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Onward and onward through the currents of clouded air
Craned down through the misty chasms to see what thing lay

there.

By a ditch of Flanders beside an arrowy road,

Which stretched to the horizon where a fired farmstead glowed
Exhaling a tremulous light and winding a murky tress
Of billowy smoke over the wilderness,

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A wounded soldier lay watching the birds overhead. . . . They vanished and into his eyes came knowledge of death and the dead.

So feeble was he that scarcely he felt the blood 'twixt his lips and flow down darkly. Upon him had gloamed eclipse When at his ear he heard a strange and terrible cry

Well up

Such as had shaken the marsh birds winging the dreary sky: "O God, God, God! I am tormented, I sink.

O water, water, I burn. Give me to drink!"

And there was no further sound under all the sky

Nor in the earth save one sharp sweet reply

From the ditch by his feet: a trickle of water was calling,
Swoln by rain it carolled and tinkled in falling.
But he could not move hand or foot and a noise
Of groaning reached him and a dreamy voice
Sing-songed of water while he lay perfectly still
And cracked his sinews with the heat of his will,
Willing himself to arise but he had not the strength
To move hand or foot a foot or hand's length.
And when he found he could not stir to arise
Two warm tears welled and rolled out of his eyes,
And he began to pray, saying unto God

Brokenly and in stupid words how he lay on the sod
And could not move, and would God look down and give
Just one minute of boyish strength that he might strive
To succour somebody-friend or foe-near him.

But God would not,

And he complained endlessly till the cramp of the shot
In his side tied and untied within like a knot.

And he fainted. And the sombre clouds flocked slowly over the slaughterous plain

Above the glimmering road that divided the slain from the slain ;
And the spent neighbour rolling his eyes at the sky far and wide
Gurgled, his mouth floating blood, and cursed God and died.
And the water in the ditch cried happily and increased till it soaked
The thirsty dead's feet and the sweeping wind stroked
Softly the matted fair hair of the soldier until he lay,

Save for this, stiller than the clotted thick clay
That in acres of ruts stretched silently

To the deserted dykes and the desolate sea.

The sombre clouds rolled slowly over the low plain
Rutted with level plough lines and lit with pools of rain,
In whose shallow mirrors the majesty of the sky
Figuring the funeral of heroes filed slowly by.1

III.

THE MORAL MISCHIEF CAUSED BY WAR.

1. A nation engaged in a bloody war can seldom escape the Nemesis of spiritual deterioration. To become accustomed to acts of bloodshed, to read daily of scenes of carnage, to be obliged to rejoice in the news of sinking ships, of the blowing up of trooptrains, and the intercepting of communications-all this must tend to blunt the moral sense and to make callous the spirit of compassion. We begin to hate our enemies and all that pertains to them.

¶ War necessarily involves a complete suspension of great portions of the moral law. This is not merely the case in unjust wars; it applies also, though in a less degree, to those which are most necessary and most righteous. War is not, and never can be, a mere passionless discharge of a painful duty. It is in its essence, and it is a main condition of its success, to kindle into fierce exercise among great masses of men the destructive and combative passions-passions as fierce and as malevolent as that with which the hound hunts the fox to its death, or the tiger springs upon its prey. Destruction is one of its chief ends. Deception is one of its means, and one of the great arts of skilful generalship is to deceive in order to destroy. Whatever other elements may mingle with and dignify war, this at least is never absent; and however reluctantly men may enter into war, however conscientiously they may endeavour to avoid it, they must know that when the scene of carnage has once opened these things must be not only accepted and condoned, but stimulated, encouraged and applauded. It would be difficult to conceive a disposition more remote from the morals of ordinary life, not to speak of Christian ideals, than that with which the soldiers most animated 1 R. Nichols, Invocation, 38.

with the fire and passion that lead to victory rush forward to bayonet the foe.1

¶ I am shocked to recognize myself approving acts that I should normally detest. I loathe bombs, until I succeed in throwing them. A submarine seems to me a piece of devilish craftiness when it sends our poor fellows in the cruisers to the bottom: but it seems to me the symbol of the most glorious courage and skill, when it strikes a German destroyer under the guns of Emden. The natural conscience is dislocated. I read quite calmly, and with gentle satisfaction, the assurances of the Press that the losses of the enemy were most gratifying. This is the war-temper. Such a temper is an outrage against man, a sin against GOD. It is under the curse of CHRIST. It puts His Cross to an open shame.2

¶ Mr. Wilson McNair witnessed the hunting of spies in Brussels on the declaration of war. If you lingered, he says, "by a shop door the passer-by viewed you with quick suspicion; if you lingered long they gathered about you. In a moment you might be the centre of one of those furious crowds which have neither reason nor pity. The poison corrupted wherever it spread as fear and hatred corrupt. Like an evil presence, War spread her black wings over this city. At night you might see fierce mobs destroying the shops of the enemy or chasing suspects through the street; men but yesterday turned soldier paced the streets and demanded proof of identity at the bayonet point. This transformation is one of the most hideous of the features of war. It is like the process of a soul's damnation made universal to all souls and quickened within the space of a few days. Damnation comes too by force; there is no escape from it. As you look upon their faces, men are debased, brutalised-out of the very nobility of their spirits, out of their heroism and out of their self-sacrifice is wrought the abomination.3

That is the worst of war; it ostracises, demoralises, brutalises reason. Even Nelson, our glorious and most lovable of heroes, swore that he would like to hang every Frenchman who came near him, Royalist and Republican alike. Hate takes root as a tradition, and lasts.4

2. If the whole nation suffers moral deterioration, most of all

1 W. E. H. Lecky, The Map of Life, 92.
'H. Scott Holland, So as by Fire, i. 22.
'W. McNair, Blood and Iron, 36.
• Viscount Morley, Recollections, ii. 88.

do the men suffer who are engaged in fighting. For the time being men put behind them the principles, the habits, and the customs of civilized humanity, and relapse into the elemental stage of savagery, in which they face one another with murder in their eyes, and know no law save the necessity which makes them seek their own safety and the destruction of their enemy. We read of outrages which shock every feeling of humanity—and who are the men that do these things, or look on without protest? For the most part they were to be met with a few weeks before pursuing their peaceful avocations as peasants and shopkeepers, as factory-workers and clerks, as business men and professional men-they were industrious, well-living citizens, upright and kindly as the average among whom we do our daily work; and as if by the touch of a magic wand of the diabolic kind, some of them have been transformed into savage creatures lusting for blood and hunting for loot. Is it possible that ordinary men can pass through experiences like these, can be transplanted for a season into a world in which the ordinary maxims of conduct are turned upside down, without some damage from the kind of work which they have to do, and the quality of the atmosphere which they have to breathe ? And if we follow them further into the heart of the battle, where men are falling dead or dying amid shot and shell, and the handto-hand struggle is raging round the guns or in the trenches; if we can take away our thoughts from the suffering that claims our human sympathy, and think of the spiritual conditions under which men are there facing death-how different seem the conditions from those in which one would desire to bid farewell to the world, how different is that place of rage and violence and blasphemy from the sanctuary of prayer and silence in which we feel it meet that the soul should prepare to meet its God.

War brings all the fantastic idiosyncrasies of human nature to the surface. Men will rob and pillage and rape and burn in war who would have lived very passable and decent lives in peace. Many of them think that it is part of the business; and, of course, the meaner and more sordid the war is, the more that part of the programme becomes possible. I have seen, even at a peaceful railway station in England, a plethoric captain of Volunteers, proceeding to his summer camp in uniform, begin to leer and ogle at the passing female sex generally, who, had he been in his usual

dress and at his daily business vocations, would have been the picture of decorous provincial family respectability.1

¶ Here's a scene I shall remember always: A misty summer morning I went along a sap-head running towards the German line at right-angles to our own. Looking out over the country, flat and uninteresting in peace, I beheld what at first would seem to be a land ploughed by the ploughs of giants. In England you read of concealed trenches-here we do not trouble about that. Trenches rise up, grey clay, 3 or 4 feet above the ground. Save for one or two men-snipers-at the sap-head, the country was deserted. No sign of humanity—a dead land. And yet thousands of men were there, like rabbits concealed. The artillery was quiet; there was no sound but a cuckoo in a shell-torn poplar. Then, as a rabbit in the early morning comes out to crop grass, a German stepped over the enemy trench-the only living thing in sight. "I'll take him," says the man near me. And like a rabbit the German falls. And again complete silence and desolation.2

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¶ I remember a characteristic case in the first advance. A German machine-gun post had been holding up the British advance and inflicting murderous casualties. The machine was enveloped and rushed, and the Germans held up their hands and surrendered. An old-time sergeant goes up to his officer, who, by the bye, was a poet, and wrote some very charming lyrics and had a taste in Art, and salutes: "Leave to shoot the prisoners, sir?" "What do you want to shoot them for ? says the poet. To avenge my brother's death," says the sergeant. I suppose the poet tells him to carry on. He pinks the Germans one after one, and some of our fellows say "Bravo!" and in others the blood runs cold. I remember the disgust of one of our American volunteers at this episode. For a few days it caused a reaction in him, and made him quite warm-hearted toward Germans. But when he had been in one or two more frays he also caught the regimental point of view, and was ready to kill "Huns ad libitum." 3

3. The atrocious cruelties that are perpetrated in war may not be worse in themselves than those which have been committed in peace, but they are done on a different scale and with a most startling indifference. These acts are possible only when war

1 Sir William Butler: an Autobiography, 199.

2 Ivar Campbell, in E. B. Osborn, The New Elizabethans, 206.

3 Stephen Graham, A Private in the Guards, 218.

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