north-west, they say; and most of the bridges and large areas of
dock. Westminster, which held most of the government offices,
suffered badly from the small bomb that destroyed the Parliament,
there are very few traces of the old
thoroughfare of Whitehall or
the Government region thereabout, but there are plentiful
drawings to scale of its buildings, and the great hole in the
east of London scarcely matters. That was a poor district and
very like the north and the south. . . . It will be possible to
reconstruct most of it. . . . It is wanted. Already it becomes
difficult to recall the old time--even for us who saw it.'
'It seems very distant to me,' said the girl.
'It was an unwholesome world,' reflected Karenin. 'I seem to
remember everybody about my
childhood as if they were ill. They
were ill. They were sick with
confusion. Everybody was anxious
about money and everybody was doing uncongenial things. They ate
a queer
mixture of foods, either too much or too little, and at
odd hours. One sees how ill they were by their advertisements.
All this new region of London they are
opening up now is
plastered with advertisements of pills. Everybody must have been
taking pills. In one of the hotel rooms in the Strand they have
found the
luggage of a lady covered up by falling rubble and
unburnt, and she was equipped with nine different sorts of pill
and tabloid. The pill-carrying age followed the weapon-carrying
age. They are
equally strange to us. People's skins must have
been in a vile state. Very few people were
properly washed; they
carried the filth of months on their clothes. All the clothes
they wore were old clothes; our way of pulping our clothes again
after a week or so of wear would have seemed
fantastic to them.
Their clothing hardly bears thinking about. And the congestion
of them! Everybody was jostling against everybody in those awful
towns. In an
uproar. People were run over and crushed by the
hundred; every year in London the cars and omnibuses alone killed
or disabled twenty thousand people, in Paris it was worse; people
used to fall dead for want of air in the
crowded ways. The
irritation of London,
internal and
external, must have been
maddening. It was a maddened world. It is like thinking of a
sick child. One has the same effect of
feverish urgencies and
acute irrational disappointments.
'All history,' he said, 'is a record of a
childhood....
'And yet not exactly a
childhood. There is something clean and
keen about even a sick child--and something
touching. But so much
of the old times makes one angry. So much they did seems grossly
stupid,
obstinately, outrageously
stupid, which is the very
opposite to being fresh and young.
'I was
reading only the other day about Bismarck, that hero of
nineteenth-century
politics, that sequel to Napoleon, that god of
blood and iron. And he was just a beery,
obstinate, dull man.
Indeed, that is what he was, the commonest, coarsest man, who
ever became great. I looked at his portraits, a heavy, almost
froggish face, with projecting eyes and a thick moustache to hide
a poor mouth. He aimed at nothing but Germany, Germany
emphasised, indurated, enlarged; Germany and his class in
Germany; beyond that he had no ideas, he was
inaccessible to
ideas; his mind never rose for a recorded
instant above a
bumpkin's
elaboratecunning. And he was the most
influential man
in the world, in the whole world, no man ever left so deep a mark
on it, because everywhere there were gross men to resonate to the
heavy notes he emitted. He
trampled on ten thousand lovely
things, and a kind of
malice in these louts made it pleasant to
them to see him
trample. No--he was no child; the dull, national
aggressiveness he stood for, no childishness. Childhood is
promise. He was survival.
'All Europe offered its children to him, it sacrificed education,
art, happiness and all its hopes of future
welfare to follow the
clatter of his sabre. The
monstrousworship of that old fool's
"blood and iron" passed all round the earth. Until the
atomicbombs burnt our way to freedom again. . . .'
'One thinks of him now as one thinks of the megatherium,' said
one of the young men.
'From first to last mankind made three million big guns and a
hundred thousand
complicated great ships for no other purpose but
war.'
'Were there no sane men in those days,' asked the young man, 'to
stand against that idolatry?'
'In a state of despair,' said Edith Haydon.
'He is so far off--and there are men alive still who were alive
when Bismarck died!' . . . said the young man....
Section 5
'And yet it may be I am
unjust to Bismarck,' said Karenin,
following his own thoughts. 'You see, men belong to their own
age; we stand upon a common stock of thought and we fancy we
stand upon the ground. I met a pleasant man the other day, a
Maori, whose great-grandfather was a
cannibal. It chanced he had
a daguerreotype of the old
sinner, and the two were
marvellously
alike. One felt that a little juggling with time and either
might have been the other. People are cruel and
stupid in a
stupid age who might be gentle and splendid in a
gracious one.
The world also has its moods. Think of the
mental food of
Bismarck's
childhood; the humiliations of Napoleon's victories,
the
crowded, crowning
victory of the Battle of the Nations....
Everybody in those days, wise or foolish, believed that the
division of the world under a
multitude of governments was
inevitable, and that it was going on for thousands of years more.
It WAS
inevitable until it was impossible. Any one who had denied
that inevitability
publicly would have been counted--oh! a SILLY
fellow. Old Bismarck was only just a little--forcible, on the
lines of the accepted ideas. That is all. He thought that since
there had to be national governments he would make one that was
strong at home and invincible
abroad. Because he had fed with a
kind of rough
appetite upon what we can see now were very
stupidideas, that does not make him a
stupid man. We've had advantages;
we've had unity and collectivism blasted into our brains. Where
should we be now but for the grace of science? I should have been
an embittered, spiteful, downtrodden member of the Russian
Intelligenza, a
conspirator, a prisoner, or an
assassin. You, my
dear, would have been breaking dingy windows as a suffragette.'
'NEVER,' said Edith stoutly....
For a time the talk broke into
humorous personalities, and the
young people gibed at each other across the smiling old
administrator, and then
presently one of the young
scientific men
gave things a new turn. He spoke like one who was full to the
brim.
'You know, sir, I've a fancy--it is hard to prove such
things--that civilisation was very near
disaster when the
atomicbombs came banging into it, that if there had been no Holsten and
no induced radio-activity, the world would have--smashed--much as
it did. Only instead of its being a smash that opened a way to
better things, it might have been a smash without a
recovery. It
is part of my business to understand
economics, and from that
point of view the century before Holsten was just a hundred
years' crescendo of waste. Only the
extreme individualism of that
period, only its utter want of any
collective understanding or
purpose can explain that waste. Mankind used up
material--insanely. They had got through three-quarters of all
the coal in the
planet, they had used up most of the oil, they
had swept away their forests, and they were
running short of tin
and
copper. Their wheat areas were getting weary and populous,
and many of the big towns had so lowered the water level of their
available hills that they suffered a
drought every summer. The
whole
system was rushing towards
bankruptcy. And they were