from mere rust, like an old coat of armour. But
in the case of the Prussian tyranny, if it be tyranny
at all, it is the whole point of its claim that it
is not antiquated, but just going to begin, like the
showman. Prussia has a whole thriving factory
of thumbscrews, a whole humming workshop of wheels
and racks, of the newest and neatest pattern, with
which to win back Europe to the Reaction ...
infandum
renovare dolorem. And if we wish to test the
truth of this, it can be done by the same method which
showed us that Russia, if her race or religion could
sometimes make her an invader and an oppressor, could
also be made an emancipator and a knight errant.
In the same way, if the Russian institutions are old-fashioned,
they honestly exhibit the good as well as the bad
that can be found in old-fashioned things. In
their police system they have an inequality which
is against our ideas of law. But in their commune
system they have an equality that is older than law
itself. Even when they flogged each other like
barbarians, they called upon each other by their Christian
names like children. At their worst they retained
all the best of a rude society. At their best,
they are simply good, like good children or good nuns.
But in Prussia all that is best in the civilised machinery
is put at the service of all that is worst in the barbaric
mind. Here again the Prussian has no accidental
merits, none of those lucky survivals, none of those
late repentances, which make the patchwork glory of
Russia. Here all is sharpened to a point and pointed
to a purpose and that purpose, if words and acts have
any meaning at all, is the destruction of liberty
throughout the world.
IV
THE ESCAPE OF FOLLY
In considering the Prussian point of view we have
been considering what seems to be mainly a mental
limitation: a kind of knot in the brain.
Towards the problem of Slav population, of English
colonisation, of French armies and reinforcements,
it shows the same strange philosophic sulks. So
far as I can follow it, it seems to amount to saying
“It is very wrong that you should be superior
to me, because I am superior to you.” The
spokesmen of this system seem to have a curious capacity
for concentrating this entanglement or contradiction,
sometimes into a single paragraph, or even a single
sentence. I have already referred to the German
Emperor’s celebrated suggestion that in order
to avert the peril of Hunnishness we should all become
Huns. A much stronger instance is his more recent
order to his troops touching the war in Northern France.
As most people know, his words ran “It is my
Royal and Imperial command that you concentrate your
energies, for the immediate present, upon one single
purpose, and that is that you address all your skill
and all the valour of my soldiers to exterminate first
the treacherous English and to walk over General French’s
contemptible little Army.” The rudeness