". .....: . . .-.". .. . ......:.. ::.... .::;-,.;-". , ...... " ..... '........ -..), '" r'\ .... , .. -.... . r ." 'R 1 'i , IT. ENE " , ' ,,\ .. ..... t- ( 1 l\ i . " f , \I 3) / 1 . I. f. . 1 I ( 5' , i t . ft . I ,. J-I S ERT N , \ '\ 1 '" ) '...-..- :" :- ...... '- -T' - .... fl.' . ...... ,.... - .... ." .. '. . ,. ': J::t.:.. =:'.;:, .. . -:' ;':i :': '.' .... .. . ...., e CV' 0/ JaS /' s :> '1 c;:; (iT :l f I J PR H õ3 ,e A-y Ft 6 1 q j 1 MRc' ''f., {v- L "'1 Ot..-r f t:J....4.- / -lA_ <... {l I ()r . y;.. e . $' L <- .-6#_ !J -. Ilc &.. (.;) p. þ, if. - - I ::- LORD ,. . ;. ... , \ - ð 8 o I I o I t. ...,.- . ..... , ,.... .. . fRy G. K Chesterton -4 -: ,,%, : :/ .-;:- : ! : : : :: -=.-:' I'laoto by Eltrolt t!:1 'r,. Ud,. Ltmlon. LORD KITCHENER BY G. K. CHESTERTON LO OON 19 1 7 LORD I( IT C I I E N I f< I IORATIO I-I ER BERT IZ ITCH E ER was Irish hy birth but English by extraêtion, being born in County I(erry, the son of an English colonel. '[he fanciful might see in this first and accidental íact, the presence of this siInplc and practical Illéln amid the Illore Inystical \vestern probleins. and dreallls \vhich were very distant froIll his nlind, an element ,yhich clings to all his career and gives it an unconscious poetry. He had Inany qualities of the epic hero, and especially this-that he was the last man in the ,,"orId to be the epic poet. '[here is something almost provocative to superstition in tll<' ,yay in \vhich he stands at every turn as the sYInbol of the special trials and the moclLrn tr;lI sfìgtlration of Engl?nd; froIn this InOlnent when he was born aInong the peclsants of Ireland to the 111nllH'nt \vhen he died upon the sea, seeking at the ot her ('nd of the world the other gn'at peasant civilisïtioll of Russia. Yet at each of t hes(' SYIll bolic IlH>lncllts he is. if not as unconscious as a synlboI, t 11('n as silent as a sYInbol; he is spcechless and suprelncly significant, like an ensign or a fLlg, I'he sup( rfìcial picturesqueness of his lif, , at least, lies vpry 11luch in this-that he \vas like a h!. ro condemned by fate to act an allegory. t [ B J LOI D IZITCI-IENER. \Ve find this, for instance, in one of the very first and perhaps one of the mo.;;t picturesque of all the facts that are recorded or reported of him. As a youth, tall, very shy a.nd quiet, he was only notable for inteIìectual interests of the soberest and most Inethodical sort, especially for the close study of Jllathematics. This also, incidentally, \vas typical enough, for his \vork in Egypt and the Soudan, by ,,'hich his fame \\"as established, \\'as based \vholly upon such calculations. It was not Inerely Inathematical but literally geometrical. His work bore the same relation to Gordon's that a rigid Inathen1atical diagraln bears to d. rough pencil sketch on \vhich it is based. Yet the student tthus Lent on the strictest side of his profession, studying it at \V oohvich and entering the Engineers as the Inost severely scientifÌc branch of the army, had as a first expericnce of war something so rOlnantic that it has been counted incredible, yet something so, relevant to the great reality of to-day that it might ha ,.e been Inade up centuries after his death, as a ITJ)'th is made up about a god. He happened to be in France in the most tragic hour that France has ever known or, please God, will ever know. She ,,'as bearing alone the \vcight of that alien tyranny, of that hopeless and aln10st lifeless violence, \"hich the other nations have since found to be the \vorst of all the terrors \vhich God tolerates in this \\"orld. She trod that \vinepress alone; and of the peoples there were none to help her. J n 1870 the Prussian had already encircleq Paris, and General Cranzy ""as fighting against enormous odds to push no!"th \'ards 2 LORD I(ITCIIENER. to its relief, \vhen his army \vas joined by the young and silent traveller from England. All that was in Kitchener's mind or nlotives will perhaps never be known. France was still something of an ideal of civilisation for many of the more generous English gentry. Prussia was never really an ideal for anybody, even the Prussians, and mere success, ,,'hich could not make her an ideal, had not yet calalnitously Illade her a model. There \vas in it also, no doubt, a touch of the schoolboy who runs away to sea- that touch of the schoolboy \vithout the sense of which the staidest Englishman will always be inexp'licable. But considered historically there is something strangely moving about the incident-the fact that Kitchenpr \\?as a French soldier altnost before he \vas an English one. As Hannibal ,vas dedicated in boyhood to 'war against the eagles of Rome, Kitchener 'was dedicated, almost in boyhood, to "rar against the eagles of Gerrriany. Ronlance came to this realist, ,,'hether by ilnpulse or by accident, like a ,vind froIll without, as first lo\.t> \vill conle to the \\Toman-hater. He \vas already, both by fate and choice, sOll1ething Blore than he had meant to be. The Inathenlatician, \\rc Inight almost say the calculating boy, ,vas already gaInbling in the highest lottery ,vhich led to the high( st and most historic loss. 1'he engineer devoted to discipline ,vas already a free lance, because alreaJy a knight-errant. He returned to England to continue his COIll- paratively humdrum order of advancement j and the next call thdt canle to hinl was of a strangcl y J LOT 0 I{ITCIIE ER'. different and yet also of a strangely significant kind. rl'he Palestine Exploratioa Fund sent him \vith another officer to conduct topographical and anti- quarian investigations in a country \vhere practical exertions are always relieved against a curiously incongruous background-as if they \vere setting up telegraph-posts through the Garden of Eden or opening a railway station. at the Ne\v Jerusaleln. But the contrast bet\veen antiquity and modernity \vas not the only one j there was still the sort of contrast that can be a collision. I(itchener \vas almost immediately to conle in contact \vith \vhat \vas to be, in various aspects, the problem of his life-the modern fanaticisms of the Near East. There i an English proverb which asks \vhether the mountain goes to l\Iahomet or he to the Inountain, and it may be a question whether his religion be the cause or the effect of a certain spirit, vivid and yet strangely negative, \vhich dwells in such deserts. \Valking alnong the olives of Gaza or looking on the Philistine plain, such travellers may well feèl that they are treading on cold volcanoes, as empty as the mountains of the moon. But the mountain of Mahomet is not yet an extinct volcano. I desert creates a kind of ecstasy out of the vt'ry emptiness of its own land, and e\'en, one In: y say, out of the emptiness' of its own theology. It af1ìnns, with no little sublin1ity, sonlething that is not tnerely the singleness but rather the solitude of God, There is the sanle extreIne simplification in the solitary figure of the Prophet; and yet this isolation perpetually reacts into its o\\'n opposite. A voill is tnade in the heart of Islanl \vhich has to be filled up again and again by a mere repetition of th(> revolution that founded it. l'here are no sacralnents ; the only th ng that can happell is a sort f apocalypsp, 7 [ c J L 0 I { I ) IZ rr elf E:\ E R . as unique as the cnn uf the \\"orlù; so the apocal fpse can only be repeated and the world end again and again. Thl're are no priests; and yet this equality can only bn ed a Inultitlldt ùf la\rless propht"ts alrnùst as IlUln rOUS as priests. l'he \'l'ry dog'na that thère is only on :\Iaholnet proùuces an endless prvcession of :\I.tholnets. Of these the Illightiest in III oJ ern tin1è \\'ere the In an whose I1aIne was ,:\.h HIed, and \rhose I110re falnous titk was the :\Iahdi; and his Illore ferocious successor .. \bdullahi, who \vas generally known as the I(halifa. These great fanatics, or great creators of fanaticism, succeeded in Inaking a InilitarisITI alInost as fatnous and fonnidablc as that of the 'Turkish Elnpire on \\'hose frontiers it ho\'ered, and in spreading a reign of terror such as can seldonl be organised except by civilisation. \ Yith !\ apoleonic suddenness anù success the i\Iahdist hordes had fallen on the anny of I licks Pasha, \\'hen it lelt its caInp :it Olndunn;ul, on the Xile opposite l(hartouIll, and had cut it to pieces in a fashion incredible. '1'hey had establisheù at Olndunnan their IIoly City, the Ronle of their nnlnadic ROlnan EIllpire. 'fowards that terrible pl:tcf Inany ad\'enturous nlcn, like puor Ifi.cks, had ((\ )fl anu were destined to o. rhc sands that u l'l1circll'ù it 'Yen.: like that entrance to the lion's C;L\'t:rn in the fable, towards which 111 any footprints pointed, anù fronl which none returneù. 'rhe last of these "..tS Gordon, that r0l11antic and e\'en eccentric figure of wholn so Inuch Illight be said. Perhaps the nlost essential thing to say of him hert..: is that fortune OnCe again playeu the artist 8 L()RI) I I'rCIIE='IEI{. in sending such a man, at once as the leader and the herald of a Inan like Jps from the Soudan, the Govèrn- mpnt having decided, if possible, to live at peace \vith the new l\Iahdist dictatorship; and he went through the deserts aln10st as solitary as a bird, on a journey as lonely as. his end. He was cut off and besieged in I(hartout11 by the Mahdist annies, and fell with the falling city. Long before his end he had been in touch \vith I{itchener, now of the Egyptian Intelligence DepartInent, and weaving very carefully a vast net of diploll1acy and strategy in whiçh the slayers of Gordon \vere to be taken at last. A \vell-known English journalist, Bennet Burleigh, \vanJering near Dongola, fell into con- versation \vith an &'\rab who spoke excellent English, and \vho, ,,-ith a hospitality highly ill1proper in a 1\IosleIn, produced two bottles of claret for his entertainment. The naIne of this Arab was Kitchener; and the two bottles \v__'re all he had. T lournalist obtained, along with the claret, his' 9 [ c j L()J } ) I\: I'f (' II E F R, fìrst glitnpse of th great and extraorJinary scltenles with \\'hich I(iteh{ ner \\-as already wurking to a \.enge the cOInrade who had fallen in } patience of the I-lindoos, 'r 0 ha ve turned this slilne once nlore into a human riv rJ to haye lifted this pavement once rnore into a hUI11an rampart or barricade, is not a sInall thing, nor a thing that could possihly be done even by Inere PO'\\"E>r, still less by mere nloney-and this I{itchener and his English companions certain]y did. '-[here 111ust have been sOInething Inuch nlore than a Inere cynical severity in" organis:ltion IJ in the In'ln \rho did it. There Inust be son1ethin r In0re than a Inere cOln- . rnercial COIntnon-Sènsc in the nation in whose n lIn it \\ as done. I t is easy enough, with suftìcient dulness and greed of detail, to " organise" anything or anybody. It is easy enough to Inake people obey a bugle (or a factory ho. )ter) as tl e Prussian soldiers obey a bugle. But it is no sllch trumpet that Inakes possible the resurr ction of the dead I I LORO 1 ITC}IEXER. The success of this second of the three con\'crging designs of I{itchener, the making of a new Egyptian army, \vas soon seen in the expedition against I)ûngola. It had been .fore- shadowed in a successful defence of Suakin, in which l,itchencr was wounded; a defence against OsnIan 11igna, -perhaps the first of the M ahdist gl'llcrals whose o\\'n strongholds \\'ere eyentuaHy stunned at Genlaizch: and in the victory at Toski, where fell the great \varrior \Vad el N jume, \vhose stratcgy had struck down both Hicks and Gordon. nut the turn of the tide \\'as Dongola. In 18 9 2 General, now Lord Grenfell, who had been Sirdar, or COlnmandcr-in-Chief of the Egyptian Anny, and ordered the advance at T oski, retired and left his post \'acanl. The great public servant known latterly as Lord CrOITIer had long had his eye on IZitchener and the part he had played, even as a young lieutenant, in the new military formation of the Fellaheen. He \\"as now put at the head of the \\'hole ne\\' anny j and the first \\"ork that fell to him \vas leading the new expedition. In three days after the order \\'as received the force started at nightfalI and nlarchcd southward into the night. The detail is SOllIet hing Inorc than picturesque; for on all accounts of that fonnidable attack on the Mahdi's power a quality of darkness rests like a kind of cloud. It was, for onc thing, a surprise attack and a very secret one, so that the cloud ,,"as as practical as a cloak; but it ,,'as also the re-entrance of a territory \\"hich an instinct h.ls It,d the English to ca1l the I)ark Continent c\'en undL'r its blazing noon. [here J LORD KITCHENER. vast dìstances alone made a veil like that of darkness, and there the lives of Gordon and Hicks and hundreds more had been s\val1owed up in an ancient silence. Perhaps \ve caniìot guess to-day, after the colder completion of Kitchener's \vork, \vhat it meant for those Who \vent on that nocturnal march j \vho crept up in t\VO linp.s, one along the river and the other along an abandoned raih\'ay track, moving through the black night j and in the black night encamped, and ,vaited for the rising of the moon. Anyhow, the tale told of it strikes this note, especially in one touch of \vhat can only be caned a terrible triviality. I mean the reference to the new noise heard just before day- break, revealing the nC.1rness of the enemy: the dreadful drum of Islam, calling for prayer to an awful God-a God not to be \vorshipped by the chang:ing ánd sometimes cheerful notes of harp or organ, but only by the drum that maddens by nlere repetition. But the third of Kitchener's lines of approach remains to consider. The surprise attack, \vhich captured the riverside village of Firket, had even- tually led, in spite of storms that ,varred .on the adv;}nce like armies, and in one place practically \"iped out a brigade, to the fall of Dongola itself. But. Dongola \"as not the high place of the enemy; it was not there that (;ordon died or that Abdullahi was still alive. Far aw y up the dark river \vere the twin cities of the tragedy, the city of the murder and t he city of the murderer. It ,vas in relation to this Qxed point of fact th:lt IZitchpner's next proceeding 13 Lel R I) 1, I TC I I EX E R, is 5e 11 to b: '..lprenlPly characteristic, He was so anxious to dn one thing that he \\yas cautious about doing it. Ill" "-as nlorc concerned to obtain a success t h=ll1 tn a ppear to desrr\'c it; he did not "rant a 1l1oral yictory, but a Inathenlatical certainty. So far frpIll following up the dash in the dark, upon Firket or I Jongnla, with Inore rOlnantic risks, he decided not to ;u.h-ance on the :\Iahdi's host a Ininute faster than nlen could foHo,," him building a raihvay_ lIt" created ut"hind hi:n a coloss:ll causeway of ('nIl11lIunicatiolls, going out alone into \\';lstes where there ,yas and had been no other morlal tr:lce or t rack. The engineering genius of Girouard, a Canadian, designed aDd developed it witla what was. considering the nature of the t:lsk, hrilliant rapidity; but by the standards of desert warfare it must ha\ye eemed that Kitchener and his English Inade ,rar as slowly as grass grows or orchards hear fruit. The horselnen of ..<\raby, darting to and fro like s\\"al1ows, nlust ha\"c felt as if they were nlenaced by the ad,"ance of :t giant snail. But it ,,"as a snail that left a shining track unknown to those sands; for t he first tinle since Rome decay d sotn<,t hing ""as hping Inadc there that could reInain. rrh.. effect uf this gro\,.ing road, on Inight alnlost say this li,"ing road, began to be felt. Mahmoud tlu' :\Iahdist military leader, fell back froln Berber, :lnd at hcred his hosts mOft closely round the sacred city ()11 the :\ile. l(itchencr, nlaking another night Inarch up the .-'\tbara ri\ycr, stormed t he Arab (:nnp and tOîk tahlnoud prisoner. Then at Jast he tnovcd lìl1dl1y up tht western bank of the Nile 14 tCJ k r J I\: I T C r I EX E R 0 and came in sight of OIndurrnan. It is sOlncwhat of a disproportion to dwell on the fight that followed and the fall of the great city. The fìghtin.. had been done already, and nlore than haH Of it was \vorking; fighting a long fight against thp centuries, against age of sloth and the great sle p of the desert, where there had been nothing but \'i ion , and against a racial decline that men haù accepted as a doon1. On the fol1o,,-ing Sunday a 111eInorial ser\.ice for Charles Gordon "ras held in the place ,,'here he ".as slain. The fact that lr wou!d have been ,"pry much puzzled by the next. passage f Ii his life. l{itchener ""as somet hing 111uch Inore than a machinc; for in the mind, as Jnuch as in the hí}dy, flexibility is far nlore m;c-)culiIJc than infl(.xibllity. 15 I J) R f) 1'- I Tell E E H.. :\ sit ua tion dl'\'l'lopl"d ahnost instant ly after his \"ictor\' in which he was to show that he ,vas a d i plorl1;l t ist cl well as a sold ier. At F ash()[Ia, a little farther up tht' ill', he found sornething Blare urprisil1g, and pt'rha ps .lll0re rotnantic, than the wildl'st .den'ish of the desert solitu(tes. A French oOlccr, and one of t h 1l1o:..t ,"aliant and distinguisht.j of Frl'nch officers, :\Iaj 'r :\Iarchand, had penetrated to tl1t' place with the pt'rtinacity of a great explorer, and l'c'Inl'd prcpared to hold it with all the uns(.ltìsh ;1rr o gal1ct: of a patriot. I t is said that thp Fn'nchlnan not onl\" \relcolllcd I{itchener in the n;une of France, but in,'ited hi Ill, with courtt'(ìUS irony, to partake nf ,'cgt'tables grown on thp pot. ;1 syrnbol of stabl,' occup.ltiou. '[he story, if it be tnl',', is adlI1irably French; for it rc"eal t on('(' tht. wit and tht, pt'asant. But th(' hUIHour of th( Englishlnan was worthily equal to the wit of tht' Frl'nchlnan; and it was hun10ur of that san(' sort which \re call good htlInour. Political papt'rs in p:lcifìc England and FralH't' ravcd and ranted O\'t'r the crisis, responsible journals howled with jingoism; but through it clll, until the ITIOlllent when the Fn 'neh agreed to retire) the two Jllost placable and t'\"\'n oC ia hIe fi gu n' were the t\\"o gri In tropical tra\'t,llt-rs and soldiers who faced e:lch other on the hUrl11n ands or Fashoda. l\S we see thenl facing 'cl('h ot her, Wl' have again the ,'ague sense of a sign or a parable \\'hich runs through this story. Fo:' they \\'l're to nH' ,t again long afterwards lS a1"lit ' . wh('n hot h wen' leading their CouIltrYI11en ag;1in t the great enelny in the Great \Var. If> LOR () I IT C I II :\ E R, SOlnething of the saIne shadow of proph('cy is perhaps the deepest tneITIOry left by the last ,,'ar of It p(yxerful sYInpathy ,,'ith the Inysterious intellect of the East. rrhence he had been again shifted to Egypt; but t e next sumInons that came to hinl s\\'allowcd up all these things. A short tinle after ,,'ar broke out \rith Germany he \\ as made :\Iinister of \Var, and held that post until the dark Sl."ason when he set out on a mission to Russia, which ne\'er reached its goal. But \vhen his ship ,vent down he had already llone a \vork and registered a chang(' in England, ,,'ith some \vords about which this sketch nlay ,,-ell conclude. Journalistic attacks ,,'ere indeed Inade upon hiIn, but in \\' itin for a .f or eig n reader I pass them by. J n s uch a place I ,,'ill not say even of the meanest of Englishmen \vhat they \\'ere not ashaIned to say of one of the greatest. I n his new work he \vas not only a very great man, but one dealing ",ith very great things j and perhaps his most historic nloment ,vas when he broke his customary silence about the deeper elllotions of life, and became the mouthpiece of the national horror at the Gernlan fashion of fighting, ,,'hich he declared to have left a stain upon the ".ho)e profession of arms. F or, by a 1l10VCInent unusually and unconsciously dramatic, he chose that moment to salute across the long stretch of years the comparative chivalry and nobility of his dead enemies of the Soudan, and to announce that in the heart of Europe, in learned acad('mies and ordered governlncnl offices, there had appeared a lunacy so cruel and unclean that ,.8 I .( ) R [) I rr C I I r \' E I . the madùest dervish dead in the d sert had a right to disdain it \"here he lay. Kitchener, like other Englishnlen of his type, rnade his name outside England and even -outside Europe. But it \vas in England, and after h:s return to England, that he did what \viII perhaps filake his name 1110St pennanent in history. That return to England "'as indeed as symbolic as his last aÌ1d tragic journey to Russia. Both will stand as syulbols of the deepest things \vhich are rnoving I11ankind in the Great War. In truth t:le whole of that great European movement which \ve call the cause of the Allies is in itself a home'vard journey. I t is a return to native and historic ideals, after an exile in the. hO\\Tling \vilderness of the political pessiIl1isI11 and cynicism of Prussia. After his great ad ventures in Africa and .-\sia, the Englishman has. re-discovered Europe; and in the very act of discovering J urope, the Englishman has at last discovered England. The revelation of the forces still really to be found in England itself, \\.hen all is said that can pos ihly or plausibly be said against English conllllercialisin and selfishness, \vas the last work of LorJ IZitchcner. He \vas the embodinlent o{ an enonnous e periencl' \vhich has passed through Impc.>rialisnl and rcach:'d patriotisnl. He had been the suprelne figure (,f that strange and spra\vling England which li(':-; beyond England; \vhich carries the habits of Enalish clubs and hotels into the solitudes uf the b Nile or up the passl's of the HiIl1alayas, ;ind is infinitely ignorallt of things infinitely nearer hOllle. For this type of Englishman Cairu was ncan'r than 19 L ( ) 1{ I ) I 1'1' C I I E E I{. Calai . \ret tlh' typical figure ,,'hich "9C associated with such places as Cairo ,,'as destined before he died to open again the anëient gate of Calais and lead in a new and noble fashion the return of E' gland to Europe. 'rh(> .gre:lt change for which his country- IHen will probably rell1 nl ber hinl longest was \vhat ,re should call in EnglaQd the revolution of the New ,\nllies. I t i ahnost i,npossible to express ho\v great a re\'o)ution it was so as to con\'ey its dimensions to the citizens of any other great Europe n country ,,"here Inilitary service has ]ong been the rule and not the exception, where the people itself is only the army in Inufti_ In its mere aspect to the eye it was sonlething like an invasion by a strange race_ 'The English professional soldier of our youth had been conspicuous not only by his red coat but by his rarity. \ \ïlen rare things become conlmon they do not becom{ l'O)n IHOJ1 plac . The tnelnory of their singularity is still strong enough to give thelll rather the' appearance of a prodigy, as anyone can realise by inlagining an army of hunchbacks or a city of one-eYt-'d tnen. The English soldier had indeed been respected as a patriotic synlbol, but rather :\S .1 priest or a prince can be a syn1bol, as being dh a exception and not the rule. A child was taken to see the suldier outside DuckinghalH Palace altnost a ht> was taken tu See the I{ing driving out of Buckinghanl Palace. lienee the first effect of th enlargcIllcnt uf the annies was sotnething ahnost like a fairv-tale-almost as if the streets were cro 'iùeù with kings, wal king about and wearing 20 LO r 1 ) (( l'rC II E E R. crowns of gold. This 111erely optical vision of th( revolution \\'as but the first iInpression of a reality equally \'ast and new. l'he first leyies which came to be called popularly Kitchener's Army, becaus of the energy and inspiration with which he set hinlself to their organisation, consisted entin"ly of \"olunteers. I t was not till long after the \\"hol face of England had been transformed by this Inobilisation that the Governnlent resorted to COlll- pulsion to bring in a mere margin of men. a\'e for the personality of Kitchener, the ne\\T Inilitarisrn of England came \vholly and freely fronl the English. While it \vas as universal as a tax, it was as SpCH1- taneous as a riot. But it is obvious that to produce so large and novel an effect out of the Inere psycho- logy of a nation, apart froln its organisation I '.\"a something \vhich required tact as well as d cision: and it is this \vhich illustrated a siùe of the Eng)i h gene;-al's character without \vhich he Inay b,'. :t.nd - indeed has been, \\TholIy Inisunderstood. I t is of the nature of national heroes of J( itcheller' s type. that their adInirers are unjust to then1. 'flirl'Y would have been better appreciated if they had bl'l'll less praise,l. \Vhen a soldier is turned into an iù()l there seenlS an unfortunate' tcndency to turn hiII1 into a \\"f L )den idol, like the wooùl'n fìgun' flf I I indcnburg l'rected by. the ridiculou:, aut horitil' of Berlin. In a nlore Inoderate and Inl. taphorical sense there has b en an unfortunate t( IlÙl'nC) to represent I{itchener as strong by rÍ1crely fI'pn'- t'ntinO' hinl as stiff-to su est that h( was Iliad., h . ,,-. of wood and not of steel. 'rh re are two Illa irns, 21 I.()RI) KI1'{'IIE\ER. which h.l\"l" l>l"l'n, 1 ol'lie\'l', thl' Il10ttoc" of two English f:lInilit's, bulh of "rhich are boasts but each thl' nHItrary of the uther. 'fhe fìrst runs, "You can brt'a k Inc, but YOll cannot bend 1l1l'''; and the Sl'COlld, d You C.ln bend Ine, but you cannot break IlIt"." \\ïth all n'3pect to \rhoc\.cr 1l1ay ha\'e bornp it, the fÌrst is the boast of thc barbarian and there- fore of l he Prussian; l h(-" ccond is the boa5t of the Christian and the ci\'ilised tnan-that he is free él!H.I flexible, yet al,,"ars returns to his true position, like a telnpered sword. r\ow too much of the eulogy on a Inan like lZitchener tended to praise hiln not as a s\yord but as a poker. f-Ie happened to rise into his first falne at a time when n1uch of th( English Press and governing class was still entirely duped by Germany, and to sOlne extent judged everything by a Bismarckian tc'st of Llood and iron. I t tended to neglect the \"ery re(ll disaùvantages, even in practical life, \\"hich lie upon th' Inan of blood and iron, as compared with the 111.1,11 of blood and bone. It is one gra,-e disadvantage, for instance, that if a n1:1.11 Inade of iron were to break' his bones, they would not hea1. r n other words, the Prussian EJnpire, ,\'ith all its perfections anù efficiencies, has one notable defect- that it is a uead thing. It does not draw its life fruIn :1ny priJIllry hUlnan religion or poetry; it does not grow :L aill froll1 within. _ \nd being a dead thing, it suffers also 11'0111 ha\.ing 110 I1ern's to gi\re warning ur reactiun; it reads no danger signals; it ha..; nu pren1onitions j about its uwn spiritual dOOll1 its sl'ntin ls arc deaf dnd all ils spies .?2 LO R I) I rrc I J E:\ E I{. are blind. On the other hanù) the British Elnpire) with all its blunders and bad anoIllalies, to which I aln the last person to be blind, has one noticeable advantage-that it is a living thing. It is not that it makes no mi';takes, but it knows it h:t:, Illldt' thenl, as the living hand knows when it has toucht,d hot iron_ I'hat is eX"lctl y what a h.lnd of irun \\"ould not kno\v; anù that is exactly the error ill tht' German ideal of a hand of iron, No candid critic of England can read its history fairly and fail to see a certain flexibility and self-modification; illil){'ral policies followed by liberal ones; Inen failing in sonlething and succeeding in sorl1ething else; lHell sent to do one thing and being wise cnol}gh to do another'; the human po\\'er of the li,'ing hand to dra\v back As it happens, ({itchener was extra- ordinarily English in this li\rely and vital nloderat iou, .A '1d it is to be feared that the Illore Gennan ideal i- satltJn of him, in the largely unenlightened England before the war, has already done SOIlH' hanH to . his reoutation, and in ITIISsIng what \,'as par- ticularly English has Inissecl what ,vas particularly interes t ing" Lord I(itchener was personally a sOln('wha t sil('nt Inafl' and his social conventions \\.('f(' those of t hi' , ordinary English officer) especialIy the offict'r \\ ho has lived aInong Orientals--col1\rentions which in any case tend in tht' direction of sil('nee. I r (' also - really had, and to an extent of which SOIn(> P('qp!t' complained) a certain English elIlbarraSsllH'llt about Inaking all his purposes clear, t:specirtlJy b('f!)J (' they were clear to hiInself. lIe probably likl'd !J 23 LORI) 1 l'rCIIE EI{. think a thing out in his uwn ,,'ay and therefor at his own tin1e, \\'hich was not always the tin1e at which people thought they had a fight to question hiru. I n this way it is true of hinl, as of such another strong rnan as the Irish patriot Parnell, that his very sirnplicity had an effect of secrecy. But it is a coruplete error about hi'rn, as it ""as a complete error about Parnell, to suppose that he took the Prussian pose of disdaining and disregarding eyerybüdy; that he settled everything in solitary egoisnl; that he \ras a Superman too self-sufficing to listen to friends and too philosophical to listen to reason. I t will be noted that e\"ery crisis of his life that is lit up by history contradicts the colours of this picture. He could not only take counsel with his friends, but he \\'as abnormally successful in taking counsel \vith his foes. I t is notable that \vhenever he came in personal contact \vith a great captain actually or potentially in arms against hiln, the result \vas not a lucre collision but a nlutual comprehension. He established the friendliest relations ,,"ith the chivalrous and ad\"enturous ß1archanù, standing on the deadly debatable land of Fashoda. He established equal1y friendly relations with the Boer generJ.ls, gathered under the dark cloud of national disappointnlent and defeat. I n all such instances, so far as his individuality could count, it is clear that hl" acted as a nlodcrate and, in the universal sense, as a liberal. 'rhc results and th records uf those who 111et him in such hours are .quite suflìcicnt to provc that he did not le;ve the irnprcssion uf a Prussian arrogance. If he was silent, 2" J.. 0 I { r) I{ I l' C I-I E :'\ E R . his silence must have been 1l10re friendly, I had alInost said l11are convi\'ial, than l11anv men's conversation., But on the larger platforn; of the Euròpean \Var, this quiet but unique gift of open- nlinde ness and intellectual hospitality was destined to do t\\'O very decisive things, \vhich Inay profoundly affect history. In the first he dealt with the Inor delnocratic and even revolutionary eh:Inen ts in England; and in the second he represents a \"l'ry real change that has passed over the Ellgli h traditions about Russia. Personall y, as has already been noted I 1 ord I{itchcner never was and never pretended to be any- thing more or less than the good 111ilitary tnan, and by the tiln of the Great War he \vas already an elderly - military man. The type has much the saine standards and traditions in all European countries; but in England it is, if anything, a little Blore trad itional, for the very reason that the anny has been SOIlH'- thing separate, professional, and relatirt'ly snlal1-:L sort of club. rrhe military 111an W;JS all the l11un' military because the nation was not n1Îlitary. Such a man is ine\Oitably conservative in his \'i(.\\"s, conventional in his manners J and simplifics tl1,' problem of patriotism to a single-eyed obedience. \Vhen he took over the business of raising the first le\.ies for the present war he was confrunted wit h the problem of the English Trades Unions-lhe \"('ry _ last problem in the \vorld which onc could rea ()nably expect such a Inan to understanù. r\nd yét h(' did undt'rstand it; he \\'as perhaps the only pt'rson in the í. class \\Tho did. If it be hard to explain 25 ::.. L 1 E-4 v ()) 7ñ LlB.RA , . , a c\> . LORD KITCHENER. to he richer classes in England, it is almost impossible to explain to any classes in any other country, because the Eng)ish situation is largely unique. There is the same difficulty as we have already found in describing ho\v vast and even violent a transformation scene the gro\vth of the great army appeared; it has been almost impossible to describe it to the chief conscript" countries, which take a great arm y for gran ted. The key to the paraliel proble m of the Trades Unions is simply this-that England is the only European country that is practically industrial and nothing else. Trades Unions can never play sllch a part in countries where the masses live on the land; such masses always have some status and support-yes, even if they are serfs. 'fhe status of the English workman is not in the earth; it is, so to speak, in the air-in a scaffolding of artificial abstractions, a frame\vork of rules and . · rights, of verbal bargdins or pdper resolutions. If he loses this, he becomes nothing so human or hOlnely as a slave. Rather he becomes a \\'ild beast, a sort of wandering vermin with no place in the state at all. It \vould be necessary to explain this, and a great deal more ,,'hich cannot possibly be explained here, before \ve coulll Ineasure the cnonnity of the enigma facing the 1 ritish of11<:ial who had to propose to the English tht> practical suspension of the 1"rades Unions. To this Inust be added the fdct that the Unions, already national institutions, had just lately been in a fernlent with ne\\" and violent doctrines: Syndicalists had in\'oked thcIl1 as the future seats of governnlent j 26 LORD KITCHENER. historical speculators had seen in them the return to the great Christian Guilds of the Middle Ages; a more revolutionary Press had appeared to champion them; gigantic strikes had split the country in every direction. Anyone woulp have said that under these circumstances the very virtues and attainments of Kitchener would ,at least make it fairly certain that he would quarrel with the Trades Unions. I t soon became apparent that the one loan \vho ,vas not going to quarrel ,vith the Trades Unions \vas Kitchener. Politicians and parliatnentary leaders, sup- posed actually to be elected by the working classes, were regarded, rightly or wrongly, with implacable suspicion. The elderly and old-fashioned Anglo- Egyptian militarist, with his doctrine and discipline of the barrack-room and the drumhead court-Inartial, was never regarded by the ,yorkers \vith a shade of suspicion. They Sil11ply took him at his \vord, and the leader of the most turbulent Trades Union element paid to him after his death the sitnplest tribute in the plai est and most popular language- " He was a traight man.-" I am so antiquated as to think it a better epitaph than the fashionahle phrase about a strong Inan. SOlTIe silent inde- scribåble geniality of fairness in the Jnan once more prevailed against the possibility of passionate nlisunderstandings, as it had prevailed against the international nervousness of the atInosphere o Fashoda or the tragic border feud of the Boers_ I suspect that it lay largely in the fact that this great English!nan ,vas sufficiently English to guess one thing - missed by many 11lore 27 I () R 1) I rr ell E:'\ E R. :-;nphistic,lted people-that the English Trades C nion an ycry English. For gCtOÙ ur evil, they art' natil)I1,.I; tht'y h;l\Yc yery little in common \':ith thl' Inr)rc international SocialisI11 (.f the Conti- nent, and nothing 'whatc,.cr in COInnlon ".ith the pl'd:lI1lic SociaIisln nf Prussia. Understanding his COllntryn1cn by instinct, he did not Inake a parade of efficiency; for tIll' English dislike the synlbols of dictatorshi l ) Inuch In )r th:-tn dictatorship. They hatc thl' crowl1 and sccptre of the tyrant much lTIOre than his t yr.1.t 1 ny. They have a national tradition which allo\\'s of far too n1uch inequality s,o long as it i soft('ned with a certain c;ul1:-trarierie, and in which l'\"Cn sl1ub:; ,)nh' re/11 n Jnber the coronet of a nobIcrn1.J1 1)11 condition th'lt he shall hirnself sccrn to forget it. 'The other matter is 1l1uch 1110re important. Though the re\'t r e of \Yivaciaus, lrly tnan, it is a!most unknown in an eldcrly Inilitary rnan, If the hardening of time was felt eve.n bv the poetic and en 10tional GrJ.ttan,' it would not have been strange if the hardening h;td bet'n quite hopeless in the rigid and reticent Kitchencr. Yet it \\yas not hopeless; and the fact bec ante> the spring of much of the nati\..)}1al hope. 'The grizzled rnartinct frcnn I ndia and Egypt showcd a certain power which is in nearly all great nlell, but of \\Thich St. Paul has becotne the traditional type- the power of being a great convert as well as a great crusader. I t is the real po\\'cr of rC'-fornling an opinion, \rhich is the very opposite of that IHere formlessness \vhich \\Te call fickleness, K or is the comparison to such an exanlple as St. Paul altogether historically disproportioI1rtte; for the point upon which this '".cry tYFical Engli htnan changed his Inind ,vas a point \vhich is now the pi,"ot of the whole future and perhaps of the very existence of Christendom. For Inany such EnglishInen it Inight altnost be called the disco\yerv of ChristendonL It .I can be called with greater precision, and illùeed wit h almost cotnplete precision, the discovery of R us i;t, l'Ail 1 tary burcaucratic systeln,; everywhere ha '"t' too much tendency to \\"ork upon one idea, and there \vas a tiIne when the Inilitary and bureaucratic systeIll of the British in the East worked on the idea of the fear of l ussia. It is needlc:;s IH n' to explain that sentiment, and useless to explain it away. It ,vas partly a mere tradilion frol!! the 29 LORD KITCHENER. natuial jingoism of the Crimean \Var; it \vas par ly in itself a tribute to the epic majesty of the Russian march across m vsterious Asia to the legendary Chinese \Yall. The point here is that it existed; and \vhere" there exists such an idea in such Illilitary rulers, they very seldom alter their idea. But I