mode of government in dealing with Barbarians, provided
the end be their improvement”; or this from
Shaw’s preface to the Home Rule edition of “John
Bull’s Other Island”: “I am
prepared to Steam-roll Tibet if Tibet persist in refusing
me my international rights.” Now, it is
within our right to enforce a principle within our
own territory, but to force it on other people, called
for the occasion “barbarians,” is quite
another thing. Shaw may get wrathful, and genuinely
so, over the Denshawai horror, and expose it nakedly
and vividly as he did in his first edition of “John
Bull’s Other Island,” Preface for Politicians;
but the aggressors are undisturbed as long as he gives
them pretexts with his “steam-roll Tibet”
phrase. And when he says further that he is prepared
to co-operate with France, Italy, Russia, Germany and
England in Morocco, Tripoli, Siberia and Africa to
civilise these places, not only are his denunciations
of Denshawai horrors of no avail—except
to draw tears after the event—but he cannot
co-operate in the civilising process without practising
the cruelty; and perhaps in their privacy the empire-makers
may smile when Shaw writes of Empire with evident
earnestness as “a name that every man who has
ever felt the sacredness of his own native soil to
him, and thus learnt to regard that feeling in other
men as something holy and inviolable, spits out of
his mouth with enormous contempt.” When,
further, in his “Representative Government”
Mill tells the English people—a thing about
which Shaw has no illusions—that they are
“the power which of all in existence best understands
liberty, and, whatever may have been its errors in
the past, has attained to more of conscience and moral
principle in its dealing with foreigners than any
other great nation seems either to conceive as possible
or recognise as desirable”—they not
only go forward to civilise the barbarians by Denshawai
horrors, but they do so unctuously in the true Macaulayan
style. We feel a natural wrath at all this, not
unmingled with amusement and amazement. In studying
the question we read much that rouses anger and contempt,
but one must laugh out heartily in coming to this
gem of Mill’s, uttered with all Mill’s
solemnity: “Place-hunting is a form of
ambition to which the English, considered nationally,
are almost strangers.” When the sincerest
expression of the English mind can produce this we
need to have our wits about us; and when, as just
now, so much nonsense, and dangerous nonsense, is being
poured abroad about the Empire, we need to pause, carefully
consider all these things, and be on our guard.