[524] Keynes.
[525] Checked by subsequent comparison with the published article in the Jour. of the Roy. United Service Institution, vol. lxv., No. 457, February, 1920.
[526] Cp. Psalm cxxxvi.
[527] Here is another glimpse of the agreeable dreams that fill the contemporary military mind. It is from Fuller’s recently published Tanks in the Great War. Colonel Fuller does not share that hostility to tanks characteristic of the older type of soldier. In the next war, he tells us: “Fast-moving tanks, equipped with tons of liquid gas ... will cross the frontier and obliterate every living thing in the fields and farms, the villages, and cities of the enemy’s country. Whilst life is being swept away around the frontier, fleets of aeroplanes will attack the enemy’s great industrial and governing centres. All these attacks will be made, at first, not against the enemy’s army ... but against the civil population, in order to compel it to accept the will of the attacker.”
For a good, well-balanced account of what modern war really means, see Philip Gibbs, Realities of War, already cited in two footnotes to § 8.
[528] A suggestive book here containing a good account of the drift of modern religious thought is G. W. Cooke’s Social Evolution of Religion.
[529] Compare Basil Thompson, The Fijians, a Study of the Decay of Custom; Introduction and opening chapters. This is a fine study of an ancient “heliolithic” culture breaking up under modernization.
| Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber: |
|---|
| Volume I. |
| parellel=> parallel {pg 618} |
| Justianian=> Justinian {pg 618} |
| Kaniska=> Kanishka {pg 646} |
| Volume II. |
| agressive=> aggressive {pg 503} |
| completer=> complete {pg 527} |
| Arisona=> Arizona {index} |
| Vimeiro=> Vimiero {index} |