That is why all Fascist writers for years past have agreed that England's
   power must be destroyed. England must be "exterminated", must be
   "annihilated", must "cease to exist". Strategically it would be possible
   for this war to end with Hitler in secure possession of Europe, and with
   the British Empire intact and British sea-power barely affected. But
   ideologically it is not possible; were Hitler to make an offer along
   those lines, it could only be treacherously, with a view to conquering
   England indirectly or renewing the attack at some more favourable moment.
   England cannot possibly be allowed to remain as a sort of funnel through
   which deadly ideas from beyond the Atlantic flow into the police states
   of Europe. And turning it round to our own point of view, we see the
   vastness of the issue before us, the all-importance of preserving our
   democracy more or less as we have known it. But to PRESERVE is always to
   EXTEND. The choice before us is not so much between victory and defeat as
   between revolution and apathy. If the thing we are fighting for is
   altogether destroyed, it will have been destroyed partly by our own act.
   It could happen that England could introduce the beginnings of Socialism,
   turn this war into a revolutionary war, and still be defeated. That is at
   any rate thinkable. But, terrible as it would be for anyone who is now
   adult, it would be far less deadly than the "compromise peace" which a
   few rich men and their hired liars are hoping for. The final ruin of
   England could only be accomplished by an English government acting under
   orders from Berlin. But that cannot happen if England has awakened
   beforehand. For in that case the defeat would be unmistakable, the
   struggle would continue, the IDEA would survive. The difference between
   going down fighting, and surrendering without a fight, is by no means a
   question of "honour" and schoolboy heroics. Hitler said once that to
   ACCEPT defeat destroys the soul of a nation. This sounds like a piece of
   claptrap, but it is strictly true. The defeat of 1870 did not lessen the
   world-influence of France. The Third Republic had more influence,
   intellectually, than the France of Napoleon III. But the sort of peace
   that Petain, Laval and Co have accepted can only be purchased by
   deliberately wiping out the national culture. The Vichy Government will
   enjoy a spurious independence only on condition that it destroys the
   distinctive marks of French culture: republicanism, secularism, respect
   for the intellect, absence of colour prejudice. We cannot be UTTERLY
   defeated if we have made our revolution beforehand. We may see German
   troops marching down Whitehall, but another process, ultimately deadly to
   the German power-dream, will have been started. The Spanish people were
   defeated, but the things they learned during those two and a half
   memorable years will one day come back upon the Spanish Fascists like a
   boomerang.
   A piece of Shakespearean bombast was much quoted at the beginning of the
   war. Even Mr Chamberlain quoted it once, if my memory does not deceive
   me:
   Come the four corners of the world in arms
   And we shall shock them: naught shall make us rue
   If England to herself do rest but true.
   It is right enough, if you interpret it rightly. But England has got to
   be true to herself. She is not being true to herself while the refugees
   who have sought our shores are penned up in concentration camps, and
   company directors work out subtle schemes to dodge their Excess Profits
   Tax. It is goodbye to the TATLER and the BYSTANDER, and farewell to the
   lady in the Rolls-Royce car. The heirs of Nelson and of Cromwell are not
   in the House of Lords. They are in the fields and the streets, in the
   factories and the armed forces, in the four-ale bar and the suburban back
   garden; and at present they are still kept under by a generation of
   ghosts. Compared with the task of bringing the real England to the
   surface, even the winning of the war, necessary though it is, is
   secondary. By revolution we become more ourselves, not less. There is no
   question of stopping short, striking a compromise, salvaging "democracy",
   standing still. Nothing ever stands still. We must add to our heritage or
   lose it, we must grow greater or grow less, we must go forward or
   backward. I believe in England, and I believe that we shall go forward.
   WELLS, HITLER AND THE WORLD STATE (1941)
   "In March or April, say the wiseacres, there is to be a stupendous
   knockout blow at Britain...What Hitler has to do it with, I cannot
   imagine. His ebbing and dispersed military resources are now probably
   not so very much greater than the Italians' before they were put to the
   test in Greece and Africa."
   "The German air power has been largely spent. It is behind the times
   and its first-rate men are mostly dead or disheartened or worn out."
   "In 1914 the Hohenzollern army was the best in the world. Behind that
   screaming little defective in Berlin there is nothing of the sort...
   Yet our military 'experts' discuss the waiting phantom. In their
   imaginations it is perfect in its equipment and invincible in
   discipline. Sometimes it is to strike a decisive 'blow' through Spain
   and North Africa and on, or march through the Balkans, march from the
   Danube to Ankara, to Persia, to India, or 'crush Russia', or 'pour' over
   the Brenner into Italy. The weeks pass and the phantom does none of
   these things--for one excellent reason. It does not exist to that
   extent. Most of such inadequate guns and munitions as it possessed must
   have been taken away from it and fooled away in Hitler's silly feints to
   invade Britain. And its raw jerry-built discipline is wilting under the
   creeping realisation that the Blitzkrieg is spent, and the war is coming
   home to roost."
   These quotations are not taken from the CAVALRY QUARTERLY but from a
   series of newspaper articles by Mr H.G. Wells, written at the beginning
   of this year and now reprinted in a book entitled GUIDE TO THE NEW
   WORLD. Since they were written, the German army has overrun the Balkans
   and reconquered Cyrenaica, it can march through Turkey or Spain at such
   time as may suit it, and it has undertaken the invasion of Russia. How
   that campaign will turn out I do not know, but it is worth noticing that
   the German general staff, whose opinion is probably worth something,
   would not have begun it if they had not felt fairly certain of finishing
   it within three months. So much for the idea that the German army is a
   bogey, its equipment inadequate, its morale breaking down, etc etc.
   What has Wells to set against the "screaming little defective in
   Berlin"? The usual rigmarole about a World State, plus the Sankey
   Declaration, which is an attempted definition of fundamental human
   rights, of anti-totalitarian tendency. Except that he is now especially
   concerned with federal world control of air power, it is the same gospel
   as he has been preaching almost without interruption for the past forty
   years, always with an air of angry surprise at the human beings who can
   fail to grasp anything so obvio 
					     					 			us.
   What is the use of saying that we need federal world control of the air?
   The whole question is how we are to get it. What is the use of pointing
   out that a World State is desirable? What matters is that not one of the
   five great military powers would think of submitting to such a thing.
   All sensible men for decades past have been substantially in agreement
   with what Mr Wells says; but the sensible men have no power and, in too
   many cases, no disposition to sacrifice themselves. Hitler is a criminal
   lunatic, and Hitler has an army of millions of men, aeroplanes in
   thousands, tanks in tens of thousands. For his sake a great nation has
   been willing to overwork itself for six years and then to fight for two
   years more, whereas for the commonsense, essentially hedonistic
   world-view which Mr Wells puts forward, hardly a human creature is
   willing to shed a pint of blood. Before you can even talk of world
   reconstruction, or even of peace, you have got to eliminate Hitler,
   which means bringing into being a dynamic not necessarily the same as
   that of the Nazis, but probably quite as unacceptable to "enlightened"
   and hedonistic people. What has kept England on its feet during the past
   year? In part, no doubt, some vague idea about a better future, but
   chiefly the atavistic emotion of patriotism, the ingrained feeling of
   the English-speaking peoples that they are superior to foreigners. For
   the last twenty years the main object of English left-wing intellectuals
   has been to break this feeling down, and if they had succeeded, we might
   be watching the SS men patrolling the London streets at this moment.
   Similarly, why are the Russians fighting like tigers against the German
   invasion? In part, perhaps, for some half-remembered ideal of Utopian
   Socialism, but chiefly in defence of Holy Russia (the "sacred soil of
   the Fatherland", etc etc), which Stalin has revived in an only slightly
   altered form. The energy that actually shapes the world springs from
   emotions--racial pride, leader-worship, religious belief, love of
   war--which liberal intellectuals mechanically write off as anachronisms,
   and which they have usually destroyed so completely in themselves as to
   have lost all power of action.
   The people who say that Hitler is Antichrist, or alternatively, the Holy
   Ghost, are nearer an understanding of the truth than the intellectuals
   who for ten dreadful years have kept it up that he is merely a figure
   out of comic opera, not worth taking seriously. All that this idea
   really reflects is the sheltered conditions of English life. The Left
   Book Club was at bottom a product of Scotland Yard, just as the Peace
   Pledge Union is a product of the navy. One development of the last ten
   years has been the appearance of the "political book", a sort of
   enlarged pamphlet combining history with political criticism, as an
   important literary form. But the best writers in this line--Trotsky,
   Rauschning, Rosenberg, Silone, Borkenau, Koestler and others--have none
   of them been Englishmen, and nearly all of them have been renegades from
   one or other extremist party, who have seen totalitarianism at close
   quarters and known the meaning of exile and persecution. Only in the
   English-speaking countries was it fashionable to believe, right up to the
   outbreak of war, that Hitler was an unimportant lunatic and the German
   tanks made of cardboard. Mr Wells, it will be seen from the quotations I
   have given above, believes something of the kind still. I do not suppose
   that either the bombs or the German campaign in Greece have altered his
   opinion. A lifelong habit of thought stands between him and an
   understanding of Hitler's power.
   Mr Wells, like Dickens, belongs to the non-military middle class. The
   thunder of guns, the jingle of spurs, the catch in the throat when the
   old flag goes by, leave him manifestly cold. He has an invincible hatred
   of the fighting, hunting, swashbuckling side of life, symbolised in all
   his early books by a violent propaganda against horses. The principal
   villain of his OUTLINE OF HISTORY is the military adventurer, Napoleon.
   If one looks through nearly any book that he has written in the last
   forty years one finds the same idea constantly recurring: the supposed
   antithesis between the man of science who is working towards a planned
   World State and the reactionary who is trying to restore a disorderly
   past. In novels, Utopias, essays, films, pamphlets, the antithesis crops
   up, always more or less the same. On the one side science, order,
   progress, internationalism, aeroplanes, steel, concrete, hygiene: on the
   other side war, nationalism, religion, monarchy, peasants, Greek
   professors, poets, horses. History as he sees it is a series of
   victories won by the scientific man over the romantic man. Now, he is
   probably right in assuming that a "reasonable", planned form of society,
   with scientists rather than witch-doctors in control, will prevail
   sooner or later, but that is a different matter from assuming that it is
   just round the corner. There survives somewhere or other an interesting
   controversy which took place between Wells and Churchill at the time of
   the Russian Revolution. Wells accuses Churchill of not really believing
   his own propaganda about the Bolsheviks being monsters dripping with
   blood etc, but of merely fearing that they were going to introduce an
   era of common sense and scientific control, in which flag-wavers like
   Churchill himself would have no place. Churchill's estimate of the
   Bolsheviks, however, was nearer the mark than Wells's. The early
   Bolsheviks may have been angels or demons, according as one chooses to
   regard them, but at any rate they were not sensible men. They were not
   introducing a Wellsian Utopia but a Rule of the Saints, which, like the
   English Rule of the Saints, was a military despotism enlivened by
   witchcraft trials. The same misconception reappears in an inverted form
   in Wells's attitude to the Nazis. Hitler is all the war-lords and
   witch doctors in history rolled into one. Therefore, argues Wells, he is
   an absurdity, a ghost from the past, a creature doomed to disappear
   almost immediately. But unfortunately the equation of science with
   common sense does not really hold good. The aeroplane, which was looked
   forward to as a civilising influence but in practice has hardly been
   used except for dropping bombs, is the symbol of that fact. Modern
   Germany is far more scientific than England, and far more barbarous.
   Much of what Wells has imagined and worked for is physically there in
   Nazi Germany. The order, the planning, the State encouragement of
   science, the steel, the concrete, the aeroplanes, are all there, but all
   in the service of ideas appropriate to the Stone Age. Science is
   fighting on the side of superstition. But obviously it is impossible for
   Wells to accept this. It would contradict the world-view on which his
   own works are based. The war-lords and the witch-doctors MUST fail, the
   common-sense World State, as seen by a nineteenth-century liberal whose
   heart does not leap at the sound of bugles, MUST triumph 
					     					 			. Treachery and
   defeatism apart, Hitler CANNOT be a danger. That he should finally win
   would be an impossible reversal of history, like a Jacobite restoration.
   But is it not a sort of parricide for a person of my age (thirty-eight)
   to find fault with H.G. Wells? Thinking people who were born about the
   beginning of this century are in some sense Wells's own creation. How
   much influence any mere writer has, and especially a "popular" writer
   whose work takes effect quickly, is questionable, but I doubt whether
   anyone who was writing books between 1900 and 1920, at any rate in the
   English language, influenced the young so much. The minds of all of us,
   and therefore the physical world, would be perceptibly different if
   Wells had never existed. Only, just the singleness of mind, the one-sided
   imagination that made him seem like an inspired prophet in the Edwardian
   age, make him a shallow, inadequate thinker now. When Wells was young,
   the antithesis between science and reaction was not false. Society was
   ruled by narrow-minded, profoundly incurious people, predatory
   businessmen, dull squires, bishops, politicians who could quote
   Horace but had never heard of algebra. Science was faintly disreputable
   and religious belief obligatory. Traditionalism, stupidity, snobbishness,
   patriotism, superstition and love of war seemed to be all on the
   same side; there was need of someone who could state the opposite
   point of view. Back in the nineteen-hundreds it was a wonderful
   experience for a boy to discover H.G. Wells. There you were, in a world
   of pedants, clergymen and golfers, with your future employers exhorting
   you to "get on or get out", your parents systematically warping your
   sexual life, and your dull-witted schoolmasters sniggering over their
   Latin tags; and here was this wonderful man who could tell you about the
   inhabitants of the planets and the bottom of the sea, and who knew that
   the future was not going to be what respectable people imagined. A
   decade or so before aeroplanes were technically feasible Wells knew that
   within a little while men would be able to fly. He knew that because he
   himself wanted to be able to fly, and therefore felt sure that research
   in that direction would continue. On the other hand, even when I was a
   little boy, at a time when the Wright brothers had actually lifted their
   machine off the ground for fifty-nine seconds, the generally accepted
   opinion was that if God had meant us to fly He would have given us
   wings. Up to 1914 Wells was in the main a true prophet. In physical
   details his vision of the new world has been fulfilled to a surprising
   extent.
   But because he belonged to the nineteenth century and to a non-military
   nation and class, he could not grasp the tremendous strength of the old
   world which was symbolised in his mind by fox-hunting Tories. He was, and
   still is, quite incapable of understanding that nationalism, religious
   bigotry and feudal loyalty are far more powerful forces than what he
   himself would describe as sanity. Creatures out of the Dark Ages have
   come marching into the present, and if they are ghosts they are at any
   rate ghosts which need a strong magic to lay them. The people who have
   shown the best understanding of Fascism are either those who have
   suffered under it or those who have a Fascist streak in themselves. A
   crude book like THE IRON HEEL, written nearly thirty years ago, is a
   truer prophecy of the future than either BRAVE NEW WORLD or THE SHAPE OF
   THINGS TO COME. If one had to choose among Wells's own contemporaries a
   writer who could stand towards him as a corrective, one might choose
   Kipling, who was not deaf to the evil voices of power and military
   "glory". Kipling would have understood the appeal of Hitler, or for that
   matter of Stalin, whatever his attitude towards them might be. Wells is
   too sane to understand the modern world. The succession of