The Meaning of the War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 18 pages of information about The Meaning of the War.

The Meaning of the War eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 18 pages of information about The Meaning of the War.

Indeed, our philosopher will conclude, the machine did use itself up.  For a long time it resisted; then it bent; then it broke.  Alas! it had crushed under it a multitude of our children; and over the fate of this young life, which was so naturally and purely heroic, our tears will continue to fall.  An implacable law decrees that spirit must encounter the resistance of matter, that life cannot advance without bruising that which lives, and that great moral results are purchased by much blood and by many tears.  But this time the sacrifice was to be rich in fruit as it had been rich in beauty.  That the powers of death might be matched against life in one supreme combat, destiny had gathered them all at a single point.  And behold how death was conquered; how humanity was saved by material suffering from the moral downfall which would have been its end; while the peoples, joyful in their desolation, raised on high the song of deliverance from the depths of ruin and of grief!

THE FORCE WHICH WASTES AND THAT WHICH DOES NOT WASTE

THE FORCE WHICH WASTES AND THAT WHICH DOES NOT WASTE

The issue of the struggle is not doubtful.  Germany will succumb.  Material force and moral force, all which is sustaining her, will end by failing her, because she is living on provision she has accumulated, is spending it, and has no way of renewing it.

Of her material resources all is known.  She has money, but her credit is falling, and one does not see where she is to borrow.  She needs nitrates for her explosives, fuel for her motors, bread for her sixty-five million inhabitants, for all of which she has made provision; but the day will come when her granaries will be empty and her tanks dry.  How will she refill them?  War, as she practises it, makes frightful havoc of her warriors.  Yet here again replenishment is impossible, no aid will come from without, because an enterprise launched with the object of imposing German rule, German “culture,” German products, only interests and ever will only interest what is already German.  Such is the situation of Germany confronted by a France who is keeping her credit intact and her ports open, who is procuring herself victual and munitions as she pleases, who reinforces her armies with all that her allies bring to her support, and who can count on the ever more active sympathy of the civilized world because her cause is that of humanity itself.

Still this is only material force, the force which is seen.  What can we say of moral force, the force which is not seen, which yet matters most since it can in a certain degree make good what is lacking of the other, and without which the other is worthless?

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The Meaning of the War from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.