464 PROSPECTS OF THE WESTERN CIVILIZATION that the linguistically selfconscious nineteenth-century Norwegians and Irish were descended neither from the original members of the Western Civilization nor from its barbarian proselytes, but from frustrated repre- sentatives of two abortive civilizations that had been blighted by pre- mature encounters with a rising Roman Western Christian Civilization for which they had been no match.1 A glance at the contemporary exhibitions of Futurism in a latter-day Western Society's life told the same tale. On the plane of political in- stitutions, the deliberate effacement of traditional boundaries through an artificial redrawing of the administrative map, more Clezstheneo,2 had been exemplified in the remapping of an eighteenth-century France into departments and of a twentieth-century Germany into Gaue,3 while, on the plane of the arts, there bad-been patent symptoms of Futurism in all provinces of a post-Modern Western World in music, dancing, painting, and sculpture.4 Yet, though such manifestations of Futurism were dis- cernible, it was also manifest that their effect, so far, had been slight. In addition to these latter-day Western evidences—at whatever value their importance was to be appraised—of schism in the Soul and schism in the Body Social, we have found,5 in a synoptic analysis of the rhythm of the disintegration-process, that the Western Civilization's latter-day history conformed to a pattern—a series of two paroxysms punctuated by one rally—that had been the regular rhythm of a Time of Troubles in the histories of civilizations that had run through the whole disintegra- tion-process from breakdown to dissolution. The appearance of this sinister pattern in Western history was, in A.D. 1952, perhaps the most alarming of all current Western experiences with non-Western prece- dents. Yet, as we have already observed in another context,6 the nebu- lous possibility that the Western Civilization might, at this date, be in the grip of the second paroxysm of a Time of Troubles was less signifi- cant than the plain fact that it had at least not yet entered into a universal state. The inquiry that we have now completed thus suggests that the non- Western precedents for Western experiences were inconclusive. While we have found enough evidence to make it clear that authentic symp- toms of breakdown and disintegration were discernible in the life of the Western Civilization mid-way through the twentieth century of the Christian Era, an assessment of this evidence has proved not to be so easy; and we might be in danger of exaggerating the significance of the facts if we were to allow ourselves to forget that, in the life of every living society, as in the life of every living organism, a tendency towards break- down and disintegration is constantly asserting itself, and as constantly requiring to be resisted, even when the society is in the healthiest and most vigorous burst of its growth. The pertinent question was not whether the symptoms of breakdown and disintegration were present, but whether they were serious. Was the malady grave ? Was it incurable ? Was it lethal? And in A.D. 1952 these were questions to which no con- clusive answer could be given when they were asked with reference to * See II. iL 322-60. * See V. vL 107-8. 3 See V. vi. 108-9. •* See IV. hr. 51-52. s See V, vL 3i2-zi. 6 On pp. 411-12, above.