<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P421"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapLXVII"></SPAN>LXVII<br/> THE POLITICAL AND SOCIAL RECONSTRUCTION OF THE WORLD</h2>
<p>The scheme and scale upon which this History is planned do not permit us to
enter into the complicated and acrimonious disputes that centre about the
treaties, and particularly of the treaty of Versailles, which concluded the
Great War. We are beginning to realize that that conflict, terrible and
enormous as it was, ended nothing, began nothing and settled nothing. It killed
millions of people; it wasted and impoverished the world. It smashed Russia
altogether. It was at best an acute and frightful reminder that we were living
foolishly and confusedly without much plan or foresight in a dangerous and
unsympathetic universe. The crudely organized egotisms and passions of national
and imperial greed that carried mankind into that tragedy, emerged from it
sufficiently unimpaired to make some other similar disaster highly probable so
soon as the world has a little recovered from its war exhaustion and fatigue.
Wars and revolutions make nothing; their utmost service to mankind is that, in
a very rough and painful way, they destroy superannuated and obstructive
things. The great war lifted the threat of German imperialism from Europe, and
shattered the imperialism of Russia. It cleared away a number of monarchies.
But a multitude of flags still waves in Europe, the frontiers still exasperate,
great armies accumulate fresh stores of equipment.</p>
<p>The Peace Conference at Versailles was a gathering very ill adapted
to do more than carry out the conflicts and defeats of the war to
their logical conclusions. The Germans, Austrians, Turks and
Bulgarians were permitted no share in its deliberations; they were
only to accept the decisions it dictated to them. From the point
of view of human welfare the choice of the place of meeting was
particularly unfortunate. It was at Versailles in 1871 that, with
every circumstance of triumphant vulgarity, the new German
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P422"></SPAN></span>Empire had
been proclaimed. The suggestion of a melodramatic reversal of that
scene, in the same Hall of Mirrors, was overpowering.</p>
<p>Whatever generosities had appeared in the opening phases of the
Great War had long been exhausted. The populations of the
victorious countries were acutely aware of their own losses and
sufferings, and entirely regardless of the fact that the defeated
had paid in the like manner. The war had arisen as a natural and
inevitable consequence of the competitive nationalisms of Europe
and the absence of any Federal adjustment of these competitive
forces; war is the necessary logical consummation of independent
sovereign nationalities living in too small an area with too
powerful an armament; and if the great war had not come in the form
it did it would have come in some similar form—just as it
will certainly return upon a still more disastrous scale in twenty
or thirty years’ time if no political unification anticipates
and prevents it. States organized for war will make wars as surely
as hens will lay eggs, but the feeling of these distressed and
war-worn countries disregarded this fact, and the whole of the
defeated peoples were treated as morally and materially responsible
for all the damage, as they would no doubt have treated the victor
peoples had the issue of war been different. The French and
English thought the Germans were to blame, the Germans thought the
Russians, French and English were to blame, and only an intelligent
minority thought that there was anything to blame in the
fragmentary political constitution of Europe. The treaty of
Versailles was intended to be exemplary and vindictive; it provided
tremendous penalties for the vanquished; it sought to provide
compensations for the wounded and suffering victors by imposing
enormous debts upon nations already bankrupt, and its attempts to
reconstitute international relations by the establishment of a
League of Nations against war were manifestly insincere and
inadequate.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-423"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-423.jpg" alt="PASSENGER AEROPLANE FLYING OVER NORTHOLT" width-obs="600" height-obs="434" /> <p class="caption">
PASSENGER AEROPLANE FLYING OVER NORTHOLT
<small><br/>
<i>(Photo taken by another ’plane by the Central Aerophoto
Co.)</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>So far as Europe was concerned it is doubtful if there would have
been any attempt whatever to organize international relations for
a permanent peace. The proposal of the League of Nations was
brought into practical politics by the President of the United
States of America, President Wilson. Its chief support was in
America. So far the United States, this new modern state, had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P423"></SPAN></span>developed no
distinctive ideas of international relationship beyond the Monroe
Doctrine, which protected the new world from European interference.
Now suddenly it was called upon for its mental contribution to the
vast problem of the time. It had none. The natural disposition of
the American people was towards a permanent world peace. With this
however was linked a strong traditional distrust of old-world
polities and a habit of isolation from old-world entanglements.
The Americans had hardly begun to think out an American solution
of world problems when the submarine campaign of the Germans
dragged them into the war on the side of the anti-German allies.
President Wilson’s scheme of a League of Nations was an
attempt at short notice to create a distinctively American world
project. It was a sketchy, inadequate and dangerous scheme. In
Europe however it was taken as a matured American point of view.
The generality of mankind in 1918-19 was intensely weary of war
and anxious at almost any sacrifice to erect
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P424"></SPAN></span>barriers
against its recurrence, but there was not a single government in
the old world willing to waive one iota of its sovereign
independence to attain any such end. The public utterances of
President Wilson leading up to the project of a World League of
Nations seemed for a time to appeal right over the heads of the
governments to the peoples of the world; they were taken as
expressing the ripe intentions of America, and the response was
enormous. Unhappily President Wilson had to deal with governments
and not with peoples; he was a man capable of tremendous flashes of
vision and yet when put to the test egotistical and limited, and
the great wave of enthusiasm he evoked passed and was wasted.</p>
<p>Says Dr. Dillon in his book, <i>The Peace Conference:</i>
“Europe, when the President touched its shores, was as clay
ready for the creative potter. Never before were the nations so
eager to follow a Moses who would take them to the long-promised
land where wars are prohibited and blockades unknown. And to their
thinking he was just that great leader. In France men bowed down
before him with awe and affection. Labour leaders in Paris told
me that they shed tears of joy in his presence, and that their
comrades would go through fire and water to help him to realize his
noble schemes. To the working classes in Italy his name was a
heavenly clarion at the sound of which the earth would be renewed.
The Germans regarded him and his doctrine as their sheet-anchor of
safety. The fearless Herr Muehlon said: ‘If President Wilson
were to address the Germans and pronounce a severe sentence upon
them, they would accept it with resignation and without a murmur
and set to work at once.’ In German-Austria his fame was
that of a saviour, and the mere mention of his name brought balm to
the suffering and surcease of sorrow to the afflicted ... .”</p>
<p>Such were the overpowering expectations that President Wilson raised. How
completely he disappointed them and how weak and futile was the League of
Nations he made is too long and too distressful a story to tell here. He
exaggerated in his person our common human tragedy, he was so very great in his
dreams and so incapable in his performance. America dissented from the acts of
its President and would not join the League Europe accepted from him. There was
a slow realization on the part of the American <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P425"></SPAN></span>people that it had been rushed into something for which
it was totally unprepared. There was a corresponding realization on the part of
Europe that America had nothing ready to give to the old world in its
extremity. Born prematurely and crippled at its birth, that League has become
indeed, with its elaborate and unpractical constitution and its manifest
limitations of power, a serious obstacle in the way of any effective
reorganization of international relationships. The problem would be a clearer
one if the League did not yet exist. Yet that world-wide blaze of enthusiasm
that first welcomed the project, that readiness of men everywhere round and
about the earth, of men, that is, as distinguished from governments, for a
world control of war, is a thing to be recorded with emphasis in any history.
Behind the short-sighted governments that divide and mismanage human affairs, a
real force for world unity and world order exists and grows.</p>
<p>From 1918 onward the world entered upon an age of conferences. Of
these the Conference at Washington called by President Harding
(1921) has been the most successful and suggestive. Notable, too,
is the Genoa Conference (1922) for the appearance of German and
Russian delegates at its deliberations. We will not discuss this
long procession of conferences and tentatives in any detail. It
becomes more and more clearly manifest that a huge work of
reconstruction has to be done by mankind if a crescendo of such
convulsions and world massacres as that of the great war is to be
averted. No such hasty improvisation as the League of Nations, no
patched-up system of Conferences between this group of states and
that, which change nothing with an air of settling everything, will
meet the complex political needs of the new age that lies before
us. A systematic development and a systematic application of the
sciences of human relationship, of personal and group psychology,
of financial and economic science and of education, sciences still
only in their infancy, is required. Narrow and obsolete, dead and
dying moral and political ideas have to be replaced by a clearer
and a simpler conception of the common origins and destinies of our
kind.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-426"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-426.jpg" alt="A PEACEFUL GARDEN IN ENGLAND" width-obs="540" height-obs="742" /> <p class="caption">
A PEACEFUL GARDEN IN ENGLAND
<small><br/>Given wisdom, all mankind might live in such gardens
</small></p>
</div>
<p>But if the dangers, confusions and disasters that crowd upon man in
these days are enormous beyond any experience of the past, it is
because science has brought him such powers as he never had
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P426"></SPAN></span>before.
And the scientific method of fearless thought, exhaustively lucid
statement, and exhaustively criticized planning, which has given
him these as yet uncontrollable powers, gives him also the hope of
controlling these powers. Man is still only adolescent. His
troubles are not the troubles of senility and exhaustion but of
increasing and still undisciplined strength. When we look at all
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P427"></SPAN></span>history as one
process, as we have been doing in this book, when we see the
steadfast upward struggle of life towards vision and control, then
we see in their true proportions the hopes and dangers of the
present time. As yet we are hardly in the earliest dawn of human
greatness. But in the beauty of flower and sunset, in the happy
and perfect movement of young animals and in the delight of ten
thousand various landscapes, we have some intimations of what life
can do for us, and in some few works of plastic and pictorial art,
in some great music, in a few noble buildings and happy gardens, we
have an intimation of what the human will can do with material
possibilities. We have dreams; we have at present undisciplined
but ever increasing power. Can we doubt that presently our race
will more than realize our boldest imaginations, that it will
achieve unity and peace, that it will live, the children of our
blood and lives will live, in a world made more splendid and lovely
than any palace or garden that we know, going on from strength to
strength in an ever widening circle of adventure and achievement?
What man has done, the little triumphs of his present state, and
all this history we have told, form but the prelude to the things
that man has got to do.</p>
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