PAGE
[Introduction]3
[I]
["Deutschland Über Alles"]31
[German Humility]31
[The Gentle German]49
[The Great Misunderstood]55
[Kultur]57
[Der deutsche Gott]69
[The Chosen People and its Mission]78
["Other Peoples"]84
[Christ]88
[Die deutsche Wahrheit]94
[German Insight and Foresight]98
[German Freedom]100
[The German Language]101
[II]
[German Ambitions]107
[Expansion in Europe]107
[Expansion beyond Europe]118
[Weltmacht]122
[III]
[War-Worship]133
[The Lust of Battle]133
[War and Religion]135
[War and Ethics]137
[War and Biology]140
[War and Kultur]143
[Blood and Iron]145
[War Necessary to Germany]149
[War Need not be Defensive]153
[Contempt for Peace]154
[Militarism Exultant]159
[IV]
[Ruthlessness]169
[V]
[Machiavelism]185
[Mendacity and Faithlessness]185
[Might is Right]194
[VI]
[England, France, and Belgium—Especially England]199
[The False Islanders]199
[Hymns of Hate]201
[British Vices—Hypocrisy, Envy, and Greed]208
[British Vices—Cowardice and Laziness]215
[Treachery to Germanism]218
[Sir Edward Grey and his Colleagues]220
[Britain's Great Illusion]223
[Comic Relief]228
[France]233
[Belgium]235
[Index of Books and Pamphlets from which quotations are made]243
[Index of Authors]255

INTRODUCTION


INTRODUCTION[ToC]

In accordance with classic precedent, this anthology ought to have consisted of "1,001 Gems of German Thought," I have been content with half that number, not—heaven knows!—for any lack of material, but simply for lack of time and energy to make the ingathering. After all, enough is as good as a feast, and I think that the evidence as to the dominant characteristics of German mentality is tolerably complete as it stands.

Though I hope it is fairly representative, the collection does not pretend to be systematic. I have cast no sweeping drag-net, but have simply dipped almost at random into the wide ocean of German thought. Some of my most precious "finds" I have come upon by pure chance; and by pure chance, too, I have no doubt missed many others. Some books that I should have liked to examine have not been accessible to me; and there must be many of which I have never heard. On the other hand, the list of books from which my gems have been selected by no means indicates the extent of my reading—or skimming. I have gone through many books and pamphlets which furnished no quotable extracts, but none that diverged in tone from the rest, or marred the majestic unison of German self-laudation and contempt for the rest of the world. I have read of (but not seen) a book by one F.W. Förster which is said to contain a protest against theoretic war-worship, and even a mild defence of England. How very mild it is we may judge from this sentence: "England has given us not only men like Lord Grey, scoundrels and hypocrites, who have this war upon their conscience; it has also given us the Salvation Army," etc., etc.

One voice the reader may be surprised to miss from the great chorus—the voice of William the Second. He is unrepresented—save in one passing remark (No. 136)—for two reasons. In the first place, his most striking utterance—the injunction to his soldiers to emulate the Huns of Attila—though almost certainly genuine, is not official, and could not be quoted without discussion.[1] In the second place, to confess the truth, I shrank from the intolerable monotony of reading his Majesty's speeches—that endless array of platitudes in full uniform—on the chance of discovering one or two quotable gems.