conference before God and mankind." (250) A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 251 In support of one part of this statement, he says : "The British dum-dum cartridges taken from the first original package, opened in the presence of the war correspon- dents, show the inscription, 'Art Dept. Ive.' at the bottom of their brass casings." One would think that he'd be chary of adducing "inscrip- tions'^ as evidence of anything. Fortunately, we have a better test of Germany's reli- ability as to truth at this juncture than could be afforded by either Chancellors or archaeologists. Perhaps the most astonishing effort to influence Ameri- can opinion is the 73-page pamphlet entitled "Truth About Germany: Facts About the War." If it had been headed "Falsehoods About Germany: Lies About the War" the title would have been more accurately descriptive. Profes- sor Love joy, of Johns Hopkins, has fitly characterized it as '"a clumsy compilation of fictions, irrelevancies and vulgar appeals to what are apparently conceived to be American prejudices." He specifies some of the direct falsehoods : "1. The pamphlet (124) says that Austria-Hungary was able to prove that the Servian government had been responsible for the plan of the assassination at Sarajevo. "2. Austria-Hungary addressed to the Servian government a number of demands which aimed at nothing but the suppresr sion of the anti-Austrian propaganda. Servia was on the point of accepting the demand, when there arrived a dispatch from St. Petersburg, and Servia mobilized. Then Austria had to act. Thus arose the Austro-Servian war. "3. Great Britain asked that Germany should aillow French and Belgian troops to form on Belgian territory for a, march against our frontier . . . England and France were resolved not to respect the neutrality of Belgium (They) did not give up their plan of attacking Germany through Belgium. 253 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "4. England aims at being mistress of the Old World in order to occupy either an equal, or a menacing, position towards the New World. For this purpose she has encouraged this war." Professor Lovejoy (125) adds: "Every American recipient of the pamphlet who subsequently took the trouble to examine the entire published evidence in the case must have speedily discovered the statements of specific historical fact in the passages cited to be either direct false- hoods or sug gestionis falsi. But it should be added that the publication in question is marked by a yet more singular sup- pressio veri; it contains no hint of what are perhaps the two most decisive of the 'facts about the war.' These, since they iseem to have been less emphasized in America than they deserve to be, should perhaps be indicated specifically. "It is a fact imdisclosed in the pamphlet that on July 30, and again in a modified form on July 31, the Russian govern- ment eommimicated to the German government an undertaking to 'stop all military preparations' (or 'to maintain a waiting attitude') if Austria would consent to 'stay the march of her troops on Servian territory and, recognizing that the Austro- Servian conflict has assumed the character of a question of general European interest, to admit that the Great Powers may examine the satisfaction which Servia can accord to the Austro- Hungarian government without injury to her rights as a sover- eign state and to her independence.' "It is a fact equally undisclosed in this repository of informa- tion about the causes of the war, that on the morning of July 31, Sir Edward Grey declared to the German Ambassador in London that 'if Germany could get any reasonable proposal put forward which made it clear that Germany and Austria were striving to preserve European peace, and that Russia and France would be unreasonable if they rejected it,' he would 'support it at St. Petersburg and Paris, and go the length of saying that if Russia and France would not accept it his Majesty's government would have nothing more to do with the consequences.* "The most illuminating 'truth about Germany' is that, on the same day, with these two pledges before it, the government A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 253 at Berlin sent to Russia and to Fiance ultimata which were certain, and therefore were manifestly designed, to render war within twenty-four hours inevitable." The pamphlet "Truth About Germany" was prepared by a Board of Editors which included many of the best-known men in letters, science, finance and German public life. As Lovejoy says, the pamphlet seems to show that the very class that among cultivated persons of other countries has gained for Germany its greatest distinction, "has signally failed at the most critical moment in German history, to perform its proper function — the function of detached criticism, of cool consideration, of insisting that facts and all the relevant facts, be known and faced. It appears to be shouting with the rest for a wholly avoidable war of which, in nearly all non-Grerman eyes, the moral indefensibility seems exceeded only by its fatal imwisdom from a purely national point of view." The astounding spectacle presented by this Board of Editors is partly explained by their relation to the State. It pays them, it promotes them, it gives them — or with- holds from them — social and ofl&cial honors and dignities. Their countrymen, Nietzsche, has prophetically dealt with this situation : "The State has never any concern with truth, but only with the truth useful to it, or, rather, with anything that is useful to it, be it truth, half-truth, or error. A coalition between State and philosophy has only meaning when the latter can promise to be unconditionally useful to the State, to put its well-being higher than truth. It would certainly be a noble thing for the State to have truth as a paid servant; but it knows well enough that it is the essence of truth to be paid nothing and serve nothing." (See pp. 277-81.) 254 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR But in view of the persistent and extraordinary efforts being made by the -Germans to influence public opinion in America, it seems worth while to consider further, and at some length, the question of the credibility of their official and semi-official statements. It should be said, at the outset, that it is almost ludicrous, when one comes to read carefully the arguments on behalf of Germany with which this country is being flooded, to note the constant contradictions. There is apparently no statement made by any one of them that is not traversed or denied by another of them. Two of these missionaries in this cultureless land — ■ Dernburg, the avowed emissary from Germany, and Miin- sterberg, the type of the pro-German professor, who has made his home here — ^have been peculiarly unfortunate, as their differences go to the very root and foundation of the war. To be sure, all their fellows pooh-pooh Bernhardi now; they all represent his books as having been without influence; they say that they were not read in America, and that almost no one reads them in Germany. They admit, with reluctance, that he did write books, but they adopt the old method of minimizing guilt, hallowed by the young female in the pages of "Midshipman Easy," by describing his editions as "very little ones." He has a fatal fascina- tion for some of them, however, and even while repudiating him, they often show themselves his disciples. Miinsterberg has been more successful than most in evading him, but Dernburg has been unable, while denying his influence and representative character, to avoid defend- ing his teachings. Powys says: (126) "The success of the German campaign of anti-Alliea propai- ganda has been less marked than its energy and patriotism A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 255 deserve. The cause of this lack of success is to be found in the fact that the leading German propagandists in this country have chosen to adopt diametrically opposite points of view, points of view that answer one another. For instance, Dr. Dernburg's reply to Lord Bryce's war-statement, whether it refuted Bryce or not, manages completely to dispose of Profes^ sor Miinsterberg. "Miinsterberg, . . . discussing Treitsclike and Bern- hardi as 'hashish-dreamers' and 'courageous clowns,' adopts an idealistic, innocent-aggrieved tone; calling attention to Ger- many's 'pacific and industrious population,' with its one wish, to 'develop its agricultural, and industrial, its cultural and moral resources.' Dr. Dernburg, however, is less inclined to cater so smoothly to American public opinion. He appears to have a simpler, more direct mind than the professor, and to be more inclined to go honestly to the root of the matter. "For instance, in an article, published in The Sun, Dr. Dern- burg, although he firmly declares that he holds Lord Bryce wrong in connecting the German people with Bemhardi, yet makes it quite plain that he thinks there is a great deal to be said for Bernhardi's attitude. The greater part of his article is indeed nothing more or less than an explanation of Bern- hardi's position and a justification of it." Later Mr. Powys returns to the same subject : "Miinsterberg adopted the line, more timid and less honest, of making a special appeal to the American people by represent- ing Germany as content with her present position, her position of cultural and industrial development, and in no way anxious to alter it. Bernhardi has converted the German people, has converted Dr. Dernburg, to the absolute necessity of altering it, if Germany as a nation is to survive. Thus Bernhardi's grand dictum of 'world-domination or downfall' becomes intel- ligible; becomes in fact Germany's motto in this war, and the motive-power behind the heroism and resolution of the German people. . "How ridiculous is it, then, of Professor Miinsterberg to endeavor to slip gracefully into the mold of American public opinion, by finding the sole cause of the war in the expansion 256 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR of Russia! Certainly one of the causes of the war is the expan- sion of Russia, but a more direct and powerful cause is the expansion of Germany; an expansion concerning which Dr. Dernburg is, as he says, an answerable authority, 'because I have stood in it.'" (127) These differences of the German apologists themselves are among the most instructive incidents of the wax, and have had undoubted effect upon the formation of American public opinion. It is not only that their statements are so frequently at variance with the facts, but their failure to agree with one another ranges from very serious to very trivial matters ; from instances like Dr. Dernburg's versions 'of Germany's attitude toward the Monroe Doctrine, com- pared with Germany's official statement of her attitude, (p. 93) to others like the question of the proper translation and significance of "Deutschland iiber Alles." (p. 282) It is right that these differences, big and little, should, whenever possible, be brought to public notice, and should be emphasized. Making the fullest possible allowance for the fallibility of human testimony, they seem to me to show, not a desire to inform, or legitimately and logically to con- vince the American people, but rather, at any cost of ver- acity, or of close adherence to facts, to hoodwink and to mislead them. N'aturall}^, misstatements, exaggerations, suppressions of vital data, and downright falsehoods, can- not be made to agree without more careful consultation than there has been time -or opportunity for. In addition to disagreement among themselves, it is noteworthy, too> that the same writer is, on occasion, self -contradictory. Furthermore they, practically without exception, fail to understand the controversial value of an understatement. They vsrrite so vigorously to solicit the sympathy of Amer- icans that they overpass the boundaries, not only of credi- bility, but also those of sobriety. A laugh evoked by an A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 257 argument, intended to^ be serious and concerned with in- tensely tragic events, is the most conclusive possible evi- dence of failure. They all claim too much. If they would claim less, we might believe more. If they did not white- wash so vigorously, we should not suspect so much dirt. Let me cite, with comment, two conspicuous examples. Herr Heinrich Friedrich Albert has contributed to the December issue of the Atlantic Monthly a paper on "Ger- man Methods of Conducting the War," which is more touch- ingly rose-colored than anything even Doctor Dernberg has written. War, so conducted, far from resembling Hell, is a pretty close approach to Heaven. The Prussian soldier, as painted by Herr Albert, is what old-fashioned people used to call "too good for earth." Shelley's apostrophe to Emilia Viviani, "Seraph of Heaven! too gentle to be human," is the only description which can be found to fit him. Of course all charges of cruelty are swept aside as of "psychopathic origin." Herr Albert wastes no time on them, but proceeds at once to make clear to us the benig- nant nature of Zeppelins and airships, which are far more "humane" than artillery, and which, by compelling the speedy surrender of a fortress, "may spare many thousands of lives and property of incalculable value." Even when the bombs are dropped upon cities not under siege "a calm and Judicious consideration" will soften our prejudice against them. They were never intended, for example, to destroy life in Paris. "The bombs were meant for the wireless station on the Eiffel Tower." If the inconspicuous nature of the tower concealed it from observation, the blame, we presume, rests with the French, who should have built it higher. 17 358 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR As for the burning of Lonvain, Herr Albert clears tlie invading troops of all responsibility, and practically of all participation in the deed. He does not even admit, with those delightful German professors who put forth their appeal "To the Civilized World/' that German soldiers "with aching hearts were obliged to fire a part of the town," — a purely academic view of militarism. Herr Albert's sol- diers behaved better than that. All they tried to do (and who can blame them?) was to defend themselves against the furious attack of Louvain civilians. When, "during this fighting, fires broke out which spread with terrific speed over the city," they risked their lives to rescue the Tower Hall, and "works of art endangered by the flames." All this time the Louvainers, indifferent to the fate of their city, fired "incessantly" at the brave men engaged in the work of preservation. "Unfortunately it was not found possible to' save the valuable library of the University." What .a picture of magnanimity ! !N"othing like it in his- tory. ISTothing much like it in fiction. Why not accept the simpler statement of a patriotic German editor who announced that the Belgians, instigated by the English, burned Louvain, in order to ^'foul the fair fame of Ger- many." The levying of indemnities is another point "much mis- understood." The practice seems at first sight an unkind one, and there are some troublesome Hague regulations which, if respected, would spoil all a conqueror's sport. But Herr Albert assures us that these huge sums are de- manded "to discourage sniping, and for the administration of occupied territory." They are in the nature of ordinary taxes. True, no dollar of them has been wasted so far in feeding the starving, or sheltering the homeless Belgians. This evidently does not come within the province of prac- tical administration. But if Belgians starve, the fault A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 259 (and this we never should have suspected) lies at the door of England. "There seem to be plans under consideration by the German Government to feed the Belgian population by importing food stuffs," says Herr Albert vaguely; and these nebulous plans are in danger of being frustrated by England's wicked efforts to seize such food stuffs as con- traband of war. How can kind-hearteed Germany feed innocent Belgium when England stays her hand ? The destruction of the Cathedral of Eheims is the epi- sode which of all others we have least understood, and this is because wc were, many of us, ignorant of the amazing circumstance which made such destruction "a military necessity." We are ignorant no longer. A German official report, quoted at length by Herr Albert, states that the Commander-in-Chief gave orders to spare the Cathedral, "so long as the enemy refrained from using it to his advan- tage." The French, thinking to profit by such forbearance, despatched "a military observer" to the roof. This ob- server, unlike the Eiffel Tower, was visible from afar. "It was necessary to dislodge him," and by the time he was dislodged — though the firing then ceased instantly — the cathedral was in ruins. It sounds like a locomotive run- ning over an ant. The roof — ^with that tendency to spon- taneous combustion which marks the propinquity of Ger- man troops — "burst into flames;" but "the responsibility rests with the enemy, who attempted to misuse a monu- ment of architectural art under the protection of the white flag." (p. 296) So far the report. Then follows a priceless sentence of Herr Albert's very own. "For a German, the fact that an official communication is issued by the army headquarters is proof sufficient of its absolute truth to facts." This is sublime. It reminds us of nothing but Prester John ex- patiating on the qualities of his countrymen, "No vice is 260 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR tolerated in our midst, and with us no one lies." (128) Another excellent sample (of the pleas with which Ger- many is flooding this country) is found in the article en- titled, "Germany's Answer" (129), by Professor Delbriick. The author is Professor of History in the University of Berlin, and is, therefore, Treitschke's successor. To a careless or an uninformed reader the article might seem strongly and almost convincingly to justify Germany's course. But a little critical examination would soon dis- pel this view. As Miss Eepplier did me the honor of consulting me with reference to a letter she later sent to an American maga- zine (130) in reply to Professor Delbriick's paper, and as our views absolutely coincide, I shall let her speak for me : "This," she says, "should be of value to American readers as embodying those ideals made familiar to us by Professor Treitschke and General von Bernhardi — ideals which soft-spoken Ger- mans have endeavored to persuade us are without influence in Berlin. It should also be of interest to American readers as illustrating on a large scale the difference between a state- ment and a fact. It is a series of assumptions proffered as though they were proven. We are asked to base our judgment, not on what has occurred, which we loiow; but on what might have occurred, of which we know nothing; not on things done, which are called evidence; but on things surmised, which have no legal or logical existence. "Professor Delbriick is not soft-spoken. Let me hasten to do him that justice. He says distinctly that Austria cannot 'tolerate the existence of the Greater Servian idea either within its borders or on its frontiers'; that 'it was inconceivable Aus- tria should content herself with the punishment of the assassins and their accomplices, even on the largest scale'; and that 'the only acceptable redress for the murder of the Archducal pair was to put an end once and for all to the Greater Servian aspirations,' to demand terms which would put Servia imder Austria.'s 'permanent control.' A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 261 "This is plain speaking. We may or we may not agree with it. We may or we may not think that three millions of people should be robbed of their national life because a shameful mur- der was committed at Serajevo, with the possible — but unproven — connivance of Servian officials. Things which are 'inconceiv- able' to Professor Delbriick are perfectly conceivable to his readers. The amazing, and amusing, statement made by this amazing, and at times amusing, German is that Austria's ultimatum (the most bullying document of recorded history) was born of 'dire extremity,' and was sent in the interest of peace. 'Studied politeness,' he affirms, would have fed Servia's swollen pride, and might have beguiled the Czar into threats from which he 'could not draw back.' After which powerful and conclusive argument, the writer adds serenely: 'We have seen that if Austria had made her demands less sharp, sooner or later the war would have broken out just the same.' " 'We' — the readers — have seen nothing of the kind. We have heard, but we have not seen. We have read, but we do not of necessity believe. Professor Delbriick tells us that Eng- land refused in this great crisis to act 'as honor dictated,' she 'suppressed all regard for the common welfare of European civilization.' He assures us that Russia represents 'the most pernicious despotism that the world knows.' But when Ger- many accuses other nations of despotism and dishonor, we are forcibly reminded of that famous passage in 'The Fortunes of Nigel' (unknown we fear to Berlin professors), where 'Baby Charles' lays down the guilt of dissimulation, and 'Steenie' lectures on the turpitude of incontinence. Russia is despotic. We used to call her cruel. But Germany's campaign in Belgium has forever altered our standards of despotism and cruelty. Before its blackness the Slavic sins grow pale. It is a blot which can never be effaced from the escutcheon of the civilized world. It has made the very name of civilization ring like a mockery in our ears. "In defence of this campaign Professor Delbriick marshals his most inconclusive arguments. In defence of this campaign Germany will be kept busy arguing until the end of time. Only a good cause can sustain itself without props. Why tell us that the conduct of the German Emperor, the Chancellor, the General Staff, 'all very sagacious personages,' 'cannot be logic- ally explained, unless they were sure that, not onlv would 362 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR England join the ranks of our enemies under any circumstances, but that the united Allies would themselves afterward make their way through Belgium' ? Is this considered to be evidence ? Can we prove an asserted fact by offering it as an explanation for somebody's conduct. A robs B. A's behaviour cannot be 'logically explained,' unless he were sure that C meant to rob him. Therefore C is to blame. The plain truth remains that England did not violate Bel- gium's neutrality, and Germany did ; that France did not march her armies across Belgium's frontier and Germany did; that France promised to respect the treaty she had signed, and Germany refused to give such a promise. How can we argue on the basis of what might have happened, and what has hap- pened? The one like paternity, is a matter of conjecture; the other, like maternity, is a matter of fact. And when Professor Delbruck asks us proudly, can we credit his 'sagacious person- ages' with a blunder; we answer humbly and truthfully that we can. "As for the naive regret that Germany found it impossible to secure both the moral advantages which would have been hers had she kept her plighted word and the material advan- tages which accrued to her from breaking it, this is expressed with Teutonic simplicity. So, too, is the confident assurance that Belgium violated her owa neutrality, which is now the rallying cry of German apologists. Because a little nation, weak, but not blind, entertained reasonable misgivings, and planned, to the best of her ability, to defend herself, should these misgivings prove well-founded, she is now accused of being the original aggressor in the quarrel of muddying the water when the wolf came dovra to drink. Why, asks Professor Delbriick triumphantly had Belgiimi built her forts on the German, and not on the French border? 'Is a country lying between two unfriendly neighbors, and taking military precau- tion against the one of them, and not against the other, in reality neutral'? " 'Two unfriendly neighbors ! ' It is candid in Professor Delbruck to admit Germany's unfriendliness; but he has no warrant in assigning the same attitude to France, Belgium saw the Germanic strategic railway, with its admirable equip- ment, built to her frontier. Had she neglected to fortify that frontier, she would have been criminally improvident. ^Vhen A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 263 an armed house-breaker plants a ladder against our front wall, we do not run and barricade the back windows. "The final paragraph of 'Germany's Answer' invites a final word of comment. 'We, in Germany,' says Professor Delbriick, 'have the firm conviction that it is not for our own independence alone that we are fighting in this war, but for the preservation of the culture and freedom of all peoples.' "This is more than the world asks at the Kaiser's hand. Most nations prefer to look after their own culture and freedom in the fashion which suits them best. And if the present con- dition of Belgium, starved, outraged, broken on the wheel, is a sample of the culture and freedom which are Germany's gift, we Americans pray Heaven to preserve us in ignorance and slavery.' " The material for continiiiiig this comparison of the state- ments of German apologists with the truth, or with the statements of other German apologists, is so abundant that it is difficult to make a selection. Dr. Dernburg has been one of the most prolific contributors. We have already seen how he has dealt with the violation of Belgium neu- trality (pp. 78-83) and incidentally with the speech of the German Chancellor." (p. 80) It seems useful to follow this indefatigable agent on another of the trails he has made since his arrival here. He appeared before the American public in December as the triumphant expounder of the so-called "secret papers" found at Brussels. He had the impudence to call our atten- tion to *'the guilt of the Belgium Government," and to the "crime" of Belgium. I have elsewhere discussed this, and have quoted American editorial utterances on the subject. But two other of our papers have dealt with him and his scandalous misrepresentations in a. way that brings out certain new points in more detail. One (131) said editorially: 264 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR "We have both the text of the so-called 'secret treaties' said to have been found in the archives of the Belgian General Staff after the German occupation of Brussels and the inter- pretation put upon the documents by the Kaiser's ingenious spokesmen in this country. "The existence of the secret papers discovered in Belgium has long been heralded and public curiosity on all sides has awaited with some eagerness the appearance of the exact text. . An examination of the 'secret papers' reveals something which Dr. Dernburg may possibly not have discovered, and which, as we understand the case, radically affects the sig- nificance of the docuiments in question. Dr. Dernburg says: " 'Only the prompt action at Lifege that put this important railway center commanding the railway connections to France and Germany into German hands prevented the English landing and invading Belgium.' " 'The guilt of the Belgium Government ( ! ! ) in this matter consists in making and concerting plans with the English and French Governments as to what steps to take in case of war.' " 'While Belgium pretended neutrality and friendship toward Germany, it was secretly planning for her defeat in a war which was considered unavoidable.' " 'The Imperial Chancellor has declared that there was irre- futable proof that if Germany did not march through Belgium her enemies would. This proof, as now being produced, is of the strongest character. So the Chancellor was right in appeal- ing to the law of necessity, although he had to regret that it violated international law.' "A rough summary of the Belgian papers now made public might easily, without dishonest intent on the part of the com- piler, give the impression that as far back as 1906 there was a confidential understanding between the Belgian General Staff and the British (and also with the French) military authori- ties for concerted action in the event of a European war; for joint mobilization; for tne prompt employment of the Belgian railways to introduce English and perhaps French troops into Belgian territory, and for the general conduct of a co-operative movement against Germany. This would mean a secret plan, Belgium's 'crime,' as Dr. Dernburg calls it, to prostitute her neutrality to British invasion in order to anticipate a possible violation of neutrality from the German frontier. A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR 265 "The same idea might be produced in an impartial mind by a hasty or not very critical reading of the documents now pub- lished; particularly of Major-General Ducarme's confidential report to the Belgian Minister of War in 1906, concerning a conference with the British military attache at Brussels. "There is, however, buried in the text of this confidential report one sentence which does not seem to have impressed Dr. Dernburg greatly. We quote it now, in italics : "He [Lieutenant-Colonel Barnardiston] proceeded in the fol- lowing sense: The landing of the English troops would take place at the French coast in the vicinity of Dunkirk and Calais so asi to haisten their movements as much as possible. The entry of the English m Belgium would only take place after the violation of ow neutrality hy Germany. A landing in Antwerp would take much more time, because larger transports would be needed and because, on the other hand, the safety would be less complete." "This certainly puts a somewhat different aspect on the alleged 'criminal' intentions of Belgium. Instead of plotting for concerted action with England and France to procure the violation of her own neutrality in anticipation of Germany's movements, Belgium appears as providing for support in case of invasion by Germany ; a purpose on the part of her powerful neighbor even then, as it seems, expected or suspected at Briis- aels. "And that is precisely what did happen in and to Belgium." Dr. Dernburg attempted to defend himself (132) say- ing that he "did not at all overlook that sentence in the 1906 document that English troops are only to be landed in case of a German attack. He adds : "I mention it where I refer to the fact that in 1906 it had only been a con- certed action. The main point is that in the 1912 docu- ment there is no such qualification any more." (sic.) This flimsy excuse is dealt with as follows: (133) "Dr. Dernburg's interpretation of the conversations in 1906 between the Belgian General Ducarme and the British military attache, Lieutenant- Colonel Barnardiston, was this: 266 A TEXT-BOOK OF THE WAR " 'They [the so-called secret papers] show that these conversa- tions were also held with Belgium; that the plans had been concerted to invade Belgium with an army of 100,000 men by way of three French ports — ^viz., Dunkirk, Calais and Boulogne — and that the British plans even considered a landing by way of the Scheldt, thus violating also the Dutch neutrality, " 'The documents, giving all the details as translated and show- ing that Belgian railway cars were to be sent to the named French ports in order to transport the British troops into Bel- gium, are dated from 1906.' "Let us put the case simply and fairly. These 'secret papers' have been widely advertised as affording evidence of a long concluded plot and purpose on the part of France or England, or both together, to violate Belgium's neutrality in order to reach and attack Germany, Belgium being a party to the plot. This has frequently been alleged by Germany's spokesmen in justification of Germany's actual violation of Belgium's neutral territory in order to reach the French frontier and attack France. "There was absolutely nothing in Dr. Dernburg's remarks introducing the 'secret documents to give any idea of their significance different from that just stated. He said: "The Imperial Chancellor has declared that there was irre- futable proof thait if Oerm>any d