George Bernard Shaw a penn State Electronic Classics Series Publication



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Bernard Shaw - Pygmalion

The Rabid Watchdogs of Liberty
Not content with these rancorous abuses of the existing law,
the war maniacs made a frantic rush to abolish all constitu-
tional guarantees of liberty and well-being. The ordinary law
was superseded by Acts under which newspapers were seized
and their printing machinery destroyed by simple police raids
a la Russe, and persons arrested and shot without any pre-
tence of trial by jury or publicity of procedure or evidence.
Though it was urgently necessary that production should be
increased by the most scientific organization and economy
of labor, and though no fact was better established than that
excessive duration and intensity of toil reduces production
heavily instead of increasing it, the factory laws were sus-
pended, and men and women recklessly over-worked until
the loss of their efficiency became too glaring to be ignored.


15
GB Shaw
Remonstrances and warnings were met either with an accu-
sation of pro-Germanism or the formula, “Remember that
we are at war now.” I have said that men assumed that war
had reversed the order of nature, and that all was lost unless
we did the exact opposite of everything we had found neces-
sary and beneficial in peace. But the truth was worse than
that. The war did not change men’s minds in any such im-
possible way. What really happened was that the impact of
physical death and destruction, the one reality that every
fool can understand, tore off the masks of education, art,
science and religion from our ignorance and barbarism, and
left us glorying grotesquely in the licence suddenly accorded
to our vilest passions and most abject terrors. Ever since
Thucydides wrote his history, it has been on record that when
the angel of death sounds his trumpet the pretences of civi-
lization are blown from men’s heads into the mud like hats
in a gust of wind. But when this scripture was fulfilled among
us, the shock was not the less appalling because a few stu-
dents of Greek history were not surprised by it. Indeed these
students threw themselves into the orgy as shamelessly as
the illiterate. The Christian priest, joining in the war dance
without even throwing off his cassock first, and the respect-
able school governor expelling the German professor with
insult and bodily violence, and declaring that no English
child should ever again be taught the language of Luther
and Goethe, were kept in countenance by the most impu-
dent repudiations of every decency of civilization and every
lesson of political experience on the part of the very persons
who, as university professors, historians, philosophers, and
men of science, were the accredited custodians of culture. It
was crudely natural, and perhaps necessary for recruiting
purposes, that German militarism and German dynastic
ambition should be painted by journalists and recruiters in
black and red as European dangers (as in fact they are), leav-
ing it to be inferred that our own militarism and our own
political constitution are millennially democratic (which they
certainly are not); but when it came to frantic denunciations
of German chemistry, German biology, German poetry,
German music, German literature, German philosophy, and
even German engineering, as malignant abominations stand-
ing towards British and French chemistry and so forth in the
relation of heaven to hell, it was clear that the utterers of


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Heartbreak House
such barbarous ravings had never really understood or cared
for the arts and sciences they professed and were profaning,
and were only the appallingly degenerate descendants of the
men of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries who, rec-
ognizing no national frontiers in the great realm of the hu-
man mind, kept the European comity of that realm loftily
and even ostentatiously above the rancors of the battle-field.
Tearing the Garter from the Kaiser’s leg, striking the Ger-
man dukes from the roll of our peerage, changing the King’s
illustrious and historically appropriate surname (for the war
was the old war of Guelph against Ghibelline, with the Kai-
ser as Arch-Ghibelline) to that of a traditionless locality. One
felt that the figure of St. George and the Dragon on our
coinage should be replaced by that of the soldier driving his
spear through Archimedes. But by that time there was no
coinage: only paper money in which ten shillings called it-
self a pound as confidently as the people who were disgrac-
ing their country called themselves patriots.

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