CONTENTS
| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I: | THE GREAT PERIL | [25] |
| Post-war Europe Revisited—Impoverishment and Taxation—Race Hatreds Unchanged—How War Is Begun—Vengeance Is the Lord's—The Churches and the League of Nations. | ||
| II: | EUROPE STILL ARMING | [51] |
| Marshal Foch and the Cause of the Great War—Navies for Defence—Strength of Europe's Armies—Europe More Militant Than Ever. | ||
| III: | THE ERUPTION IN THE MEDITERRANEAN | [59] |
| Dropping Hot Cinders in the Balkans—Seeing War in Pictures—Force the Arbiter of Right and Wrong—Limiting the Activities of the League—Bottling up the Adriatic. | ||
| IV: | IS THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS A SUCCESS? | [68] |
| Triumphs of the League—All Great Powers Should Be in It—America and the League—Treaty and the League—Ending the Arbitrament of the Sword. | ||
| V: | THE TREATY OF VERSAILLES AND ITS CRITICS | [81] |
| Treaty Criticised But Not Read—America and the Treaty—Labour and the Treaty—Treaty and League of Nations Interwoven. | ||
| VI: | 1922 | [95] |
| War Dance Still in the World—Ultimatum Instead of Conference—Cannes and Genoa—Enemies at Council Table—Talk of an American Loan. | ||
| VII: | WHAT IS FRANCE AFTER? | [104] |
| Clemenceau and the Rhine—Annexation and Revenge—Anglo-American Guarantee to France—Poincaré and the Rhine. | ||
| VIII: | WHAT IS FRANCE AFTER? | [116] |
| Versailles Treaty and the Rhine Frontier—Foch and the Political Frontier—American and British Pressure—Sham Republic of the Rhine. | ||
| IX: | WHAT IS FRANCE AFTER? | [130] |
| Bonar Law and Poincaré—Productive Sanctions and Reparations—Moratorium for Germany Fails—Britain Stands Aside. | ||
| X: | REPARATIONS | [136] |
| Reparations and the Treaty—Capacity to Pay—Reparations Commission Changed—America's Vacant Chair—Worthless "C" Bonds for Britain. | ||
| XI: | MR. HUGHES'S NEW HAVEN SPEECH | [147] |
| Secretary Hughes's New Haven Speech, a Timid Deliverance—Impartial Tribunal of Experts—Offer of American Help. | ||
| XII: | THE FRENCH INVASION OF THE RUHR | [156] |
| What Germany Has Paid—"In Technical Default"—Wrong Way to Make Germany Pay—Ruining German Industry—France's Secret Aim. | ||
| XIII: | LOST OPPORTUNITIES | [167] |
| French Failure in the Ruhr—Wild Oats of Reparation—The Ruhr and the League of Nations—The Bankers' Conference. | ||
| XIV: | FRENCH SCHEMES | [175] |
| Italy and the Ruhr—Iron Ore of Lorraine and German Coal Deposits—Loucheur and Hugo Stinnes—German Workmen in Bondage. | ||
| XV: | THE QUICKSAND | [183] |
| Loucheur and the Ruhr—Lack of Leader in France—Disregard of Allies—Aggression and Security—Failure of Bonar Law. | ||
| XVI: | THE FIRST GERMAN OFFER | [191] |
| Does France Seek a Settlement?—Demand for Submission in the Ruhr—German Offer Inadequate—Keeping America Out—Treaty Idea Not Followed. | ||
| XVII: | THE SECOND GERMAN NOTE | [202] |
| German Offer and the Loan to Germany—Can Berlin Assent to Invasion?—Reintroducing America—Weakening Debtors Ability to Pay. | ||
| XVIII: | THE NAPOLEONIC DREAM | [213] |
| European Mind Unhinged—What Every Frenchman Knows—Pickwick Follows Snodgrass—Germany May Collapse—Undoing the Work of Bismarck. | ||
| XIX: | IS IT PEACE? | [225] |
| Stresemann Man of Energy—Chaos Ahead for Germany—British Unemployment—France a Self-contained Country—Balfour's Note a Generous Offer. | ||
| XX: | WHAT NEXT? | [234] |
| Pen-and-ink Jousting—Tory "Diehards" and France—Poincaré and the Dove of Peace—What "Pay and Stay" Means—France's Minimum and Britain's Surrender. | ||
| XXI: | THE BRITISH DEBT TO AMERICA | [244] |
| Borrowing for Allies—British Taxpayer's Burden—Creditor Nation Now Debtor—Britain Must Pay Her Way—Her Currency Not Discredited—Inter-Allied Debts. | ||
| XXII: | INTER-ALLIED DEBTS | [252] |
| Discovery of the Middle West—Legend of British Wealth—1,400,000 Unemployed—The Balfour Note—Can Britain Afford To Be More Generous Than America? | ||
| XXIII: | THE BRITISH ELECTIONS | [264] |
| Minority Rule and Moral Authority—National Liberals at the Polls—Danger of England's Electoral System—Labour's Prospects—Warring Liberal Factions. | ||
| XXIV: | HOW DEMOCRACY WORKS | [282] |
| Growth of Britain's Electorate—Women Suffrage—New Voters Without a Party—Absentees from the Polls—Freaks of the Group System. | ||
| XXV: | POLITICAL REALITIES | [291] |
| Post-war Legislation—The Irish Cauldron—Labour and Capital—Agriculture and Industry—Socialism Courting Fascism. | ||
| XXVI: | SHOULD WE MAKE PEACE WITH RUSSIA? | [301] |
| Pre-revolutionary Russia—Corruption and Betrayal—"Shaking Hands with Murder"—If Turkey, Why Not Russia?—Need for Russia's Exports. | ||
| XXVII: | PALESTINE AND THE JEWS | [312] |
| Stupidity of Anti-Semitism—Blighting Rule of the Turk—The Jew as a Cultivator—Race Equality in Palestine—Zionist Declaration. | ||
| XXVIII: | THE TREATY OF LAUSANNE | [322] |
| Turkish Fezzes in the Air—Blow of Prestige of the West—Massacres and Misgovernment—Fertile Country a Wilderness—Had Wilson Succeeded—Lausanne a Milestone, not a Terminus. | ||
| XXIX: | THE SIGNING OF THE IRISH TREATY | [339] |
| Gladstone's Home-rule Fight—Scene in No. 10 Downing Street—Griffith and Collins—To Sign or Not to Sign—Childers, Sullen and Disappointed—Treaty a Pillar of Hope for Future. | ||
| XXX: | PROHIBITION | [350] |
| The Lesson from Russia—Britain Not Convinced—Experiments Difficult—Public Uneducated—Outlook Not Encouraging. | ||
| XXXI: | UNOFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF "OFFICIAL" INFORMATION | [361] |
| Julius Cæsar Began It—Self Defence and Secret Information—The Versailles Decision—General Rules and Special Cases. | ||
WHERE ARE WE GOING?
WHERE ARE WE GOING?