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<h2> CHAPTER V. CRITICISM </h2>
<p>THE influence of theoretical principles upon real life is produced more
through criticism than through doctrine, for as criticism is an
application of abstract truth to real events, therefore it not only brings
truth of this description nearer to life, but also accustoms the
understanding more to such truths by the constant repetition of their
application. We therefore think it necessary to fix the point of view for
criticism next to that for theory.</p>
<p>From the simple narration of an historical occurrence which places events
in chronological order, or at most only touches on their more immediate
causes, we separate the CRITICAL.</p>
<p>In this CRITICAL three different operations of the mind may be observed.</p>
<p>First, the historical investigation and determining of doubtful facts.
This is properly historical research, and has nothing in common with
theory.</p>
<p>Secondly, the tracing of effects to causes. This is the REAL CRITICAL
INQUIRY; it is indispensable to theory, for everything which in theory is
to be established, supported, or even merely explained, by experience can
only be settled in this way.</p>
<p>Thirdly, the testing of the means employed. This is criticism, properly
speaking, in which praise and censure is contained. This is where theory
helps history, or rather, the teaching to be derived from it.</p>
<p>In these two last strictly critical parts of historical study, all depends
on tracing things to their primary elements, that is to say, up to
undoubted truths, and not, as is so often done, resting half-way, that is,
on some arbitrary assumption or supposition.</p>
<p>As respects the tracing of effect to cause, that is often attended with
the insuperable difficulty that the real causes are not known. In none of
the relations of life does this so frequently happen as in War, where
events are seldom fully known, and still less motives, as the latter have
been, perhaps purposely, concealed by the chief actor, or have been of
such a transient and accidental character that they have been lost for
history. For this reason critical narration must generally proceed hand in
hand with historical investigation, and still such a want of connection
between cause and effect will often present itself, that it does not seem
justifiable to consider effects as the necessary results of known causes.
Here, therefore must occur, that is, historical results which cannot be
made use of for teaching. All that theory can demand is that the
investigation should be rigidly conducted up to that point, and there
leave off without drawing conclusions. A real evil springs up only if the
known is made perforce to suffice as an explanation of effects, and thus a
false importance is ascribed to it.</p>
<p>Besides this difficulty, critical inquiry also meets with another great
and intrinsic one, which is that the progress of events in War seldom
proceeds from one simple cause, but from several in common, and that it
therefore is not sufficient to follow up a series of events to their
origin in a candid and impartial spirit, but that it is then also
necessary to apportion to each contributing cause its due weight. This
leads, therefore, to a closer investigation of their nature, and thus a
critical investigation may lead into what is the proper field of theory.</p>
<p>The critical CONSIDERATION, that is, the testing of the means, leads to
the question, Which are the effects peculiar to the means applied, and
whether these effects were comprehended in the plans of the person
directing?</p>
<p>The effects peculiar to the means lead to the investigation of their
nature, and thus again into the field of theory.</p>
<p>We have already seen that in criticism all depends upon attaining to
positive truth; therefore, that we must not stop at arbitrary propositions
which are not allowed by others, and to which other perhaps equally
arbitrary assertions may again be opposed, so that there is no end to pros
and cons; the whole is without result, and therefore without instruction.</p>
<p>We have seen that both the search for causes and the examination of means
lead into the field of theory; that is, into the field of universal truth,
which does not proceed solely from the case immediately under examination.
If there is a theory which can be used, then the critical consideration
will appeal to the proofs there afforded, and the examination may there
stop. But where no such theoretical truth is to be found, the inquiry must
be pushed up to the original elements. If this necessity occurs often, it
must lead the historian (according to a common expression) into a
labyrinth of details. He then has his hands full, and it is impossible for
him to stop to give the requisite attention everywhere; the consequence
is, that in order to set bounds to his investigation, he adopts some
arbitrary assumptions which, if they do not appear so to him, do so to
others, as they are not evident in themselves or capable of proof.</p>
<p>A sound theory is therefore an essential foundation for criticism, and it
is impossible for it, without the assistance of a sensible theory, to
attain to that point at which it commences chiefly to be instructive, that
is, where it becomes demonstration, both convincing and sans re'plique.</p>
<p>But it would be a visionary hope to believe in the possibility of a theory
applicable to every abstract truth, leaving nothing for criticism to do
but to place the case under its appropriate law: it would be ridiculous
pedantry to lay down as a rule for criticism that it must always halt and
turn round on reaching the boundaries of sacred theory. The same spirit of
analytical inquiry which is the origin of theory must also guide the
critic in his work; and it can and must therefore happen that he strays
beyond the boundaries of the province of theory and elucidates those
points with which he is more particularly concerned. It is more likely, on
the contrary, that criticism would completely fail in its object if it
degenerated into a mechanical application of theory. All positive results
of theoretical inquiry, all principles, rules, and methods, are the more
wanting in generality and positive truth the more they become positive
doctrine. They exist to offer themselves for use as required, and it must
always be left for judgment to decide whether they are suitable or not.
Such results of theory must never be used in criticism as rules or norms
for a standard, but in the same way as the person acting should use them,
that is, merely as aids to judgment. If it is an acknowledged principle in
tactics that in the usual order of battle cavalry should be placed behind
infantry, not in line with it, still it would be folly on this account to
condemn every deviation from this principle. Criticism must investigate
the grounds of the deviation, and it is only in case these are
insufficient that it has a right to appeal to principles laid down in
theory. If it is further established in theory that a divided attack
diminishes the probability of success, still it would be just as
unreasonable, whenever there is a divided attack and an unsuccessful
issue, to regard the latter as the result of the former, without further
investigation into the connection between the two, as where a divided
attack is successful to infer from it the fallacy of that theoretical
principle. The spirit of investigation which belongs to criticism cannot
allow either. Criticism therefore supports itself chiefly on the results
of the analytical investigation of theory; what has been made out and
determined by theory does not require to be demonstrated over again by
criticism, and it is so determined by theory that criticism may find it
ready demonstrated.</p>
<p>This office of criticism, of examining the effect produced by certain
causes, and whether a means applied has answered its object, will be easy
enough if cause and effect, means and end, are all near together.</p>
<p>If an Army is surprised, and therefore cannot make a regular and
intelligent use of its powers and resources, then the effect of the
surprise is not doubtful.—If theory has determined that in a battle
the convergent form of attack is calculated to produce greater but less
certain results, then the question is whether he who employs that
convergent form had in view chiefly that greatness of result as his
object; if so, the proper means were chosen. But if by this form he
intended to make the result more certain, and that expectation was founded
not on some exceptional circumstances (in this case), but on the general
nature of the convergent form, as has happened a hundred times, then he
mistook the nature of the means and committed an error.</p>
<p>Here the work of military investigation and criticism is easy, and it will
always be so when confined to the immediate effects and objects. This can
be done quite at option, if we abstract the connection of the parts with
the whole, and only look at things in that relation.</p>
<p>But in War, as generally in the world, there is a connection between
everything which belongs to a whole; and therefore, however small a cause
may be in itself, its effects reach to the end of the act of warfare, and
modify or influence the final result in some degree, let that degree be
ever so small. In the same manner every means must be felt up to the
ultimate object.</p>
<p>We can therefore trace the effects of a cause as long as events are worth
noticing, and in the same way we must not stop at the testing of a means
for the immediate object, but test also this object as a means to a higher
one, and thus ascend the series of facts in succession, until we come to
one so absolutely necessary in its nature as to require no examination or
proof. In many cases, particularly in what concerns great and decisive
measures, the investigation must be carried to the final aim, to that
which leads immediately to peace.</p>
<p>It is evident that in thus ascending, at every new station which we reach
a new point of view for the judgment is attained, so that the same means
which appeared advisable at one station, when looked at from the next
above it may have to be rejected.</p>
<p>The search for the causes of events and the comparison of means with ends
must always go hand in hand in the critical review of an act, for the
investigation of causes leads us first to the discovery of those things
which are worth examining.</p>
<p>This following of the clue up and down is attended with considerable
difficulty, for the farther from an event the cause lies which we are
looking for, the greater must be the number of other causes which must at
the same time be kept in view and allowed for in reference to the share
which they have in the course of events, and then eliminated, because the
higher the importance of a fact the greater will be the number of separate
forces and circumstances by which it is conditioned. If we have unravelled
the causes of a battle being lost, we have certainly also ascertained a
part of the causes of the consequences which this defeat has upon the
whole War, but only a part, because the effects of other causes, more or
less according to circumstances, will flow into the final result.</p>
<p>The same multiplicity of circumstances is presented also in the
examination of the means the higher our point of view, for the higher the
object is situated, the greater must be the number of means employed to
reach it. The ultimate object of the War is the object aimed at by all the
Armies simultaneously, and it is therefore necessary that the
consideration should embrace all that each has done or could have done.</p>
<p>It is obvious that this may sometimes lead to a wide field of inquiry, in
which it is easy to wander and lose the way, and in which this difficulty
prevails—that a number of assumptions or suppositions must be made
about a variety of things which do not actually appear, but which in all
probability did take place, and therefore cannot possibly be left out of
consideration.</p>
<p>When Buonaparte, in 1797,(*) at the head of the Army of Italy, advanced
from the Tagliamento against the Archduke Charles, he did so with a view
to force that General to a decisive action before the reinforcements
expected from the Rhine had reached him. If we look, only at the immediate
object, the means were well chosen and justified by the result, for the
Archduke was so inferior in numbers that he only made a show of resistance
on the Tagliamento, and when he saw his adversary so strong and resolute,
yielded ground, and left open the passages, of the Norican Alps. Now to
what use could Buonaparte turn this fortunate event? To penetrate into the
heart of the Austrian empire itself, to facilitate the advance of the
Rhine Armies under Moreau and Hoche, and open communication with them?
This was the view taken by Buonaparte, and from this point of view he was
right. But now, if criticism places itself at a higher point of view—namely,
that of the French Directory, which body could see and know that the
Armies on the Rhine could not commence the campaign for six weeks, then
the advance of Buonaparte over the Norican Alps can only be regarded as an
extremely hazardous measure; for if the Austrians had drawn largely on
their Rhine Armies to reinforce their Army in Styria, so as to enable the
Archduke to fall upon the Army of Italy, not only would that Army have
been routed, but the whole campaign lost. This consideration, which
attracted the serious attention of Buonaparte at Villach, no doubt induced
him to sign the armistice of Leoben with so much readiness.</p>
<p>(*) Compare Hinterlassene Werke, 2nd edition, vol. iv. p.<br/>
276 et seq.<br/></p>
<p>If criticism takes a still higher position, and if it knows that the
Austrians had no reserves between the Army of the Archduke Charles and
Vienna, then we see that Vienna became threatened by the advance of the
Army of Italy.</p>
<p>Supposing that Buonaparte knew that the capital was thus uncovered, and
knew that he still retained the same superiority in numbers over the
Archduke as he had in Styria, then his advance against the heart of the
Austrian States was no longer without purpose, and its value depended on
the value which the Austrians might place on preserving their capital. If
that was so great that, rather than lose it, they would accept the
conditions of peace which Buonaparte was ready to offer them, it became an
object of the first importance to threaten Vienna. If Buonaparte had any
reason to know this, then criticism may stop there, but if this point was
only problematical, then criticism must take a still higher position, and
ask what would have followed if the Austrians had resolved to abandon
Vienna and retire farther into the vast dominions still left to them. But
it is easy to see that this question cannot be answered without bringing
into the consideration the probable movements of the Rhine Armies on both
sides. Through the decided superiority of numbers on the side of the
French—130,000 to 80,000—there could be little doubt of the
result; but then next arises the question, What use would the Directory
make of a victory; whether they would follow up their success to the
opposite frontiers of the Austrian monarchy, therefore to the complete
breaking up or overthrow of that power, or whether they would be satisfied
with the conquest of a considerable portion to serve as a security for
peace? The probable result in each case must be estimated, in order to
come to a conclusion as to the probable determination of the Directory.
Supposing the result of these considerations to be that the French forces
were much too weak for the complete subjugation of the Austrian monarchy,
so that the attempt might completely reverse the respective positions of
the contending Armies, and that even the conquest and occupation of a
considerable district of country would place the French Army in strategic
relations to which they were not equal, then that result must naturally
influence the estimate of the position of the Army of Italy, and compel it
to lower its expectations. And this, it was no doubt which influenced
Buonaparte, although fully aware of the helpless condition of the
Archduke, still to sign the peace of Campo Formio, which imposed no
greater sacrifices on the Austrians than the loss of provinces which, even
if the campaign took the most favourable turn for them, they could not
have reconquered. But the French could not have reckoned on even the
moderate treaty of Campo Formio, and therefore it could not have been
their object in making their bold advance if two considerations had not
presented themselves to their view, the first of which consisted in the
question, what degree of value the Austrians would attach to each of the
above-mentioned results; whether, notwithstanding the probability of a
satisfactory result in either of these cases, would it be worth while to
make the sacrifices inseparable from a continuance of the War, when they
could be spared those sacrifices by a peace on terms not too humiliating?
The second consideration is the question whether the Austrian Government,
instead of seriously weighing the possible results of a resistance pushed
to extremities, would not prove completely disheartened by the impression
of their present reverses.</p>
<p>The consideration which forms the subject of the first is no idle piece of
subtle argument, but a consideration of such decidedly practical
importance that it comes up whenever the plan of pushing War to the utmost
extremity is mooted, and by its weight in most cases restrains the
execution of such plans.</p>
<p>The second consideration is of equal importance, for we do not make War
with an abstraction but with a reality, which we must always keep in view,
and we may be sure that it was not overlooked by the bold Buonaparte—that
is, that he was keenly alive to the terror which the appearance of his
sword inspired. It was reliance on that which led him to Moscow. There it
led him into a scrape. The terror of him had been weakened by the gigantic
struggles in which he had been engaged; in the year 1797 it was still
fresh, and the secret of a resistance pushed to extremities had not been
discovered; nevertheless even in 1797 his boldness might have led to a
negative result if, as already said, he had not with a sort of
presentiment avoided it by signing the moderate peace of Campo Formio.</p>
<p>We must now bring these considerations to a close—they will suffice
to show the wide sphere, the diversity and embarrassing nature of the
subjects embraced in a critical examination carried to the fullest extent,
that is, to those measures of a great and decisive class which must
necessarily be included. It follows from them that besides a theoretical
acquaintance with the subject, natural talent must also have a great
influence on the value of critical examinations, for it rests chiefly with
the latter to throw the requisite light on the interrelations of things,
and to distinguish from amongst the endless connections of events those
which are really essential.</p>
<p>But talent is also called into requisition in another way. Critical
examination is not merely the appreciation of those means which have been
actually employed, but also of all possible means, which therefore must be
suggested in the first place—that is, must be discovered; and the
use of any particular means is not fairly open to censure until a better
is pointed out. Now, however small the number of possible combinations may
be in most cases, still it must be admitted that to point out those which
have not been used is not a mere analysis of actual things, but a
spontaneous creation which cannot be prescribed, and depends on the
fertility of genius.</p>
<p>We are far from seeing a field for great genius in a case which admits
only of the application of a few simple combinations, and we think it
exceedingly ridiculous to hold up, as is often done, the turning of a
position as an invention showing the highest genius; still nevertheless
this creative self-activity on the part of the critic is necessary, and it
is one of the points which essentially determine the value of critical
examination.</p>
<p>When Buonaparte on 30th July, 1796,(*) determined to raise the siege of
Mantua, in order to march with his whole force against the enemy,
advancing in separate columns to the relief of the place, and to beat them
in detail, this appeared the surest way to the attainment of brilliant
victories. These victories actually followed, and were afterwards again
repeated on a still more brilliant scale on the attempt to relieve the
fortress being again renewed. We hear only one opinion on these
achievements, that of unmixed admiration.</p>
<p>(*) Compare Hinterlassene Werke, 2nd edition, vol. iv. p.<br/>
107 et seq.<br/></p>
<p>At the same time, Buonaparte could not have adopted this course on the
30th July without quite giving up the idea of the siege of Mantua, because
it was impossible to save the siege train, and it could not be replaced by
another in this campaign. In fact, the siege was converted into a
blockade, and the town, which if the siege had continued must have very
shortly fallen, held out for six months in spite of Buonaparte's victories
in the open field.</p>
<p>Criticism has generally regarded this as an evil that was unavoidable,
because critics have not been able to suggest any better course.
Resistance to a relieving Army within lines of circumvallation had fallen
into such disrepute and contempt that it appears to have entirely escaped
consideration as a means. And yet in the reign of Louis XIV. that measure
was so often used with success that we can only attribute to the force of
fashion the fact that a hundred years later it never occurred to any one
even to propose such a measure. If the practicability of such a plan had
ever been entertained for a moment, a closer consideration of
circumstances would have shown that 40,000 of the best infantry in the
world under Buonaparte, behind strong lines of circumvallation round
Mantua, had so little to fear from the 50,000 men coming to the relief
under Wurmser, that it was very unlikely that any attempt even would be
made upon their lines. We shall not seek here to establish this point, but
we believe enough has been said to show that this means was one which had
a right to a share of consideration. Whether Buonaparte himself ever
thought of such a plan we leave undecided; neither in his memoirs nor in
other sources is there any trace to be found of his having done so; in no
critical works has it been touched upon, the measure being one which the
mind had lost sight of. The merit of resuscitating the idea of this means
is not great, for it suggests itself at once to any one who breaks loose
from the trammels of fashion. Still it is necessary that it should suggest
itself for us to bring it into consideration and compare it with the means
which Buonaparte employed. Whatever may be the result of the comparison,
it is one which should not be omitted by criticism.</p>
<p>When Buonaparte, in February, 1814,(*) after gaining the battles at
Etoges, Champ-Aubert, and Montmirail, left Bluecher's Army, and turning
upon Schwartzenberg, beat his troops at Montereau and Mormant, every one
was filled with admiration, because Buonaparte, by thus throwing his
concentrated force first upon one opponent, then upon another, made a
brilliant use of the mistakes which his adversaries had committed in
dividing their forces. If these brilliant strokes in different directions
failed to save him, it was generally considered to be no fault of his, at
least. No one has yet asked the question, What would have been the result
if, instead of turning from Bluecher upon Schwartzenberg, he had tried
another blow at Bluecher, and pursued him to the Rhine? We are convinced
that it would have completely changed the course of the campaign, and that
the Army of the Allies, instead of marching to Paris, would have retired
behind the Rhine. We do not ask others to share our conviction, but no one
who understands the thing will doubt, at the mere mention of this
alternative course, that it is one which should not be overlooked in
criticism.</p>
<p>(*) Compare Hinterlassene Werks, 2nd edition. vol. vii. p.<br/>
193 et seq.<br/></p>
<p>In this case the means of comparison lie much more on the surface than in
the foregoing, but they have been equally overlooked, because one-sided
views have prevailed, and there has been no freedom of judgment.</p>
<p>From the necessity of pointing out a better means which might have been
used in place of those which are condemned has arisen the form of
criticism almost exclusively in use, which contents itself with pointing
out the better means without demonstrating in what the superiority
consists. The consequence is that some are not convinced, that others
start up and do the same thing, and that thus discussion arises which is
without any fixed basis for the argument. Military literature abounds with
matter of this sort.</p>
<p>The demonstration we require is always necessary when the superiority of
the means propounded is not so evident as to leave no room for doubt, and
it consists in the examination of each of the means on its own merits, and
then of its comparison with the object desired. When once the thing is
traced back to a simple truth, controversy must cease, or at all events a
new result is obtained, whilst by the other plan the pros and cons go on
for ever consuming each other.</p>
<p>Should we, for example, not rest content with assertion in the case before
mentioned, and wish to prove that the persistent pursuit of Bluecher would
have been more advantageous than the turning on Schwartzenberg, we should
support the arguments on the following simple truths:</p>
<p>1. In general it is more advantageous to continue our blows in one and the
same direction, because there is a loss of time in striking in different
directions; and at a point where the moral power is already shaken by
considerable losses there is the more reason to expect fresh successes,
therefore in that way no part of the preponderance already gained is left
idle.</p>
<p>2. Because Bluecher, although weaker than Schwartzenberg, was, on account
of his enterprising spirit, the more important adversary; in him,
therefore, lay the centre of attraction which drew the others along in the
same direction.</p>
<p>3. Because the losses which Bluecher had sustained almost amounted to a
defeat, which gave Buonaparte such a preponderance over him as to make his
retreat to the Rhine almost certain, and at the same time no reserves of
any consequence awaited him there.</p>
<p>4. Because there was no other result which would be so terrific in its
aspects, would appear to the imagination in such gigantic proportions, an
immense advantage in dealing with a Staff so weak and irresolute as that
of Schwartzenberg notoriously was at this time. What had happened to the
Crown Prince of Wartemberg at Montereau, and to Count Wittgenstein at
Mormant, Prince Schwartzenberg must have known well enough; but all the
untoward events on Bluecher's distant and separate line from the Marne to
the Rhine would only reach him by the avalanche of rumour. The desperate
movements which Buonaparte made upon Vitry at the end of March, to see
what the Allies would do if he threatened to turn them strategically, were
evidently done on the principle of working on their fears; but it was done
under far different circumstances, in consequence of his defeat at Laon
and Arcis, and because Bluecher, with 100,000 men, was then in
communication with Schwartzenberg.</p>
<p>There are people, no doubt, who will not be convinced on these arguments,
but at all events they cannot retort by saying, that "whilst Buonaparte
threatened Schwartzenberg's base by advancing to the Rhine, Schwartzenberg
at the same time threatened Buonaparte's communications with Paris,"
because we have shown by the reasons above given that Schwartzenberg would
never have thought of marching on Paris.</p>
<p>With respect to the example quoted by us from the campaign of 1796, we
should say: Buonaparte looked upon the plan he adopted as the surest means
of beating the Austrians; but admitting that it was so, still the object
to be attained was only an empty victory, which could have hardly any
sensible influence on the fall of Mantua. The way which we should have
chosen would, in our opinion, have been much more certain to prevent the
relief of Mantua; but even if we place ourselves in the position of the
French General and assume that it was not so, and look upon the certainty
of success to have been less, the question then amounts to a choice
between a more certain but less useful, and therefore less important,
victory on the one hand, and a somewhat less probable but far more
decisive and important victory, on the other hand. Presented in this form,
boldness must have declared for the second solution, which is the reverse
of what took place, when the thing was only superficially viewed.
Buonaparte certainly was anything but deficient in boldness, and we may be
sure that he did not see the whole case and its consequences as fully and
clearly as we can at the present time.</p>
<p>Naturally the critic, in treating of the means, must often appeal to
military history, as experience is of more value in the Art of War than
all philosophical truth. But this exemplification from history is subject
to certain conditions, of which we shall treat in a special chapter and
unfortunately these conditions are so seldom regarded that reference to
history generally only serves to increase the confusion of ideas.</p>
<p>We have still a most important subject to consider, which is, How far
criticism in passing judgments on particular events is permitted, or in
duty bound, to make use of its wider view of things, and therefore also of
that which is shown by results; or when and where it should leave out of
sight these things in order to place itself, as far as possible, in the
exact position of the chief actor?</p>
<p>If criticism dispenses praise or censure, it should seek to place itself
as nearly as possible at the same point of view as the person acting, that
is to say, to collect all he knew and all the motives on which he acted,
and, on the other hand, to leave out of the consideration all that the
person acting could not or did not know, and above all, the result. But
this is only an object to aim at, which can never be reached because the
state of circumstances from which an event proceeded can never be placed
before the eye of the critic exactly as it lay before the eye of the
person acting. A number of inferior circumstances, which must have
influenced the result, are completely lost to sight, and many a subjective
motive has never come to light.</p>
<p>The latter can only be learnt from the memoirs of the chief actor, or from
his intimate friends; and in such things of this kind are often treated of
in a very desultory manner, or purposely misrepresented. Criticism must,
therefore, always forego much which was present in the minds of those
whose acts are criticised.</p>
<p>On the other hand, it is much more difficult to leave out of sight that
which criticism knows in excess. This is only easy as regards accidental
circumstances, that is, circumstances which have been mixed up, but are in
no way necessarily related. But it is very difficult, and, in fact, can
never be completely done with regard to things really essential.</p>
<p>Let us take first, the result. If it has not proceeded from accidental
circumstances, it is almost impossible that the knowledge of it should not
have an effect on the judgment passed on events which have preceded it,
for we see these things in the light of this result, and it is to a
certain extent by it that we first become acquainted with them and
appreciate them. Military history, with all its events, is a source of
instruction for criticism itself, and it is only natural that criticism
should throw that light on things which it has itself obtained from the
consideration of the whole. If therefore it might wish in some cases to
leave the result out of the consideration, it would be impossible to do so
completely.</p>
<p>But it is not only in relation to the result, that is, with what takes
place at the last, that this embarrassment arises; the same occurs in
relation to preceding events, therefore with the data which furnished the
motives to action. Criticism has before it, in most cases, more
information on this point than the principal in the transaction. Now it
may seem easy to dismiss from the consideration everything of this nature,
but it is not so easy as we may think. The knowledge of preceding and
concurrent events is founded not only on certain information, but on a
number of conjectures and suppositions; indeed, there is hardly any of the
information respecting things not purely accidental which has not been
preceded by suppositions or conjectures destined to take the place of
certain information in case such should never be supplied. Now is it
conceivable that criticism in after times, which has before it as facts
all the preceding and concurrent circumstances, should not allow itself to
be thereby influenced when it asks itself the question, What portion of
the circumstances, which at the moment of action were unknown, would it
have held to be probable? We maintain that in this case, as in the case of
the results, and for the same reason, it is impossible to disregard all
these things completely.</p>
<p>If therefore the critic wishes to bestow praise or blame upon any single
act, he can only succeed to a certain degree in placing himself in the
position of the person whose act he has under review. In many cases he can
do so sufficiently near for any practical purpose, but in many instances
it is the very reverse, and this fact should never be overlooked.</p>
<p>But it is neither necessary nor desirable that criticism should completely
identify itself with the person acting. In War, as in all matters of
skill, there is a certain natural aptitude required which is called
talent. This may be great or small. In the first case it may easily be
superior to that of the critic, for what critic can pretend to the skill
of a Frederick or a Buonaparte? Therefore, if criticism is not to abstain
altogether from offering an opinion where eminent talent is concerned, it
must be allowed to make use of the advantage which its enlarged horizon
affords. Criticism must not, therefore, treat the solution of a problem by
a great General like a sum in arithmetic; it is only through the results
and through the exact coincidences of events that it can recognise with
admiration how much is due to the exercise of genius, and that it first
learns the essential combination which the glance of that genius devised.</p>
<p>But for every, even the smallest, act of genius it is necessary that
criticism should take a higher point of view, so that, having at command
many objective grounds of decision, it may be as little subjective as
possible, and that the critic may not take the limited scope of his own
mind as a standard.</p>
<p>This elevated position of criticism, its praise and blame pronounced with
a full knowledge of all the circumstances, has in itself nothing which
hurts our feelings; it only does so if the critic pushes himself forward,
and speaks in a tone as if all the wisdom which he has obtained by an
exhaustive examination of the event under consideration were really his
own talent. Palpable as is this deception, it is one which people may
easily fall into through vanity, and one which is naturally distasteful to
others. It very often happens that although the critic has no such
arrogant pretensions, they are imputed to him by the reader because he has
not expressly disclaimed them, and then follows immediately a charge of a
want of the power of critical judgment.</p>
<p>If therefore a critic points out an error made by a Frederick or a
Buonaparte, that does not mean that he who makes the criticism would not
have committed the same error; he may even be ready to grant that had he
been in the place of these great Generals he might have made much greater
mistakes; he merely sees this error from the chain of events, and he
thinks that it should not have escaped the sagacity of the General.</p>
<p>This is, therefore, an opinion formed through the connection of events,
and therefore through the RESULT. But there is another quite different
effect of the result itself upon the judgment, that is if it is used quite
alone as an example for or against the soundness of a measure. This may be
called JUDGMENT ACCORDING TO THE RESULT. Such a judgment appears at first
sight inadmissible, and yet it is not.</p>
<p>When Buonaparte marched to Moscow in 1812, all depended upon whether the
taking of the capital, and the events which preceded the capture, would
force the Emperor Alexander to make peace, as he had been compelled to do
after the battle of Friedland in 1807, and the Emperor Francis in 1805 and
1809 after Austerlitz and Wagram; for if Buonaparte did not obtain a peace
at Moscow, there was no alternative but to return—that is, there was
nothing for him but a strategic defeat. We shall leave out of the question
what he did to get to Moscow, and whether in his advance he did not miss
many opportunities of bringing the Emperor Alexander to peace; we shall
also exclude all consideration of the disastrous circumstances which
attended his retreat, and which perhaps had their origin in the general
conduct of the campaign. Still the question remains the same, for however
much more brilliant the course of the campaign up to Moscow might have
been, still there was always an uncertainty whether the Emperor Alexander
would be intimidated into making peace; and then, even if a retreat did
not contain in itself the seeds of such disasters as did in fact occur,
still it could never be anything else than a great strategic defeat. If
the Emperor Alexander agreed to a peace which was disadvantageous to him,
the campaign of 1812 would have ranked with those of Austerlitz,
Friedland, and Wagram. But these campaigns also, if they had not led to
peace, would in all probability have ended in similar catastrophes.
Whatever, therefore, of genius, skill, and energy the Conqueror of the
World applied to the task, this last question addressed to fate(*)
remained always the same. Shall we then discard the campaigns of 1805,
1807, 1809, and say on account of the campaign of 1812 that they were acts
of imprudence; that the results were against the nature of things, and
that in 1812 strategic justice at last found vent for itself in opposition
to blind chance? That would be an unwarrantable conclusion, a most
arbitrary judgment, a case only half proved, because no human, eye can
trace the thread of the necessary connection of events up to the
determination of the conquered Princes.</p>
<p>(*) "Frage an der Schicksal,"a familiar quotation from<br/>
Schiller.—TR.<br/></p>
<p>Still less can we say the campaign of 1812 merited the same success as the
others, and that the reason why it turned out otherwise lies in something
unnatural, for we cannot regard the firmness of Alexander as something
unpredictable.</p>
<p>What can be more natural than to say that in the years 1805, 1807, 1809,
Buonaparte judged his opponents correctly, and that in 1812 he erred in
that point? On the former occasions, therefore, he was right, in the
latter wrong, and in both cases we judge by the RESULT.</p>
<p>All action in War, as we have already said, is directed on probable, not
on certain, results. Whatever is wanting in certainty must always be left
to fate, or chance, call it which you will. We may demand that what is so
left should be as little as possible, but only in relation to the
particular case—that is, as little as is possible in this one case,
but not that the case in which the least is left to chance is always to be
preferred. That would be an enormous error, as follows from all our
theoretical views. There are cases in which the greatest daring is the
greatest wisdom.</p>
<p>Now in everything which is left to chance by the chief actor, his personal
merit, and therefore his responsibility as well, seems to be completely
set aside; nevertheless we cannot suppress an inward feeling of
satisfaction whenever expectation realises itself, and if it disappoints
us our mind is dissatisfied; and more than this of right and wrong should
not be meant by the judgment which we form from the mere result, or rather
that we find there.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, it cannot be denied that the satisfaction which our mind
experiences at success, the pain caused by failure, proceed from a sort of
mysterious feeling; we suppose between that success ascribed to good
fortune and the genius of the chief a fine connecting thread, invisible to
the mind's eye, and the supposition gives pleasure. What tends to confirm
this idea is that our sympathy increases, becomes more decided, if the
successes and defeats of the principal actor are often repeated. Thus it
becomes intelligible how good luck in War assumes a much nobler nature
than good luck at play. In general, when a fortunate warrior does not
otherwise lessen our interest in his behalf, we have a pleasure in
accompanying him in his career.</p>
<p>Criticism, therefore, after having weighed all that comes within the
sphere of human reason and conviction, will let the result speak for that
part where the deep mysterious relations are not disclosed in any visible
form, and will protect this silent sentence of a higher authority from the
noise of crude opinions on the one hand, while on the other it prevents
the gross abuse which might be made of this last tribunal.</p>
<p>This verdict of the result must therefore always bring forth that which
human sagacity cannot discover; and it will be chiefly as regards the
intellectual powers and operations that it will be called into
requisition, partly because they can be estimated with the least
certainty, partly because their close connection with the will is
favourable to their exercising over it an important influence. When fear
or bravery precipitates the decision, there is nothing objective
intervening between them for our consideration, and consequently nothing
by which sagacity and calculation might have met the probable result.</p>
<p>We must now be allowed to make a few observations on the instrument of
criticism, that is, the language which it uses, because that is to a
certain extent connected with the action in War; for the critical
examination is nothing more than the deliberation which should precede
action in War. We therefore think it very essential that the language used
in criticism should have the same character as that which deliberation in
War must have, for otherwise it would cease to be practical, and criticism
could gain no admittance in actual life.</p>
<p>We have said in our observations on the theory of the conduct of War that
it should educate the mind of the Commander for War, or that its teaching
should guide his education; also that it is not intended to furnish him
with positive doctrines and systems which he can use like mental
appliances. But if the construction of scientific formulae is never
required, or even allowable, in War to aid the decision on the case
presented, if truth does not appear there in a systematic shape, if it is
not found in an indirect way, but directly by the natural perception of
the mind, then it must be the same also in a critical review.</p>
<p>It is true as we have seen that, wherever complete demonstration of the
nature of things would be too tedious, criticism must support itself on
those truths which theory has established on the point. But, just as in
War the actor obeys these theoretical truths rather because his mind is
imbued with them than because he regards them as objective inflexible
laws, so criticism must also make use of them, not as an external law or
an algebraic formula, of which fresh proof is not required each time they
are applied, but it must always throw a light on this proof itself,
leaving only to theory the more minute and circumstantial proof. Thus it
avoids a mysterious, unintelligible phraseology, and makes its progress in
plain language, that is, with a clear and always visible chain of ideas.</p>
<p>Certainly this cannot always be completely attained, but it must always be
the aim in critical expositions. Such expositions must use complicated
forms of science as sparingly as possible, and never resort to the
construction of scientific aids as of a truth apparatus of its own, but
always be guided by the natural and unbiassed impressions of the mind.</p>
<p>But this pious endeavour, if we may use the expression, has unfortunately
seldom hitherto presided over critical examinations: the most of them have
rather been emanations of a species of vanity—a wish to make a
display of ideas.</p>
<p>The first evil which we constantly stumble upon is a lame, totally
inadmissible application of certain one-sided systems as of a formal code
of laws. But it is never difficult to show the one-sidedness of such
systems, and this only requires to be done once to throw discredit for
ever on critical judgments which are based on them. We have here to deal
with a definite subject, and as the number of possible systems after all
can be but small, therefore also they are themselves the lesser evil.</p>
<p>Much greater is the evil which lies in the pompous retinue of technical
terms—scientific expressions and metaphors, which these systems
carry in their train, and which like a rabble-like the baggage of an Army
broken away from its Chief—hang about in all directions. Any critic
who has not adopted a system, either because he has not found one to
please him, or because he has not yet been able to make himself master of
one, will at least occasionally make use of a piece of one, as one would
use a ruler, to show the blunders committed by a General. The most of them
are incapable of reasoning without using as a help here and there some
shreds of scientific military theory. The smallest of these fragments,
consisting in mere scientific words and metaphors, are often nothing more
than ornamental flourishes of critical narration. Now it is in the nature
of things that all technical and scientific expressions which belong to a
system lose their propriety, if they ever had any, as soon as they are
distorted, and used as general axioms, or as small crystalline talismans,
which have more power of demonstration than simple speech.</p>
<p>Thus it has come to pass that our theoretical and critical books, instead
of being straightforward, intelligible dissertations, in which the author
always knows at least what he says and the reader what he reads, are
brimful of these technical terms, which form dark points of interference
where author and reader part company. But frequently they are something
worse, being nothing but hollow shells without any kernel. The author
himself has no clear perception of what he means, contents himself with
vague ideas, which if expressed in plain language would be unsatisfactory
even to himself.</p>
<p>A third fault in criticism is the MISUSE of HISTORICAL EXAMPLES, and a
display of great reading or learning. What the history of the Art of War
is we have already said, and we shall further explain our views on
examples and on military history in general in special chapters. One fact
merely touched upon in a very cursory manner may be used to support the
most opposite views, and three or four such facts of the most
heterogeneous description, brought together out of the most distant lands
and remote times and heaped up, generally distract and bewilder the
judgment and understanding without demonstrating anything; for when
exposed to the light they turn out to be only trumpery rubbish, made use
of to show off the author's learning.</p>
<p>But what can be gained for practical life by such obscure, partly false,
confused arbitrary conceptions? So little is gained that theory on account
of them has always been a true antithesis of practice, and frequently a
subject of ridicule to those whose soldierly qualities in the field are
above question.</p>
<p>But it is impossible that this could have been the case, if theory in
simple language, and by natural treatment of those things which constitute
the Art of making War, had merely sought to establish just so much as
admits of being established; if, avoiding all false pretensions and
irrelevant display of scientific forms and historical parallels, it had
kept close to the subject, and gone hand in hand with those who must
conduct affairs in the field by their own natural genius.</p>
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