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the research magnificent-第80部分

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。  He believed that the evil and horror of war was becoming more and more tremendous with every decade; and that the free play of national prejudice and that stupid filching ambitiousness that seems to be inseparable from monarchy; were bound to precipitate catastrophe; unless a real international aristocracy could be brought into being to prevent it。 In the drawer full of papers labelled 〃Politics;〃 White found a paper called 〃The Metal Beast。〃  It showed that for a time Benham had been greatly obsessed by the thought of the armaments that were in those days piling up in every country in Europe。  He had gone to Essen; and at Essen he had met a German who had boasted of Zeppelins and the great guns that were presently to smash the effete British fleet and open the Imperial way to London。 〃I could not sleep;〃 he wrote; 〃on account of this man and his talk and the streak of hatred in his talk。  He distressed me not because he seemed exceptional; but because he seemed ordinary。  I realized that he was more human than I was; and that only killing and killing could come out of such humanity。  I thought of the great ugly guns I had seen; and of the still greater guns he had talked about; and how gloatingly he thought of the destruction they could do。  I felt as I used to feel about that infernal stallion that had killed a man with its teeth and feet; a despairing fear; a sense of monstrosity in life。  And this creature who had so disturbed me was only a beastly snuffy little man in an ill…fitting frock…coat; who laid his knife and fork by their tips on the edge of his plate; and picked his teeth with gusto and breathed into my face as he talked to me。  The commoneside。  The monster of steel and iron carries Kaiser and Germany and all Europe captive。  It has persuaded them to mount upon its back and now they must follow the logic of its path。  Whither? 。 。 。  Only kingship will ever master that beast of steel which has got loose into the world。  Nothing but the sense of unconquerable kingship in us all will ever dare withstand it。 。 。 。  Men must be kingly aristocrats it isn't MAY be now; it is MUST beor; these confederated metals; these things of chemistry and metallurgy; these explosives and mechanisms; will trample the blood and life out of our race into mere red…streaked froth and filth。 。 。 。〃 Then he turned to the question of this metallic beast's release。 Would it ever be given blood? 〃Men of my generation have been brought up in this threat of a great war that never comes; for forty years we have had it; so that it is with a note of incredulity that one tells oneself; 〃After all this war may happen。  But can it happen?〃 He proceeded to speculate upon the probability whether a great war would ever devastate western Europe again; and it was very evident to White that he wanted very much to persuade himself against that idea。  It was too disagreeable for him to think it probable。  The paper was dated 1910。  It was in October; 1914; that White; who was still working upon the laborious uncertain account of Benham's life and thought he has recently published; read what Benham had written。 Benham concluded that the common…sense of the world would hold up this danger until reason could get 〃to the head of things。〃 〃There are already mighty forces in Germany;〃 Benham wrote; 〃that will struggle very powerfully to avoid a war。  And these forces increase。  Behind the coarseness and the threatenings; the melodrama and the display of the vulgarer sort there arises a great and noble people。 。 。 。  I have talked with Germans of the better kind。 。 。 。 You cannot have a whole nation of Christophes。 。 。 。  There also the true knighthood discovers itself。 。 。 。  I do not believe this war will overtake us。〃 〃WELL!〃 said White。 〃I must go back to Germany and understand Germany better;〃 the notes went on。 But other things were to hold Benham back from that resolve。  Other things were to hold many men back from similar resolves until it was too late for them。 。 。 。 〃It is preposterous that these monstrous dangers should lower over Europe; because a certain threatening vanity has crept into the blood of a people; because a few crude ideas go inadequately controlled。 。 。 。  Does no one see what that metallic beast will do if they once let it loose?  It will trample cities; it will devour nations。 。 。 。〃 White read this on the 9th of October; 1914。  One crumpled evening paper at his feet proclaimed in startled headlines: 〃Rain of Incendiary Shells。  Antwerp Ablaze。〃  Another declared untruthfully but impressively: 〃Six Zeppelins drop Bombs over the Doomed City。〃 He had bought all the evening papers; and had read and re…read them and turned up maps and worried over strategic problems for which he had no data at allas every one did at that timebefore he was able to go on with Benham's manuscripts。 These pacific reassurances seemed to White's war…troubled mind like finding a flattened and faded flower; a girl's love token; between the pages of some torn and scorched and blood…stained book picked out from a heap of loot after rapine and murder had had their fill。 。 。 。 〃How can we ever begin over again?〃 said White; and sat for a long time staring gloomily into the fire; forgetting forgetting; forgetting too that men who are tired and weary die; and that new men are born to succeed them。 。 。 。 〃We have to begin over again;〃 said White at last; and took up Benham's papers where he had laid them down。 。 。 。

9

One considerable section of Benham's treatment of the Fourth Limitation was devoted to what he called the Prejudices of Social Position。  This section alone was manifestly expanding into a large treatise upon the psychology of economic organization。 。 。 。 It was only very slowly that he had come to realize the important part played by economic and class hostilities in the disordering of human affairs。  This was a very natural result of his peculiar social circumstances。  Most people born to wealth and ease take the established industrial system as the natural method in human affairs; it is only very reluctantly and by real feats of sympathy and disinterestedness that they can be brought to realize that it is natural only in the sense that it has grown up and come about; and necessary only because nobody is strong and clever enough to rearrange it。  Their experience of it is a satisfactory experience。 On the other hand; the better off one is; the wider is one's outlook and the more alert one is to see the risks and dangers of international dissensions。  Travel and talk to foreigners open one's eyes to aggressive possibilities; history and its warnings become conceivable。  It is in the nature of things that socialists and labour parties should minimize international obligations and necessities; and equally so that autocracies and aristocracies and plutocracies should be negligent of and impatient about social reform。 But Benham did come to realize this broader conflict between worker and director; between poor man and possessor; between resentful humanity and enterprise; between unwilling toil and unearned opportunity。  It is a far profounder and subtler conflict than any other in human affairs。  〃I can foresee a time;〃 he wrote; 〃when the greater natio
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