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the new machiavelli-第25章

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The prevailing force in my undergraduate days was not Socialism but 

Kiplingism。  Our set was quite exceptional in its socialistic 

professions。  And we were all; you must understand; very distinctly 

Imperialists also; and professed a vivid sense of the 〃White Man's 

Burden。〃



It is a little difficult now to get back to the feelings of that 

period; Kipling has since been so mercilessly and exhaustively 

mocked; criticised and torn to shreds;never was a man so violently 

exalted and then; himself assisting; so relentlessly called down。  

But in the middle nineties this spectacled and moustached little 

figure with its heavy chin and its general effect of vehement 

gesticulation; its wild shouts of boyish enthusiasm for effective 

force; its lyric delight in the sounds and colours; in the very 

odours of empire; its wonderful discovery of machinery and cotton 

waste and the under officer and the engineer; and 〃shop〃 as a poetic 

dialect; became almost a national symbol。  He got hold of us 

wonderfully; he filled us with tinkling and haunting quotations; he 

stirred Britten and myself to futile imitations; he coloured the 

very idiom of our conversation。  He rose to his climax with his 

〃Recessional;〃 while I was still an undergraduate。



What did he give me exactly?



He helped to broaden my geographical sense immensely; and he 

provided phrases for just that desire for discipline and devotion 

and organised effort the Socialism of our time failed to express; 

that the current socialist movement still fails; I think; to 

express。  The sort of thing that follows; for example; tore 

something out of my inmost nature and gave it a shape; and I took it 

back from him shaped and let much of the rest of him; the tumult and 

the bullying; the hysteria and the impatience; the incoherence and 

inconsistency; go uncriticised for the sake of it:





〃Keep ye the Lawbe swift in all obedience

Clear the land of evil; drive the road and bridge the ford;

Make ye sure to each his own

That he reap where he hath sown;

By the peace among Our peoples let men know we serve the Lord!〃





And then again; and for all our later criticism; this sticks in my 

mind; sticks there now as quintessential wisdom:





The 'eathen in 'is blindness bows down to wood an' stone;

'E don't obey no orders unless they is 'is own;

'E keeps 'is side…arms awful: 'e leaves 'em all about

An' then comes up the regiment an' pokes the 'eathen out。

     All along o' dirtiness; all along o' mess;

     All along o' doin' things rather…more…or…less;

     All along of abby…nay; kul; an' hazar…ho;

     Mind you keep your rifle an' yourself jus' so!〃





It is after all a secondary matter that Kipling; not having been 

born and brought up in Bromstead and Penge; and the war in South 

Africa being yet in the womb of time; could quite honestly entertain 

the now remarkable delusion that England had her side…arms at that 

time kept anything but 〃awful。〃  He learnt better; and we all learnt 

with him in the dark years of exasperating and humiliating struggle 

that followed; and I do not see that we fellow learners are 

justified in turning resentfully upon him for a common ignorance and 

assumption。 。 。 。



South Africa seems always painted on the back cloth of my Cambridge 

memories。  How immense those disasters seemed at the time; disasters 

our facile English world has long since contrived in any edifying or 

profitable sense to forget!  How we thrilled to the shouting 

newspaper sellers as the first false flush of victory gave place to 

the realisation of defeat。  Far away there our army showed itself 

human; mortal and human in the sight of all the world; the pleasant 

officers we had imagined would change to wonderful heroes at the 

first crackling of rifles; remained the pleasant; rather incompetent 

men they had always been; failing to imagine; failing to plan and 

co…operate; failing to grip。  And the common soldiers; too; they 

were just what our streets and country…side had made them; no sudden 

magic came out of the war bugles for them。  Neither splendid nor 

disgraceful were they;just ill…trained and fairly plucky and 

wonderfully good…tempered menpaying for it。  And how it lowered 

our vitality all that first winter to hear of Nicholson's Nek; and 

then presently close upon one another; to realise the bloody waste 

of Magersfontein; the shattering retreat from Stormberg; Colenso

Colenso; that blundering battle; with White; as it seemed; in 

Ladysmith near the point of surrender! and so through the long 

unfolding catalogue of bleak disillusionments; of aching; 

unconcealed anxiety lest worse should follow。  To advance upon your 

enemy singing about his lack of cleanliness and method went out of 

fashion altogether!  The dirty retrogressive Boer vanished from our 

scheme of illusion。



All through my middle Cambridge period; the guns boomed and the 

rifles crackled away there on the veldt; and the horsemen rode and 

the tale of accidents and blundering went on。  Men; mules; horses; 

stores and money poured into South Africa; and the convalescent 

wounded streamed home。  I see it in my memory as if I had looked at 

it through a window instead of through the pages of the illustrated 

papers; I recall as if I had been there the wide open spaces; the 

ragged hillsides; the open order attacks of helmeted men in khaki; 

the scarce visible smoke of the guns; the wrecked trains in great 

lonely places; the burnt isolated farms; and at last the blockhouses 

and the fences of barbed wire uncoiling and spreading for endless 

miles across the desert; netting the elusive enemy until at last; 

though he broke the meshes again and again; we had him in the toils。  

If one's attention strayed in the lecture…room it wandered to those 

battle…fields。



And that imagined panorama of war unfolds to an accompaniment of 

yelling newsboys in the narrow old Cambridge streets; of the flicker 

of papers hastily bought and torn open in the twilight; of the 

doubtful reception of doubtful victories; and the insensate 

rejoicings at last that seemed to some of us more shameful than 

defeats。 。 。 。







7





A book that stands out among these memories; that stimulated me 

immensely so that I forced it upon my companions; half in the spirit 

of propaganda and half to test it by their comments; was Meredith's 

ONE OF OUR CONQUERORS。  It is one of the books that have made me。  

In that I got a supplement and corrective of Kipling。  It was the 

first detached and adverse criticism of the Englishman I had ever 

encountered。  It must have been published already nine or ten years 

when I read it。  The country had paid no heed to it; had gone on to 

the expensive lessons of the War because of the dull aversion our 

people feel for all such intimations; and so I could read it as a 

book justified。  The war endorsed its every word for me; underlined 

each warning indication of the gigantic dangers that gathered 

against our system across the narrow seas。  It discovered Europe to 

me; as watching and critical。



But while I could respond to all its criticisms of my country's 

intellectual indolence; of my country's want of training and 

discipline and moral courage; I remember that the idea that on the 

continent there were other peoples going ahead of us; mentally alert 

while we fumbled; disciplined while we slouched; aggressive and 

preparing to bring our Imperial pride to a reckoning; was extremely 

novel and distasteful to me。  It set me worrying of nights。  It put 

all my projects for social and political reconstruction upon a new 

uncomfortable footing。  It made them no longer merely desirable but 

urgent。  Instead of pride and the love of making one might own to a 

baser motive。  Under Kipling's sway I had a little forgotten the 

continent of Europe; treated it as a mere envious echo to our own 

world…wide display。  I began now to have a disturbing sense as it 

were of busy searchlights over the horizon。 。 。 。



One consequence of the patriotic chagrin Meredith produced in me was 

an attempt to belittle his merit。  〃It isn't a good novel; anyhow;〃 

I said。



The charge I brought against it was; I remember; a lack of unity。  

It professed to be a study of the English situation in the early 

nineties; but it was all deflected; I said; and all the interest was 

confused by the story of Victor Radnor's fight with society to 

vindicate the woman he had loved and never married。  Now in the 

retrospect and with a mind full of bitter enlightenment; I can do 

Meredith justice; and admit the conflict was not only essential but 

cardinal in his picture; that the terrible inflexibility of the rich 

aunts and the still more terrible claim of Mrs。 Burman Radnor; the 

〃infernal punctilio;〃 and Dudley Sowerby's limitations; were the 

central substance of that inalert
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