35
GB Shaw
their domestic cages and tasted both discipline and indepen-
dence. The thoughtless and snobbish middle classes have been
pulled up short by the very unpleasant experience of being
ruined to an unprecedented extent. We have all had a tre-
mendous jolt; and although the widespread notion that the
shock of the war would automatically make a new heaven
and a new earth, and that the dog would never go back to
his vomit nor the sow to her wallowing in the mire, is al-
ready seen to be a delusion, yet
we are far more conscious of
our condition than we were, and far less disposed to submit
to it. Revolution, lately only a sensational chapter in history
or a demagogic claptrap, is now a possibility so imminent
that hardly by trying to suppress it in other countries by
arms and defamation, and calling the process anti-Bolshe-
vism, can our Government stave it off at home.
Perhaps the most tragic figure of the day is the American
President who was once a historian.
In those days it became
his task to tell us how, after that great war in America which
was more clearly than any other war of our time a war for an
idea, the conquerors, confronted with a heroic task of recon-
struction, turned recreant, and spent fifteen years in abusing
their victory under cover of pretending to accomplish the
task they were doing what they could to make impossible.
Alas! Hegel was right when he said that we learn from his-
tory that men never learn anything from history. With what
anguish of mind the President sees that we,
the new con-
querors, forgetting everything we professed to fight for, are
sitting down with watering mouths to a good square meal of
ten years revenge upon and humiliation of our prostrate foe,
can only be guessed by those who know, as he does, how
hopeless is remonstrance, and how happy Lincoln was in
perishing from the earth before his inspired messages be-
came scraps of paper. He knows well that from the Peace
Conference will come, in spite of his utmost, no edict on
which he will be able,
like Lincoln, to invoke “the consider-
ate judgment of mankind: and the gracious favor of Almighty
God.” He led his people to destroy the militarism of Zabern;
and the army they rescued is busy in Cologne imprisoning
every German who does not salute a British officer; whilst
the government at home, asked whether it approves, replies
that it does not propose even to discontinue this Zabernism
when
the Peace is concluded, but in effect looks forward to
36
Heartbreak House
making Germans salute British officers until the end of the
world. That is what war makes of men and women. It will
wear off; and the worst it threatens is already proving im-
practicable; but before the humble and contrite heart ceases
to be despised, the President and I, being of the same age,
will be dotards. In the meantime there is, for him, another
history
to write; for me, another comedy to stage. Perhaps,
after all, that is what wars are for, and what historians and
playwrights are for. If men will not learn until their lessons
are written in blood, why, blood they must have, their own
for preference.
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