WAR AND THE FUTURE
By
H. G. Wells
CONTENTS:
THE
WAR IN ITALY (AUGUST, 1916)
THE
WESTERN WAR (SEPTEMBER, 1916)
HOW
PEOPLE THINK ABOUT THE WAR
I.
DO THEY REALLY THINK AT ALL?
II.
THE YIELDING PACIFIST AND THE CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTOR
V.
THE SOCIAL CHANGES IN PROGRESS
1
One of the minor peculiarities of this unprecedented war is the Tour of the Front. After some months of suppressed information—in which even the war correspondent was discouraged to the point of elimination—it was discovered on both sides that this was a struggle in which Opinion was playing a larger and more important part than it had ever done before. This wild spreading weed was perhaps of decisive importance; the Germans at any rate were attempting to make it a cultivated flower. There was Opinion flowering away at home, feeding rankly on rumour; Opinion in neutral countries; Opinion getting into great tangles of misunderstanding and incorrect valuation between the Allies. The confidence and courage of the enemy; the amiability and assistance of the neutral; the zeal, sacrifice, and serenity of the home population; all were affected. The German cultivation of opinion began long before the war; it is still the most systematic and, because of the psychological ineptitude of the Germans, it is probably the clumsiest. The French Maison de la Presse is certainly the best organisation in existence for making things clear, counteracting hostile suggestion, the British official organisations are comparatively ineffective; but what is lacking officially is very largely made up for by the good will and generous efforts of the English and American press. An interesting monograph might be written upon these various attempts of the belligerents to get themselves and their proceedings explained.
Because there is perceptible in these developments, quite over and above the desire to influence opinion, a very real effort to get things explained. It is the most interesting and curious—one might almost write touching—feature of these organisations that they do not constitute a positive and defined propaganda such as the Germans maintain. The German propaganda is simple, because its ends are simple; assertions of the moral elevation and loveliness of Germany; of the insuperable excellences of German Kultur, the Kaiser, and Crown Prince, and so forth; abuse of the "treacherous" English who allied themselves with the "degenerate" French and the "barbaric" Russians; nonsense about "the freedom of the seas"—the emptiest phrase in history—childish attempts to sow suspicion between the Allies, and still more childish attempts to induce neutrals and simple-minded pacifists of allied nationality to save the face of Germany by initiating peace negotiations. But apart from their steady record and reminder of German brutalities and German aggression, the press organisations of the Allies have none of this definiteness in their task. The aim of the national intelligence in each of the allied countries is not to exalt one's own nation and confuse and divide the enemy, but to get a real understanding with the peoples and spirits of a number of different nations, an understanding that will increase and become a fruitful and permanent understanding between the allied peoples. Neither the English, the Russians, the Italians, nor the French, to name only the bigger European allies, are concerned in setting up a legend, as the Germans are concerned in setting up a legend of themselves to impose upon mankind. They are reality dealers in this war, and the Germans are effigy mongers. Practically the Allies are saying each to one another, "Pray come to me and see for yourself that I am very much the human stuff that you are. Come and see that I am doing my best—and I think that is not so very bad a best...." And with that is something else still more subtle, something rather in the form of, "And please tell me what you think of me—and all this."
So we have this curious byplay of the war, and one day I
find Mr. Nabokoff, the editor of the Retch, and Count Alexy Tolstoy, that
writer of delicate short stories, and Mr. Chukovsky, the subtle critic, calling
in upon me after braving the wintry seas to see the British fleet; M. Joseph
Reinach follows them presently upon the same errand; and then appear
photographs of Mr. Arnold Bennett wading in the trenches of Flanders, Mr. Noyes
becomes discreetly indiscreet about what he has seen among the submarines, and
Mr. Hugh Walpole catches things from Mr. Stephen Graham in the Dark Forest of
Russia. All this is quite over and above such writing of facts at first hand as
Mr. Patrick McGill and a dozen other real experiencing soldiers—not to mention
the soldiers' letters Mr. James Milne has collected, or the unforgettable and
immortal Prisoner of War of Mr. Arthur Green—or such admirable war
correspondents' work as Mr. Philip Gibbs or Mr. Washburne has done. Some of us
writers—I can answer for one—have made our Tour of the Fronts with a very
understandable diffidence. For my own part I did not want to go. I evaded a
suggestion that I should go in 1915. I travel badly, I
speak French and Italian with incredible atrocity, and am an extreme Pacifist.
I hate soldiering. And also I did not want to write anything "under
instruction". It is largely owing to a certain stiffness in the
composition of General Delme-Radcliffe is resolved that Italy shall not feel
neglected by the refusal of the invitation from the Comando Supremo by anyone
who from the perspective of Italy may seem to be a representative of British
opinion. If Herbert Spencer had been alive General Radcliffe would have
certainly made him come, travelling-hammock, ear clips and all—and I am not
above confessing that I wish that Herbert Spencer was alive—for this purpose. I
found
My own manner of testifying must be to tell what I have seen and what I have thought during this extraordinary experience. It has been my natural disposition to see this war as something purposeful and epic, as it is great, as an epoch, as "the War that will end War"—but of that last, more anon. I do not think I am alone in this inclination to a dramatic and logical interpretation. The caricatures in the French shops show civilisation (and particularly Marianne) in conflict with a huge and hugely wicked Hindenburg Ogre. Well, I come back from this tour with something not so simple as that. If I were to be tied down to one word for my impression of this war, I should say that this war is Queer. It is not like anything in a really waking world, but like something in a dream. It hasn't exactly that clearness of light against darkness or of good against ill. But it has the quality of wholesome instinct struggling under a nightmare. The world is not really awake. This vague appeal for explanations to all sorts of people, this desire to exhibit the business, to get something in the way of elucidation at present missing, is extraordinarily suggestive of the efforts of the mind to wake up that will sometimes occur at a deep crisis. My memory of this tour I have just made is full of puzzled-looking men. I have seen thousands of poilus sitting about in cafes, by the roadside, in tents, in trenches, thoughtful. I have seen Alpini sitting restfully and staring with speculative eyes across the mountain gulfs towards unseen and unaccountable enemies. I have seen trainloads of wounded staring out of the ambulance train windows as we passed. I have seen these dim intimations of questioning reflection in the strangest juxtapositions; in Malagasy soldiers resting for a spell among the big shells they were hoisting into trucks for the front, in a couple of khaki-clad Maoris sitting upon the step of a horse-van in Amiens station. It is always the same expression one catches, rather weary, rather sullen, inturned. The shoulders droop. The very outline is a note of interrogation. They look up as the privileged tourist of the front, in the big automobile or the reserved compartment, with his officer or so in charge, passes—importantly. One meets a pair of eyes that seems to say: "Perhaps you understand....
"In which case—-...?"
It is a part, I think, of this disposition to investigate
what makes everyone collect "specimens" of the war. Everywhere the
souvenir forces itself upon the attention. The homecoming permissionaire brings
with him invariably a considerable weight of broken objects, bits of shell,
cartridge clips, helmets; it is a peripatetic museum. It is as if he hoped for
a clue. It is almost impossible, I have found, to escape these pieces in
evidence. I am the least collecting of men, but I have brought home Italian
cartridges, Austrian cartridges, the fuse of an
Austrian shell, a broken Italian bayonet, and a note that is worth half a franc
within the confines of
2
I avow myself an extreme Pacifist. I am against the man who
first takes up the weapon. I carry my pacifism far beyond the ambiguous little
group of British and foreign sentimentalists who pretend so amusingly to be socialists
in the Labour Leader, whose conception of foreign policy is to give Germany now
a peace that would be no more than a breathing time for a fresh outrage upon
civilisation, and who would even make heroes of the crazy young assassins of
the Dublin crime. I do not understand those people. I do not merely want to
stop this war. I want to nail down war in its coffin. Modern war is an
intolerable thing. It is not a thing to trifle with in this Urban District
Council way, it is a thing to end forever. I have
always hated it, so far that is as my imagination enabled me to realise it; and
now that I have been seeing it, sometimes quite closely for a full month, I
hate it more than ever. I never imagined a quarter of its waste, its boredom,
its futility, its desolation. It is merely a destructive and dispersive instead
of a constructive and accumulative industrialism. It is a gigantic, dusty,
muddy, weedy, bloodstained silliness. It is the plain duty of every man to give
his life and all that he has if by so doing he may help to end it. I hate
It is my unshakeable belief that essentially the Allies
fight for a permanent world peace, that primarily they do not make war but
resist war, that has reconciled me to this not very congenial experience of
touring as a spectator all agog to see, through the war zones. At any rate
there was never any risk of my playing Balaam and blessing the enemy. This war
is tragedy and sacrifice for most of the world, for the Germans it is simply
the catastrophic outcome of fifty years of elaborate intellectual foolery.
Militarism, Welt Politik, and here we are! What else could have happened, with
Michael and his infernal War Machine in the very centre of
It is a disaster. It may be a necessary disaster; it may teach a lesson that could be learnt in no other way; but for all that, I insist, it remains waste, disorder, disaster.
There is a disposition, I know, in myself as well as in
others, to wriggle away from this verity, to find so much good in the collapse
that has come to the mad direction of
I am reminded of a story, or rather of the idea for a story
that I think I must have read in that curious collection of fantasies and
observations,
The elementary tales of the world are very few, and
3
One of the larger singularities of the great war is its failure to produce great and imposing personalities, mighty leaders, Napoleons, Caesars. I would indeed make that the essential thing in my reckoning of the war. It is a drama without a hero; without countless incidental heroes no doubt, but no star part. Even the Germans, with a national predisposition for hero-cults and living still in an atmosphere of Victorian humbug, can produce nothing better than that timber image, Hindenburg.
It is not that the war has failed to produce heroes so much as that it has produced heroism in a torrent. The great man of this war is the common man. It becomes ridiculous to pick out particular names. There are too many true stories of splendid acts in the past two years ever to be properly set down. The V.C.'s and the palms do but indicate samples. One would need an encyclopaedia, a row of volumes, of the gloriousness of human impulses. The acts of the small men in this war dwarf all the pretensions of the Great Man. Imperatively these multitudinous heroes forbid the setting up of effigies. When I was a young man I imitated Swift and posed for cynicism; I will confess that now at fifty and greatly helped by this war, I have fallen in love with mankind.
But if I had to pick out a single figure to stand for the
finest quality of the Allies' war, I should I think choose the figure of
General Joffre. He is something new in history. He is leadership without vulgar
ambition. He is the extreme antithesis to the Imperial boomster of
By great good luck I was able to see him. I was delayed in
Let me confess that de Tessin had had to persuade me to go to Headquarters. Partly that was because I didn't want to use up even ten minutes of the time of the French commanders, but much more was it because I have a dread of Personages.
There is something about these encounters with personages—as
if one was dealing with an effigy, with something tremendous put up to be seen.
As one approaches they become remoter; great unsuspected crevasses are
discovered. Across these gulfs one makes ineffective gestures. They do not meet
you, they pose at you enormously. Sometimes there is something more terrible
than dignity; there is condescension. They are affable. I had but recently had
an encounter with an imported Colonial statesman, who was being advertised like
a soap as the coming saviour of
The effect of these French commanders upon me was quite different from my encounter with that last belated adventurer in the effigy line. I felt indeed that I was a rather idle and flimsy person coming into the presence of a tremendously compact and busy person, but I had none of that unpleasant sensation of a conventional role, of being expected to play the minute worshipper in the presence of the Great Image. I was so moved by the common humanity of them all that in each case I broke away from the discreet interpretations of de Tessin and talked to them directly in the strange dialect which I have inadvertently made for myself out of French, a disemvowelled speech of epicene substantives and verbs of incalculable moods and temperaments, "Entente Cordiale." The talked back as if we had met in a club. General Pelle pulled my leg very gaily with some quotations from an article I had written upon the conclusion of the war. I think he found my accent and my idioms very refreshing. I had committed myself to a statement that Bloch has been justified in his theory that under modern conditions the defensive wins. There were excellent reasons, and General Pelle pointed them out, for doubting the applicability of this to the present war.
Both he and General Castelnau were anxious that I should see
a French offensive sector as well as
But of that I will write later. My present concern is with General Joffre as the antithesis of the Effigy. The effigy,
"Thou Prince of Peace,
Thou God of War,"
as Mr. Sylvester Viereck called him, prances on a great horse, wears a Wagnerian cloak, sits on thrones and talks of shining armour and "unser Gott." All Germany gloats over his Jovian domesticities; when I was last in Berlin the postcard shops were full of photographs of a sort of procession of himself and his sons, all with long straight noses and sidelong eyes. It is all dreadfully old-fashioned. General Joffre sits in a pleasant little sitting-room in a very ordinary little villa conveniently close to Headquarters. He sits among furniture that has no quality of pose at all, that is neither magnificent nor ostentatiously simple and hardy. He has dark, rather sleepy eyes under light eyelashes, eyes that glance shyly and a little askance at his interlocutor and then, as he talks, away—as if he did not want to be preoccupied by your attention. He has a broad, rather broadly modelled face, a soft voice, the sort of persuasive reasoning voice that many Scotchmen have. I had a feeling that if he were to talk English he would do so with a Scotch accent. Perhaps somewhere I have met a Scotchman of his type. He sat sideways to his table as a man might sit for a gossip in a cafe.
He is physically a big man, and in my memory he grows bigger and bigger. He sits now in my memory in a room like the rooms that any decent people might occupy, like that vague room that is the background of so many good portraits, a great blue-coated figure with a soft voice and rather tired eyes, explaining very simply and clearly the difficulties that this vulgar imperialism of Germany, seizing upon modern science and modern appliances, has created for France and the spirit of mankind.
He talked chiefly of the strangeness of this confounded war.
It was exactly like a sanitary engineer speaking of the unexpected difficulties
of some particularly nasty inundation. He made little stiff horizontal gestures
with his hands. First one had to build a dam and stop the rush of it, so; then
one had to organise the push that would send it back. He explained the
organisation of the push. They had got an organisation now that was working out
most satisfactorily. Had I seen a sector? I had seen the sector of
Neither he nor his two colleagues spoke of the Germans with
either hostility or humanity.
Is any greater contrast possible than between so implacable, patient, reasonable—and above all things capable—a being as General Joffre and the rhetorician of Potsdam, with his talk of German Might, of Hammer Blows and Hacking Through? Can there be any doubt of the ultimate issue between them?
There are stories that sound pleasantly true to me about
General Joffre's ambitions after the war. He is tired; then he will be very
tired. He will, he declares, spend his first free summer in making a tour of
the waterways of
If I were to set a frontispiece to a book about this War I would make General Joffre the frontispiece.
4
As we swung back along the dusty road to Paris at a pace of fifty miles an hour and upwards, driven by a helmeted driver with an aquiline profile fit to go upon a coin, whose merits were a little flawed by a childish and dangerous ambition to run over every cat he saw upon the road, I talked to de Tessin about this big blue-coated figure of Joffre, which is not so much a figure as a great generalisation of certain hitherto rather obscured French qualities, and of the impression he had made upon me. And from that I went on to talk about the Super Man, for this encounter had suddenly crystallised out a set of realisations that had been for some time latent in my mind.
How much of what follows I said to de Tessin at the time I do not clearly remember, but this is what I had in mind.
The idea of the superman is an idea that has been developed by various people ignorant of biology and unaccustomed to biological ways of thinking. It is an obvious idea that follows in the course of half an hour or so upon one's realisation of the significance of Darwinism. If man has evolved from something different, he must now be evolving onward into something sur-human. The species in the future will be different from the species of the past. So far at least our Nietzsches and Shaws and so on went right.
But being ignorant of the elementary biological proposition
that modification of a species means really a secular change in its average,
they jumped to a conclusion—to which the late Lord Salisbury also jumped years
ago at a very memorable British Association meeting—that a species is modified
by the sudden appearance of eccentric individuals here and there in the general
mass who interbreed—preferentially. Helped by a streak of antic egotism in
themselves, they conceived of the superman as a posturing personage,
misunderstood by the vulgar, fantastic, wonderful. But
the antic Personage, the thing I have called the Effigy, is not new but old,
the oldest thing in history, the departing thing. It
depends not upon the advance of the species but upon the uncritical
hero-worship of the crowd. You may see the monster drawn twenty times the size
of common men upon the oldest monuments of
And it is the peculiarity of this war, it is the most reassuring evidence that a great increase in general ability and critical ability has been going on throughout the last century, that no isolated great personages have emerged. Never has there been so much ability, invention, inspiration, leadership; but the very abundance of good qualities has prevented our focusing upon those of any one individual. We all play our part in the realisation of God's sanity in the world, but, as the strange, dramatic end of Lord Kitchener has served to remind us, there is no single individual of all the allied nations whose death can materially affect the great destinies of this war.
In the last few years I have developed a religious belief that has become now to me as real as any commonplace fact. I think that mankind is still as it were collectively dreaming and hardly more awakened to reality than a very young child. It has these dreams that we express by the flags of nationalities and by strange loyalties and by irrational creeds and ceremonies, and its dreams at times become such nightmares as this war. But the time draws near when mankind will awake and the dreams will fade away, and then there will be no nationality in all the world but humanity, and no kind, no emperor, nor leader but the one God of mankind. This is my faith. I am as certain of this as I was in 1900 that men would presently fly. To me it is as if it must be so.
So that to me this extraordinary refusal of the allied nations under conditions that have always hitherto produced a Great Man to produce anything of the sort, anything that can be used as an effigy and carried about for the crowd to follow, is a fact of extreme significance and encouragement. It seems to me that the twilight of the half gods must have come, that we have reached the end of the age when men needed a Personal Figure about which they could rally. The Kaiser is perhaps the last of that long series of crowned and cloaked and semi-divine personages which has included Caesar and Alexander and Napoleon the First—and Third. In the light of the new time we see the emperor-god for the guy he is. In the August of 1914 he set himself up to be the paramount Lord of the World, and it will seem to the historian to come, who will know our dates so well and our feelings, our fatigues and efforts so little, it will seem a short period from that day to this, when the great figure already sways and staggers towards the bonfire.
5
I had the experience of meeting a contemporary king upon
this journey. He was the first king I had ever met. The
I went to see him from
Addicted as I am to the cinematograph, in which the standard of study furniture is particularly rich and high, I found something very cooling and simple and refreshing in the sight of the king's study furniture. He sat down with me at a little useful writing table, and after asking me what I had seen in Italy and hearing what I had seen and what I was to see, he went on talking, very good talk indeed.
I suppose I did a little exceed the established tradition of courts by asking several questions and trying to get him to talk upon certain points as to which I was curious, but I perceived that he had had to carry on at least so much of the regal tradition as to control the conversation. He was, however, entirely un-posed. His talk reminded me somehow of Maurice Baring's books; it had just the same quick, positive understanding. And he had just the same detachment from the war as the French generals. He spoke of it—as one might speak of an inundation. And of its difficulties and perplexities.
Here on the Adriatic side there were political entanglements
that by comparison made our western after-the-war problems plain sailing. He
talked of the game of spellicans among the Balkan nationalities. How was that
difficulty to be met? In
He went on to talk of the strange contrasts of war, of such things as the indifference of the birds to gunfire and desolation. One day on the Carso he had been near the newly captured Austrian trenches, and suddenly from amidst a scattered mass of Austrian bodies a quail had risen that had struck him as odd, and so too had the sight of a pack of cards and a wine flask on some newly-made graves. The ordinary life was a very obstinate thing....
He talked of the courage of modern men. He was astonished at the quickness with which they came to disregard shrapnel. And they were so quietly enduring when they were wounded. He had seen a lot of the wounded, and he had expected much groaning and crying out. But unless a man is hit in the head and goes mad he does not groan or scream! They are just brave. If you ask them how they feel it is always one of two things: either they say quietly that they are very bad or else they say there is nothing the matter....
He spoke as if these were mere chance observations, but everyone tells me that nearly every day the king is at the front and often under fire. He has taken more risks in a week than the Potsdam War Lord has taken since the war began. He keeps himself acutely informed upon every aspect of the war. He was a little inclined to fatalism, he confessed. There were two stories current of two families of four sons, in each three had been killed and in each there was an attempt to put the fourth in a place of comparative safety. In one case a general took the fourth son in as an attendant and embarked upon a ship that was immediately torpedoed; in the other the fourth son was killed by accident while he was helping to carry dinner in a rest camp. From those stories we came to the question whether the uneducated Italians were more superstitious than the uneducated English; the king thought they were much less so. That struck me as a novel idea. But then he thought that English rural people believe in witches and fairies.
I have given enough of this talk to show the quality of this king of the new dispensation. It was, you see, the sort of easy talk one might hear from fine-minded people anywhere. When we had done talking he came to the door of the study with me and shook hands and went back to his desk—with that gesture of return to work which is very familiar and sympathetic to a writer, and with no gesture of regality at all.
Just to complete this impression let me repeat a pleasant story about this king and our Prince of Wales, who recently visited the Italian front. The Prince is a source of anxiety on these visits; he has a very strong and very creditable desire to share the ordinary risks of war. He is keenly interested, and unobtrusively bent upon getting as near the fighting as line as possible. But the King of Italy was firm upon keeping him out of anything more than the most incidental danger. "We don't want any historical incidents here," he said. I think that might well become an historical phrase. For the life of the Effigy is a series of historical incidents.
6
Manifestly one might continue to multiply portraits of fine people working upon this great task of breaking and ending the German aggression, the German legend, the German effigy, and the effigy business generally; the thesis being that the Allies have no effigy. One might fill a thick volume with pictures of men up the scale and down working loyally and devotedly upon the war, to make this point clear that the essential king and the essential loyalty of our side is the commonsense of mankind.
There comes into my head as a picture at the other extreme
of this series, a memory of certain trenches I visited on my last day in
I came round the corner upon a youngster with an intelligent face and steady eyes sitting up on the firing step, awake and thinking. We looked at one another. There are moments when mind leaps to mind. It is natural for the man in the trenches suddenly confronted by so rare a beast as a middle-aged civilian with an enquiring expression, to feel oneself something of a spectacle and something generalised. It is natural for the civilian to look rather in the vein of saying, "Well, how do you take it?" As I pushed past him we nodded slightly with an effect of mutual understanding. And we said with our nods just exactly what General Joffre had said with his horizontal gestures of the hand and what the King of Italy conveyed by his friendly manner; we said to each other that here was the trouble those Germans had brought upon us and here was the task that had to be done.
Our guide to these trenches was a short, stocky young man, a cob; with a rifle and a tight belt and projecting skirts and a helmet, a queer little figure that, had you seen it in a picture a year or so before the war, you would most certainly have pronounced Chinese. He belonged to a Northumbrian battalion; it does not matter exactly which. As we returned from this front line, trudging along the winding path through the barbed wire tangles before the smashed and captured German trench that had been taken a fortnight before, I fell behind my guardian captain and had a brief conversation wit this individual. He was a lad in the early twenties, weather-bit and with bloodshot eyes. He was, he told me, a miner. I asked my stock question in such cases, whether he would go back to the old work after the war. He said he would, and then added—with the events of overnight on his mind: "If A'hm looky."
Followed a little silence. Then I
tried my second stock remark for such cases. One does not talk to soldiers at
the front in this war of Glory or the "Empire on which the sun never
sets" or "the meteor flag of
"Well," I said, "it's got to be done."
"Aye," he said, easing the strap of his rifle a little; "it's got to be done."
1
My first impressions of the Italian war centre upon
My earlier rides in
And upon the roads and beside them was the enormous
equipment of a modern army advancing. Everywhere I saw new roads being made,
railways pushed up, vast store dumps, hospitals; everywhere the villages
swarmed with grey soldiers; everywhere our automobile was threading its way and
taking astonishing risks among interminable processions of motor lorries,
strings of ambulances or of mule carts, waggons with timber, waggons with wire,
waggons with men's gear, waggons with casks, waggons discreetly veiled, columns
of infantry, cavalry, batteries en route. Every waggon that goes up full comes
back empty, and many wounded were coming down and prisoners and troops
returning to rest. Goritzia had been taken a week or so before my arrival; the
Isonzo had been crossed and the Austrians driven back across the Carso for
several miles; all the resources of
One travelled through a choking dust under the blue sky, and
above the steady incessant dusty succession of lorry, lorry, lorry, lorry that
passed one by, one saw, looking up, the tree tops, house roofs, or the solid
Venetian campanile of this or that wayside village. Once as we were coming out
of the great grey portals of that beautiful old relic of a former school of
fortification, Palmanova, the traffic became suddenly bright yellow, and for a
kilometre or so we were passing nothing but Sicilian mule carts loaded with
hay. These carts seem as strange among the grey shapes of modern war transport
as a Chinese mandarin in painted silk would be. They are the most individual of
things, all two-wheeled, all bright yellow and the same size it is true, but
upon each there are they gayest of little paintings, such paintings as one sees
in England at times upon an ice-cream barrow. Sometimes the picture will
present a scriptural subject, sometimes a scene of opera, sometimes a dream
landscape or a trophy of fruits or flowers, and the harness—now much out of
repair—is studded with brass. Again and again I have passed strings of these
gay carts; all
Through the dust I came to
By devious routes I went on to certain batteries of big guns which had played their part in hammering the Austrian left above Monfalcone across an arm of the Adriatic, and which were now under orders to shift and move up closer. The battery was the most unobtrusive of batteries; its one desire seemed to be to appear a simple piece of woodland in the eye of God and the aeroplane. I went about the network of railways and paths under the trees that a modern battery requires, and came presently upon a great gun that even at the first glance seemed a little less carefully hidden than its fellows. Then I saw that it was a most ingenious dummy made of a tree and logs and so forth. It was in the emplacement of a real gun that had been located; it had its painted sandbags about it just the same, and it felt itself so entirely a part of the battery that whenever its companions fired t burnt a flash and kicked up a dust. It was an excellent example of the great art of camouflage which this war has developed.
I went on through the wood to a shady observation post high
in a tree, into which I clambered with my guide. I was able from this position
to get a very good idea of the lie of the Italian eastern front. I was in the
delta of the Isonzo. Directly in front of me were some marshes and the extreme
tip of the
As a consequence when I visited it I found it very little injured—compared, that is, with such other towns as have been fought through. Here and there the front of a house has been knocked in by an Austrian shell, or a lamp-post prostrated. But the road bridge had suffered a good deal; its iron parapet was twisted about by shell bursts and interwoven with young trees and big boughs designed to screen the passer-by from the observation of the Austrian gunners upon Monte Santo. Here and there were huge holes through which one could look down upon the blue trickles of water in the stony river bed far below. The driver of our automobile displayed what seemed to me an extreme confidence in the margins of these gaps, but his confidence was justified. At Sagrado the bridge had been much more completely demolished; no effort had been made to restore the horizontal roadway, but one crossed by a sort of timber switchback that followed the ups and downs of the ruins.
It is not in these places that one must look for the real
destruction of modern war. The real fight on the left of Goritzia went through
the
Yet into this wilderness the Italians are now thrusting a sort of order. The German is a wonderful worker, they say on the Anglo-French front that he makes his trenches by way of resting, but I doubt if he can touch the Italian at certain forms of toil. All the way up to San Martino and beyond, swarms of workmen were making one of those carefully graded roads that the Italians make better than any other people. Other swarms were laying water-pipes. For upon the Carso there are neither roads nor water, and before the Italians can thrust farther both must be brought up to the front.
As we approached San Martino an Austrian aeroplane made its
presence felt overhead by dropping a bomb among the tents of some workmen, in a
little scrubby wood on the hillside near at hand. One heard the report and
turned to see the fragments flying and the dust. Probably they got someone. And
then, after a little pause, the encampment began to spew out men; here, there
and everywhere they appeared among the tents, running like rabbits at
evening-time, down the hill. Soon after and probably in connection with this
signal, Austrian shells began to come over. They do not use shrapnel because
the rocky soil of
Along about four thousand miles of the various fronts this sort of thing was going on that morning....
2
This Carso front is the practicable offensive front of
1
The mountain warfare of
The legitimate war, so to speak, in this region is a
mountaineering war. The typical position is roughly as follows. The Austrians
occupy valley A which opens northward; the Italians occupy valley B which opens
southward. The fight is for the crest between A and B. The side that wins that
crest gains the power of looking down into, firing into and outflanking the
positions of the enemy valley. In most cases it is the Italians now who are
pressing, and if the reader will examine a map of the front and compare it with
the official reports he will soon realise that almost everywhere the Italians
are up to the head of the southward valleys and working over the crests so as
to press down upon the Austrian valleys. But in the Trentino the Austrians are
still well over the crest on the southward slopes. When I was in
Now it cannot be said that under modern conditions mountains
favour either the offensive or the defensive. But they certainly make
operations far more deliberate than upon a level. An engineered road or railway
in an Alpine valley is the most vulnerable of things; its curves and viaducts
may be practically demolished by shell fire or swept by shrapnel, although you
hold the entire valley except for one vantage point. All the mountains round
about a valley must be won before that valley is safe for the transport of an
advance. But on the other hand a surprise capture of some single mountain crest
and the hoisting of one gun into position there may block the retreat of guns
and material from a great series of positions. Mountain surfaces are
extraordinarily various and subtle. You may understand
Such briefly is the idea of mountain struggle. Its realities, I should imagine, are among the strangest and most picturesque in all this tremendous world conflict. I know nothing of the war in the east, of course, but there are things here that must be hard to beat. Happily they will soon get justice done to them by an abler pen than mine. I hear that Kipling is to follow me upon this ground; nothing can be imagined more congenial to his extraordinary power of vivid rendering than this struggle against cliffs, avalanches, frost and the Austrian.
To go the Italian round needs, among other things, a good
head. Everywhere it has been necessary to make roads where hitherto there have
been only mule tracks or no tracks at all; the roads are often still in the
making, and the automobile of the war tourist skirts precipices and takes
hairpin bends upon tracks of loose metal not an inch too broad for the
operation, or it floats for a moment over the dizzy edge while a train of mule
transport blunders by. The unruly imagination of man's heart (which is
"only evil continually") speculates upon what would be the
consequences of one good bump from the wheel of a mule cart. Down below, the
trees that one sees through a wisp of cloud look far too small and spiky and
scattered to hold out much hope for a fallen man of letters. And at the high
positions they are too used to the vertical life to understand the secret
feelings of the visitor from the horizontal. General Bompiani, whose writings
are well known to all English students of military matters, showed me the
Gibraltar he is making of a great mountain system east of the
"Let me show you," he said, and flung himself on to the edge of the precipice into exactly the position of a lady riding side-saddle. "You will find it more comfortable to sit down."
But anxious as I am abroad not to discredit my country by unseemly exhibitions I felt unequal to such gymnastics without a proper rehearsal at a lower level. I seated myself carefully at a yard (perhaps it was a couple of yards) from the edge, advanced on my trousers without dignity to the verge, and so with an effort thrust my legs over to dangle in the crystalline air.
"That," proceeded General Bompiani, pointing with a giddy flourish of his riding whip, "is Monte Tomba."
I swayed and half-extended my hand towards him. But he was still there—sitting, so to speak, on the half of himself.... I was astonished that he did not disappear abruptly during his exposition....
2
The fighting man in the Dolomites has been perhaps the most wonderful of all these separate campaigns. I went up by automobile as far as the clambering new road goes up the flanks of Tofana No. 2; thence for a time by mule along the flank of Tofana No. 1, and thence on foot to the vestiges of the famous Castelletto.
The aspect of these mountains is particularly grim and wicked; they are worn old mountains, they tower overhead in enormous vertical cliffs of sallow grey, with the square jointings and occasional clefts and gullies, their summits are toothed and jagged; the path ascends and passes round the side of the mountain upon loose screes, which descend steeply to a lower wall of precipices. In the distance rise other harsh and desolate-looking mountain masses, with shining occasional scars of old snow. Far below is a bleak valley of stunted pine trees through which passes the road of the Dolomites.
As I ascended the upper track two bandages men were coming down on led mules. It was mid-August, and they were suffering from frostbite. Across the great gap between the summits a minute traveller with some provisions was going up by wire to some post upon the crest. For everywhere upon the icy pinnacles are observation posts directing the fire of the big guns on the slopes below, or machine-gun stations, or little garrisons that sit and wait through the bleak days. Often they have no link with the world below but a precipitous climb or a "teleferic" wire. Snow and frost may cut them off absolutely for weeks from the rest of mankind. The sick and wounded must begin their journey down to help and comfort in a giddy basket that swings down to the head of the mule track below.
Originally all these crests were in Austrian hands; they were stormed by the Alpini under almost incredible conditions. For fifteen days, for example, they fought their way up these screes on the flanks of Tofana No. 2 to the ultimate crags, making perhaps a hundred metres of ascent each day, hiding under rocks and in holes in the daylight and receiving fresh provisions and ammunition and advancing by night. They were subjected to rifle fire, machine-gun fire and bombs of a peculiar sort, big iron balls of the size of a football filled with explosive that were just flung down the steep. They dodged flares and star shells. At one place they went up a chimney that would be far beyond the climbing powers of any but a very active man. It must have been like storming the skies. The dead and wounded rolled away often into inaccessible ravines. Stray skeletons, rags of uniform, fragments of weapons, will add to the climbing interest of these gaunt masses for many years to come. In this manner it was that Tofana No. 2 was taken.
Now the Italians are organising this prize, and I saw winding up far above me on the steep grey slope a multitudinous string of little things that looked like black ants, each carrying a small bright yellow egg. They were mules bringing back balks of timber....
But one position held out invincibly; this was the Castelletto, a great natural fortress of rock standing out at an angle of the mountain in such a position that it commanded the Italian communications (the Dolomite road) in the valley below, and rendered all their positions uncomfortable and insecure. This obnoxious post was practically inaccessible either from above or below, and it barred the Italians even from looking into the Val Travenanzes which it defended. It was, in fact, an impregnable position, and against it was pitted the invincible 5th Group of the Alpini. It was the old problem of the irresistible force in conflict with the immovable object. And the outcome has been the biggest military mine in all history.
The business began in January, 1916, with surveys of the rock in question. The work of surveying for excavations, never a very simple one, becomes much more difficult when the site is occupied by hostile persons with machine guns. In March, as the winter's snows abated, the boring machinery began to arrive, by mule as far as possible and then by hand. Altogether about half a kilometre of gallery had to be made to the mine chamber, and meanwhile the explosive was coming up load by load and resting first here, then there, in discreetly chosen positions. There were at the last thirty-five tons of it in the inner chamber. And while the boring machines bored and the work went on, Lieutenant Malvezzi was carefully working out the problem of "il massimo effetto dirompimento" and deciding exactly how to pack and explode his little hoard. On the eleventh of July, at 3.30, as he rejoices to state in his official report, "the mine responded perfectly both in respect of the calculations made and of the practical effects," that is to say, the Austrians were largely missing and the Italians were in possession of the crater of the Castelletto and looking down the Val Travenanzes from which they had been barred for so long. Within a month things had been so tidied up, and secured by further excavations and sandbags against hostile fire, that even a middle-aged English writer, extremely fagged and hot and breathless, could enjoy the same privilege. All this, you must understand, had gone on at a level to which the ordinary tourist rarely climbs, in a rarefied, chest-tightening atmosphere, with wisps of clouds floating in the clear air below and club-huts close at hand....
Among these mountains avalanches are frequent; and they come down regardless of human strategy. In many cases the trenches cross avalanche tracks; they and the men in them are periodically swept away and periodically replaced. They are positions that must be held; if the Italians will not face such sacrifices, the Austrians will. Avalanches and frostbite have slain and disabled their thousands; they have accounted perhaps for as many Italians in this austere and giddy campaign as the Austrians....
3
It seems to be part of the stern resolve of Fate that this,
the greatest of wars, shall be the least glorious; it is manifestly being
decided not by victories but by blunders. It is indeed a history of colossal
stupidities. Among the most decisive of these blunders, second only perhaps of
the blunder of the
There was only one good point about the Austrian thrust. No
one could have foretold it. And it did so completely surprise the Italians as
to catch them without any prepared line of positions in the rear. On the very
eve of the big Russian offensive, the Austrians thrust eighteen divisions hard
at the Trentino frontier. The Italian posts were then in Austrian territory;
they held on the left wing and the right, but they were driven by the sheer
weight of men and guns in the centre; they lost guns and prisoners because of
the difficulty of mountain retreats to which I have alluded, and the Austrians
pouring through reached not indeed the plain of Venetia, but to the upland valleys
immediately above it, to Asiago and Arsiero. They probably saw the Venetian
plain through gaps in the hills, but they were still separated from it even at
Arsiero by what are mountains to an English eye, mountains as high as
As one motors through these ripe and beautiful towns and through
the rich valleys that link them—it is a smiling land abounding in old castles
and villas, Vicenza is a rich museum of Palladio's architecture and Bassano is
full of irreplaceable painted buildings—one feels that the things was a narrow
escape, but from the military point of view it was merely an insane escapade.
The Austrians had behind them—and some way behind them—one little strangulated
railway and no good pass road; their right was held at Pasubio, their left was
similarly bent back. In front of them was between twice and three times their
number of first class troops, with an unlimited
equipment. If they had surmounted that last mountain crest they would have come
down to almost certain destruction in the plain. They could never have got
back. For a time it was said that General Cadorna considered that possibility.
From the point of view of purely military considerations, the Trentino
offensive should perhaps have ended in the capitulation of
I will confess I am glad it did not do so. This tour of the
fronts has made me very sad and weary with a succession of ruins. I can bear no
more ruins unless they are the ruins of
On the hills beyond Schio I walked out through the embrasure
of a big gun in a rock gallery, and saw the highest points upon the hillside to
which the Austrian infantry clambered in their futile last attacks. Below me
were the ruins of Arsiero and Velo d'Astico recovered, and across the broad
valley rose Monte Cimone with the Italian trenches
upon its crest and the Austrians a little below to the north. A very
considerable bombardment was going on and it reverberated finely. (It is only
among mountains that one hears anything that one can call the thunder of guns.
The heaviest bombardments I heard in
1
I have a peculiar affection for
All over Venetia the Austrian seaplanes are making the same
sort of idiot raid on lighted places that the Zeppelins have been making over
2
Except in the case of
But there is a return trade. Near
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