EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1919 STQRY OF A SOUL'S ADVENTURE WITH THE WORDS, THOUGHTS AND THE DEEDS OF WOODROW WILSON 4 J DREAMS OF "POLITICAL TRIP TO THE MOON" AT PARIS PEACEPARLEY Thing Called "Bunk" a Big Factor in League of Nations Conference President "'Takes the Limit Off the Game of Faith" "THREE MEN AROUND A TABLE CAUGHT IN A WHIRL OF MUDDLED THINKING" "Move to End All Wars Didn't Create Anything" "Thing Couldn't Be Done; This Wasn't the Millennium." "Hope of the World in Young Men" By CLINTON V. GILBERT Staff Corrfipnndfnt of His Ermine Public Lrilgrr CcpvrlBht, tlli, bu tilt: I'ulilto Ledaer Company Mr. Gilbert represented the Eve ning 1'ublio Ledger at 'nrt! timing the Peace Conference and rallied daily reports of the deliberation nf the representatives of the Allird nafioni. Be returned to the United States uith President Wilson, Ki'ncc then he has been in intimate tourh with the progress of the struggle in "Washing ton over ratification of the treaty. rpHlS article is confessional. I seek tu " justify tho fnitli flint is in mc re garding the league of nntions. To do so may help some others who nre also troubled with the common doubts. I accept that league with "reservations" of mi own. perhaps not merely "interpretative rcscivutions," but "amendatory reservations," for I nm pot sure that, it jou will have the pa tience to follow me, T shall not he found to have struck out a figurative article X and placed mj fnitli not hi the league itself nt all, but in some thing thnt will use the league tlic peo- ) pie. Rod. the power not ourselves that I makes things muddle along which A Matthew Arnold suw in his clegnnt classical way. I begin my confession in Paris, in the press room nt 4 Place do la Concorde, where homesick men daily met and re solved Unit whatever the world might henceforth be forced to endure it should never suffer from another Peace Con ference not even if there hnd to be a league of nations to m event it! Wil liam Allen White was there. He was looking depressed. It takes a great deal to make William Allen look de pressed, but It was the month of Mnj. perhaps, and men had seen the worst. Their souls had been tried bv six months of nence conferring. I was t', feeling depressed nnd doubtless looking ? tft? for 1 lnnk ilenresm-d much more easily than does AVillium Allen, He tried to avoid mc. but unsuccessfully; V am bigger nnd quicker than he. 'William Allen." I said it was not necessary to enter into explanations. At pTfu wrtn iihi'firR mnrplv resumed- "DWflf'lViillnm All-n. .In votl'-" "I still doL'Vhe replied weakly. "At least," ha.arldcd. "I think I do." "I do not!" 1 retorted, for a mo ment almost with a note of triumph nt thinking that I hnd reached a point in conviction one stage in advance of his. "I am through!" He did not reply. "Wlllinm Allen," I pursued, "be honest. I shall. I shall set jou an example. I have fallen for every bit of bunk there has been in the world since I was old enough for people (o think it worth while to offer bunk to me." "So have I." he said more cheerfully. "I can't get on without it. I don't even pretend to myself that I can swear off and thnt I only take bunk now nnd then, for company's sake, nndran stop whenever I want to. I can't "I fell," I continued nlentlessl. "for direct primuries and wrote power ful articles to prove how much better Uic world would be when the people .ruled the elections. William Allen, they don't rule the elections. The old gang rules the elections. It is the same old ithlpg." "Fell" for Direct Elections "I know, I know." he said. "It was disappointing, nut it is not quite ns tou saV. Now in Kansas " , "William Allen," I cut him olf. "I ffell for the direct election of senators, to Improve the Senate. And now for a Judgment upon me I have to spend my Lfe In Washington, much of the time In the Senate press gallery." He opened bis mouth as if to say something. "There was your man, Thompson, the pride and joy of the direct elector of Kansas," I went on severely. "I know," he said, and like the .carpenter he shed a bitter tear. "I fell for Charles Evans Hughes of hirsute idealism, when he was governor of New York and I wrote many power ful articles to prove that he could save the world." William Allen stirred as if in de fens, but I drowned out his words, "and flnallv." I continued, "I fell for Woodrow Wilson, and, hardest of all, I fell for his league of nations. And now I am through 1 Never again!" Just at that moment n brilliant Amer ican journalist entered the room. Wil liam Allen White's eyes rested upon him a moment and he turned to mc smll- .Ing! "There's Blank. He's never fnllen for anything in bis whole life. His mind sever stoops to folly. He sees clean through every bit of buuk there is. He's never known the joy- of being f fooled. Ha can't. No. I am not In t- T - -.it... 11. .... n.wl I IDrOUfin Jl III fcVIUS M6iH uu umi know it. Bunk springs eternal in the 1 human breast. It Is falling for bunk that keeps me young. I know this league of nations looks bad from here nrt rlzht now. But then you can't tell , what the people may do with It, I can tee how they may yet fool the fellers ' vho have fooled us with It. And you, iroii are not through. A man who has fallen for bunk so long as yon have can t stop now. its a name, its nis suture. And I wouldn't change mine," in- went An with a dance at the brll- Z 1anf faurnulUt who r-erer suffered from illusions, "with the clear-eyed mad who always knows to a certainty that tho j future will be no better than the past." T I hope it Is not an Indiscretion for me to record this conversation. At any rate I did not rouse stenograpmc notes of It and retail It to the Senate foreign relations committee. And if William Allen White wants to disavow It his J word Is as good as mine, and probably j better. peeds of Woodrow Wilson At this rolnt William Allen White disappears from tho story, to its dis advantage, and it becomes a plulu con fasofrm of- faith, n. simple- record of my 6w xierlenfB -with the thing we called "bBjk' bt which we never even in i'arii pirir licu'd to be "bunk," the story of n soul's ndvcntme with the words nnd deeds of Woodiow WIRon. There are ninny souls which hnve hnd this adventure with these words and deeds, nnd this plain recital may nssit some of them; which is the only good reason there over Is for writ ing the nutobiogrnphv of nnv fnitli. The autobiography of this fnitli is the nuto bioginphy of every other faith ns Wil liam Allen White nnd I In effect ngreed during our little tnlk in the pressroom tit 4 Plnee de In Concorde of the faith in direct primaries, of the faith in the direct election of senators, of the faith In ilemocrncy Itself, perhaps if nny of us were old enough to remember the extrnvngant expectations. iustifviug the right and left killing of disbelievers in it upon the guillotine, thnt were enter tained regarding the new freedom, equality nnd fraternity thnt it was bringing into the world, nnd it will he the ntttobiograph of the coming "democratization of industry," which Mr. WiNon nnd most of mankind nre tnlking nbout now. There is n time when theie is nothing so wonderful thnt J on won't believe it of the new hope of the human race. And there is also the time when you get .lour William Allen AVhlte up ngiiinst n wnll, and share confidences, telling how man times ou hnve fallen for "bunk" nnd how this Inst "bunk" is the worst of nil, nnd how jou are through for good nnd all. And nt neither time nre you nil where nenrri the truth than at the other! There is always the "perhaps," which Mr. White said so well, that the people will take the thing Hint has been created In hand and fool the "fellers" that have just boon fooling sou. And that "per haps" was all the hope there ever was In it really nnvwav. You exaggerated thnt perhaps Into n tremendous faith. You forgot Hint It wns nuh a perhnps, bucked up it mny he by the ver gen eral conviction thnt su h was the way the process of time worked out, nnd the thought thnt you weie the privileged spectator nt the final miracle when the promise of the earth, the hope that is alwiis in men's hearts, was in the full ness of cars to be realized. Capacity of Men to Forget I suppose that the was ot pi ogress nro ntu-nK creased bl this eapacllj of nen to forget experience in their -nl ind believe utterly In something new. If there were not men who could snj to ach other what William Allen White .Hid 1 said to e.ieh other in the press oom n t I'm is, if the mujoiit of men ,vere like thnt brilliant journalist who could preserve his skepticism unmoved through no matter what emotional crisis, nnd no nintter whnt tremendous birth of new hopes, the world would nut Kct anywhere nnd life itself would not 'm much fun. Hut it Is not so. One of the wise provisions of nature is that most ot us fall readily for what in our moments of swearing oil wc call "bunk," our hearts prepared for It b. events nnd by n carefull organized movement led by n persuasive leader. Without this cupacit of mankind the Inertia of beliefs nnd social states could not be overcome. The race would itntid still. Hut "bunk" takes a lot out of ou. These gicnt responses of i whole community, n whole nation, a whole world, in the recent instance, h appeals of faith in better things nre ex hausting. You pass through the huge crisis that is necessary to overcome the Inertia of organized thinking, nnd on look afterward at the small apparent result of all tin cost in the way of faith nnd enthusiasm. You are de pressed. There is u deep reaction Stirred All Mankind The most tremendous faith that has been aroused since the Crusades was the faith Mr. Wilsou aroused b his plea in the midst of n war which do stroved 10.000,000 men that this war should end all wnr, thnt men should . orgnnic the whole earth for nil time against war. He stirred ull mankind And now thnt we see the thiug, parti realized, and perceive that we have just a new institution bearing a striking re semblance to other institutions of the past for tho same purpose which failed nnd went their way, and now that wc fuce the old, old experience, namely, that though the institution is new the men who control It nre the snme old men the same bosses sit around the same table in the snme bnck room s before direct primnries and that these same old men nre the men who brought down upon tho world the trouble in the past, nnd thnt they show surprising the suine selfishness nud lack of vision as before, and facing this old, old ex perience ivd realize that the institution has no necessary virtue in itself, but for Its hopeful operation depends on the men in charge of It. we are depressed. excessively, unreasonably dojected. The emotions thnt we nave gone through have taken too much out of us to fnce even u partial disillusionment calmly. We want to confess, and misery loviug company, we want to take some one else who is probably in the same stute ot mind, some William Alien wnite, apart and say, "Hoy, it is bunk, the worst bunk ot all but, believe, me, this is tho last time." In what I have just been writing I have spoken of what "jou" thought and what "you" felt and how "you" re sponded to the world-wide emotions of tho crusade for an organization that would bring about the brotherhood of man and end all war. nnd I have done so on Purpose, although, this is the BlUljr, UUI, UIJIUI, UV u. Uljr ., my belief and of bow my emotions ear ned me away in mat woroy tempest. I have done so because your thoughts were responsible in a way for my thoughts, and your emotions con tributed to my emotions and because we -were carried away together. Every great movement strong enough to overcome the inertia of mental habits and stir the depths of faith is a con tagion. The spirit of a mob has been studied and it is known how each man in the' mob catches fire from every dthtr man, When scientists hays sufficiently explored the psychology of the mob, they will pass on to that much wider but kindred field, the psychology ot cru sades, the ps.vcliology of the rapid spread of world beliefs, the psychology of things like tho direct primaries re form, tho league of nations agitation, the l.ihor movement, or whatever the latest thing is, they will find thnt whnt "jou" think controls whnt "I" think, thnt my emotions vibrate In response to n universal vibration of emotions; thnt I, ordiiinrilv critical and sanclv skenti- eal, hnve become extravagantly hopeful because "jou" are extraviigantly hope ful ; that 1 lose the power to see clenrlj because "you"' hnve, nil of you," lost the power to see clearly. They will find a mob, a divinely mad mob, swept nlong by thnt mad thing, unity of pur pose, units of feeling, and unity of something which for the moment is mis taken for thought. It Is n unity not often achieved, perhaps fortunately for the human race, for as 1 hnve snid be fore, it takes much out of" jou. Hut while it lasts it is n tremendous force, an irresistible inspiration. And the In vestigators will ulwnjs find some one at the head the mob always has n leader uttering large Inspiring phrnscH vvhidi he may believe for the moment, himself catried away by the spirit lie has conjured up, phrases like "all men aie bom free nnd equnl" ; "llbertj, equality nnd fraternity"; not to ven ture upon more reient shibboleths still chin ged with deep feeling. What Happened to .Minor Hubert Minor, the cartoonist, a radi cal if theie ever was one, was caught in the Russian whiilwiuil and sacked to I'ettogind. lie turned up iu I'm is during the pence conference, disil lusioned like many another at that gathering, only for another cause. "Why." said he to mc, "it's not so different in Russia politically from whnt it is iinjwheie else. You can't take the words of l.enlne nnd Tiotskj litcrnllj. A lot of what they say is bunk. They talk to keep their own fel lows going!'' lie wns disappointed, jou see. l'or n radical, stirred to the, depths, whnt happened in Hussiii turned out not to be the real thing. And certainly ninny of the things Charles r.vnns Hughes said as governoi of New York about direct piininrlcs nnd what the would do to th" bosses turned out to be whnt William Allen White and I in our depiessioii nt Paris called "bunk." Words used to "keep his fellows going," part of the exaggeration nnd self-deception without which no movement would ever irullj get stnrtcd. Now ul Hie height of the league of nnlii ns agitation what indeed was it thnt 1 expected, thnt )ou expected, that .vour emotioii'il exaltation made an iiitlele of fnitli with me and my emo tional exnltntlou made an article of faith with ou. and the emotional exultation of both of us innde, I suspect, nil urticle of Increased faith with Wood row Wilson? People, radical people, talk of Woodrow Wilson's betrayal of them. It Is Just ns fair to talk of their belrajnl of Woodrow Wilson. Each misled the other by the mob spirit for lack of better name that possessed us all. Whnt wns it wc expected in our moment of highest cxpectaucj V Well, It is n little hard to define at this distnncc of time nnd nt this lowered mental temperature whnt we did expect, so thnt we can saj just how far short we hnve toine of realising our expec tation Whnt we renlly expected wns a sud den perfection of mankind, achieved in ii result of the war and through the medium of fine phrases, which for ever save the world. Hut we did not believe our expectations in that way at thut time. If we had we would have re- lueed them to nonsen-e nud let all of the intense feeling out of the movement. "(Aiding of All War" One of the definite tilings wns the ending of nil wnr and the organization of the wot Id s ns to make nil war forever after impossible. Thnt is n pretty large definite thing. Considir whnt it means to make people believe u thing like that. All our beliefs are in a certain scale We believe now thnt it will be possible to tly nround the earth because men have nlrcadv flown across the Atlantic ocean. We used nnlv a short time ngo not to believe it. We don't believe it possible to 11 to Mars, for nothing has ever made the transit from thnt planet to this. If some one does so it will then become quite easily possible to believe that man will H to Jupiter or Saturn or to the uttermost bounds of space, for that mutter Since beliefs are relative, vvlien Mr. Wilson planted In mens minds the belief that there would he no more war anil that the world would bo so organized that men everywhere would Iho ever after In peace, lie set up a new standard of credence. He took the limit off the game of faith. Helieving thut, sou did not I did not neasure suggested impossibilities by old tandards, bj the old foot rule of ex perience, but by the .vurdstick of faith ind h.v the standard of a world in which ull men were brothers nud war wns in outworn game of perished d.v nasties. Here are some of the suggested tliiugs: That there would exist that this orgunizntiou of Mr. Wilsou's would bu a sort of United Mates ot the world. This belief involved the fallacy of tho international superstate with all the responsibilities of reconcil ing races and religions, of obtaining' nationality of adopting fair bases ot representation, and n dozen others. Hut it was au extremely vital fallacy. It was not meiely a popular fallacy. It wns not merely my fallacy and your fnllacy. The French, tiiat cleverest thinking, of all races, persisted in it right up till the time the League of Nntions was adopted without a super state, and they may attach a icserva t Ion in fuvor of one to their aiceptnnce of the German treaty. Once jour scale of beliefs has been radically changed by the unquestioning acceptance of the Idea thut all war was at end nnd men organized in perfect International har mony, you wcro not I was not at nny rate crlUcul of tho idea of a super state. Mn in further excusing some of these beliefs later in this article I shall show how the idea of u super state was built up, "authoritatively." Perfect State of Future . Here was another suggested thing: That in this democracy of all nations, the United States of the world, thcro would bu n lessened International eco nomic competition. Naturally the larger organization would follow the lines of the smaller, and one could not thluk of turlff walls between New York and Pennsylvania. This was Inference from point three of the fourteen points, and one easily made by n mind whose stand ard of credence had been upset by the - I(I'hou? "".tfES insertion into it ot tire giant concrp- l,f. .,..,.,l l .r. !,.,, Nor was I aloue in this Inference. The Republicans us a party thought that point turee meant mat tncre snouia ne no more tariffs and they made it a cam paign issue in the last congressional election. Senator Mnrtiu, tho President's lead er ou the Senate floor, did not know whether in this perfect state of the fu ture there would bo tariffs or not. No more did Senator Hitchcock, an ex ceedingly able Democrat, who has since succeeded to the leadership of bis party in tne upper couse. But they did vnow REASONABLE HOPE FOR THE FUTURE "I don't think Mr. Wilson so much got us luto n world combination as lie got tho world combination into which we almost inevitably were forced to enter made fnlrly respectable one presenting reasonable hopes for tho future, one thnt substituted for the pure rule of might n sort of rudimentary Inter national justice, not the perfect tiling, the 'impartial justice' he talked about, but still sonic more justice Uian would otherwise hnve been there." that some oulte hmnnn Aincrirnnn with certnln business interests thnt might be indecently exnosed to fnreien rntnncti- tlon weie not taking a peifcct view of tne simntion nnd did want tnriirs. These lenctlonnrie.s were nil going to vote the Republican ticket. So Mr. Martin nnd Mr. Hltdicock both wrote to the Presi dent quite modestly nnd nsked him what point three did mean anyhow ; in the Perfect future would there be nny tar iffs; a question something like the ques tion about mnriinges in heaven. The answer wns thnt there would be; the (list words which Indicated thnt some thing of the present was going to cnirj over intd the perfect time to come. Now one more suggested or inferred thing. It will be the Inst, for this is going to up nn nrticle nnd not n boolf I refer to the "magnanimous pence" thnt wc were going to mnke with (ier- mnny. Of course, In n world out of which wnr had disappeared and wheic selfishness hnd been diminished nnd the brotherhood of ninti hnd been lenlized. nnturnlly ou hnd to treat the defeated enemy 1 ke nn erring brother. Probably he must sit nt the pence table nnd help write tlu' peace himself I And bearing on this hope there wns again the parallel the deadly parallel of the United Stntes. This coming International orgnnizntiou. with such adaptations ns a superheated imnglnn tlon would see wcro necesary, would be the United States of the World. Re member how we set nn example to nil mankind in letting the South nfter the Civil Wnr hack into the Union without punishment of nny Kind! The very thing! Apparent! the trick nnd I use the word without nn evil intent of setting n big movement going is to implant one new big belief into men's hearts like the belief in n world so oignnircd as to make wnr imiwssiblo nnd thus change the believers' stnndird (f credence. I'vi n the idea of treating (iermanv as the South hnd been treated bv the North did not present difficul ties to the imagination in those dajs. We niav have thought that we should have trouble to get Uurope to go thnt far on the innil of brotherhood with us. hut we did not reject the idea, nt least ns an niin of our President, on the giourid of its being preposterous. Wnit hefoie ou exelnim out ngninst this. It is now several months since our whole standard of beliefs ranged nlongside the big belief in the wnrless world. Now I will give von a light on the origin of such beliefs or suggestions as. this last, Piesident Wi'son made n speech in New Ymk on September 27, 101S, on the occasion of tho opening of the fourth Iiibeity loan, in whiih he said the price of peace "is Impartial justice in every item of the settlement, no matter whose interest Is crossed; nnd not on impartial justice, but also the satisfaction of the several peoples whose foi tunes are dealt with. The impartial justice meted out must in volve no discrimination between those to whom wo wish to he just and those to whom wo do not wish to be just." Rending Under Illusions Rend now in the light of whet hap pened iu Paris those word do not seem to mean much; no words do. So iitanv words have been snid and so miiiiv ac tions done, nnd there Is so much dis pute nbout irconcillug the two thnt we hnve grown stale upon phrases. Hut in September, 101R, ou could not read them iu the light of Paris; oti rend tliein rather under the illusions of n powerful emotion in which nil jour standards of belief had been upset by making .Jim believe in something bigger Hum nn'v tiling ever experienced before, a sort of political trip to the moon. At lenst I did, I am not sure that Presi dent Wilson did not spenk them iu that spirit of exaltation. The mob influences Its leader Just as the leader influences the mob. The thing Is reciprocal. I had u cm ions ex perience with respect to those very words, or apparently to me, with ye spect to them, which throws n great light ou tho exalted faithiu the league of nations with which this countrj , or part of it, went to Paris, a faith that wns bound to be defeated because im possible. I nm the Washington corre spondent of the Kve.vino Priu.ir tirjDOKit. Ten days or n fortnight nfter these words were snid I was talking with a man who was the President's in timate associate iu the conduct of the war. He wns ns likely to know nt that time what the President was thinking upon themes like these ns would have been Secretary McAdoo, Secretary Haki;r. Mr. Hoover, .Tudgo Biundeis, Mr. Tumulty, Mr. Vance MeCornilek, Mr. Rarueh, Secretary Daniels, Mr. House. General March, Secretary Lan sing. Mr. George Creel. I mention nt random the men, big and little, who had then frequent access to the White House. Now. remember tho words. "No discrimination between those to whom we wish to be just nnd those to whom wo do not wish to be just." Those to whom wc do not wish to be lust were clearly the Germans. This Intimate as sociate of the President's said to me suddenly, npropos of nothing in partic ular, "Our stundard of treating Ger many in mnkiug peace with her must be our treatment of the South nfter the Civil AVar. Wilson must be free from any kind of Kuropean entanglements in order to enforce that standard of jus tice nnd humanity upon the Allies. We shall all hnve to live together after the war iu the way tho North has had to live with the South since the wnr." This man wns not a sentimentalist. He was not pro-German, far from it. There was no special reason why his mind should have run upon this particular problem or running upon It should have reached thin particular conclusion. I thought then, remembering the speech just quoted, that he wns re flecting the way the mind of the Presi dent wns operating at the moment. I am still inclined to think so. I who was here In Washington took this con ception of peace making seriously. He who was much nearer the President took It mucn raore serio.usly. I cir culated it. I don't know how the coun try took it. Perhnps the seriousness with which It wns taken varied In versely 'as the square of the distance from the White House. I think bo. Hut it is easy to sec from UiIh instance how un exaggerated idea spread and per haps to see where -it centered. Idea ot International Superstate Take another example : Whore did the idea of a United States of the World originate, the idea of an international superstate? Tho President wuh speak ing ou Independence Duy nt Washing ton's tomb. He said: "We take our cuo 'from Uiem (Washington and his associates) do wo not? Wo intend what they intended. We, here In America, believe our participation In the war to be only a fruitage of what they planted. There must now be settled once for nil what was settled for Amer ica iu the great age upon whose lu SplraUou we draw today," I read those words coldly today ioOHing lor mtie meaning in them and I find little. Time has wrought Its changes, Jtut I read them when uttered looking for, much meaning lu them under the sway of the movement nnd I found much mean ing lu them. There were many such words in the mnny speeches implying n united de mocracy of the world, tho application abroad of the American parallel. Again the men close to the President, re sponsible with him for the conduct of the wnr nnd for the plnns of the future, talked strangely In the language of the great ijossesslon of that time which now seems so remotn less than two enrs Inter. More than one man of the sort mentioned above, nt the elbow of the President and ccrtninlv in con tnct with his thought, explained Amer ica's big navy program, persisted iu after tho conclusion of the armistice, on the ground that America, possessing a great coast line to defend, would he called upon to make n lurge contri bution In ships of war to the league uf nations. And in this case the strength of the idea did not enrry in veisel.v ns the squnre of the distnncc from the Piesident, It was as strong at Paris ns it wns nt one time In the President's own circle nt Washington. The Uicnch understood the league to be a sunerstute nnd foucht for it. And two da.v before the President's ndliesion to the Smuts plan, a leading American lnwjer at Paris, one of whose duties wns supposed to be the drafting of n plan for a lengue of nntions, said thnt he nnd his legul associates were doing nothing because they could not find out whether the President favored a superstate or not! Now, of course, American experts at 1'oris were in u bud way and had difficulty in nsccrtnin ing what the President wished. It is not conceivable,, however, that the President himself did not know whether he favored u superstate or not nt the time tliis expert wns unculUhtciicd. Hut the noinl is that nn nble lavvjer, having access ccrtninlv to Colonel House anil Secretnr.v Lunsnig. two dn.vs before tbe American position was announced, took the superstate seriousl. When cabinet members nt Washington just befoie the Peace Conference nnd legu experts nt thut confluence were caught iu this whirl of muddled thinking there is excuse for me anil for jou if )ou weie one of the nddle btnincd, too. For it wns muddled thinking. One moment's clear thought wouii hnve shown that n supeistute was im possible ; that it would have required constitutional amendments in thb country thnt would never hnve gom through; thnt it would have demnnde surrenders ot sovcreignt) every when thnt no nation certninl.v iu this ng would consider lor a moment. Hut tin point is thnt clear thinking was im possible. We were caught in a move nient. We hnd come to believe one tiling so big thnt nothing seemed im possible. Resides theie wns the Gicnt Wnr, tho most tiemendous thing in history. Kver.vbody expected some thing tremendous to come out of it. Just now we aie surprised that so lit tle has come out of it. Probably wi my deceiving ourselves just ns much nt 'his moment ns we wcro two years ago ut iu the opposite direction. The wnr nil the movement destrojed the critica' uicillt. The mnile us nil cieduloiis Thej Hindi- us accept promises nnd even meie phrases without stopping to ana l.vze them, without asking their prnc ticabilitj. Freedom of the Sens Piolmbly Mr. Wilson thought almost as loosely as the rest of us. To get the whole world going with jou jou hnve to let jourself go, too. And theie is the case of tho freedom of the seas. It was one of the fourteen points. (J rent Hritnin hnd reserved the right to refuse its support of that point. When Mr. Wilson announced his decision to go abroad he told Democratic senators that he would go primarily to fight for the freedom of the seas. Yet nt Paris the issue disappeared utterly. Mr. Wilson himself explained its dis appearance thus: Well, that's a joke on me. You see 1 thought before I enmo here thut there wns such nn issue as the freedom of tin seas. Rut I find that there is none. I fulled to think the thing out. You see it is this way: When there is a Icaguo of nntions there can bo no neutrals. And when there are no neutrals there can he no one who is interested in the free dom of the seas, the question only aiis ing in case of wur." The explanation seems to explain. At least we must ac cept it.. Hut it shows by his own con fession that .Mr. Wilson fulled to think out his own program. What he took for one of his, biggest Issues was no issue at all! Well, no matter whose fault it was, whether it wnb Mr. Wilson's fault or our own fault, oc the fault of the men who surrounded Mr. Wilsou nnd who misunderstood him and contributed to muddying public thinking, whether ef fect ot the leader on the mob and of tho mbb on the leader, we went, tbe whole world popularly speaking, went to Paris in an absurdly expectant mood. I went there in that mood. Everj'bodj- was inevitably doomed to disappointment. The thing simply could not be dono. This was not the millen nium, It was the same old wicked world gathered together, seeking selfish advantage nnd In many enscs 'forced to be selfish by sheer disaster inevitably ahead, which looked as If it would sure lv befall if Mr. Wilson's plan of not discriminating between those to whom we wished to be just und those to whom we did not wish to be just should be carried out. It was a sinking ship, snve-himself-who-can situation, in which the man to whom we did not wish to be just had little chance of sentimental consideration. I includo Mr. Wilson n a share of the blame as ono possibly at fault be cause he confessed to unclear thinking on the freedom of the seas. And because the unclear thinking of those close to him. nbout the superstate and about treating Germany like tho South sug gests, though, of course, it does not prove, further Unclear thinking on bis part. And because, beyond a doubt, he thought unclearly about the famous secret treaties, or thought about them not at all, believing himself sufficiently In his own notion of tho changed spirit of the world to conclude that the mere publication of those treaties by Uie Russian revolutionists had been enough to destroy them, . At any rale the denunciation of those treaties was ono key to the remaking of the world, and the President failed to secure their denunciation in tbe arml stlco conferenco which preceded the Pence Conference, He failed to ask for It, There was where old diplomacy won as far as It has won, and so far as I can remember no one In this country remarked upon it at the time. The existence of tho treaties was well known, but we had talked ourself Into tbe un critical notion that mere publicity had destroved them, that u breath from the golden uge to come naa wltnercd them In our consciousness they were a nothing, In Mr. Wilson's conscious ness they were evidently ns nothing. I suspect lie wns a victim of the popular psychology he had created ns ti neces sary part of his movement. At nny rnte this victory of old diplomacy passed by unnoticed. Disillusionment Comes 1 went to Paris to the Teaco Con ference ns a newspnper correspondent. Ily this much my experience differed from the average. My disillusionment wns direct and speedy. Yours came through rending the news dispntches, moro siowlj Aery soon old diplomacy wus noticed. A subtle something per vaded tho atmosphere, which showed thnt the breath of tho golden ngo had Withered notlllnir. I nnd l-vnrv AmnrWn observer was conscious that something neiu tne uuropcans together their common experiences, their common be liefs, their secret treaties, their dif ferent point of view. A Frenchman oiicu explained it to mc by saying, "We nro a very old people and experience has made its skeptical. You arc n very yOUUg IlCOnle nnd full of mnfldenr-r. mill optimism of youth, it Is hard for us to understand each other." And the trench had taken trouble to re-enforec their skepticism with n very thorough and iicver-faillug understanding witli the English. The first sharply disillusioning thing nt Paris was M. Clcmenceau's speech, nt the end of December. .Mr. Wilson wns traveling in England, receiving every indication that the people of the whole country were with him. M. Clemenccau evidently did not like the development, knowing well how Lloyd George veers and shifts In rcspouso to public opinion. The belief ut Paris is that M. Clemenccau hml nrennrnl him. self for Mr. Wilson's cominir In 1'nrls by reaching n hard and fast understam lug with the English premier for mu tual support of ccrtnin alms. M. Clem enceau spoke sharply in the Inidst of .Mr. Wilson's triumphal tour through Kugland, evidently to remind Lloyd George that he wus bo.und by ccrtnin promises to himself. Ho snid, with chnrncteristic frankness, that he did not believe in a lengue of nations, but did believe in tho old-fashioned balance of power j that what he wanted was an al liance of the victorious countries nud thnt this wns what he would work for. I remember the shock I felt when I rend M. Clcmenceau's speech, 'iWhat blasphemy," I thought, "that this old unregeucrnte, who has outlived his use fulness and who docs not realize the new age tivcn now when it is ahead- here, should utter Such outworn doctrine." And then with Ameiicun confidence, I ndded "What folly!" It wns, how ever, the first little jnr my fnitli got iu Europe. The wicked still flourished, nlid had not been cut down, not eVcr iu their old age. ISrltish Journalist's View The das- before I had been in Man "hester where I met that wonderful old nan, Mr. Scott, the editor of the Man chester Guardian. He is a friend of Lloyd George, but nut nn indiscrimiu ting one. The Hritish premier's reputa tion was somewhat disquieting; so I isked Mr. Scott about the Hritish (Me ntion to the Pence Conference, where it stood upon 'the league of nations. "Lloyd Georga is for the league with out a doubt,' he said. "You can count upon him. Hut remember, he never thinks un idea out or understands its 'ogicnl implications nnd lie is perfectly capable of doing things utterly iucou dstent with his general conviction. On tho other hand, Loyd Robert Cecil, like all the Cecils, is n religious man, and the lengue is almost n religion with him. With Mr. Halfour, too, it is prac tically the same thing." Au extremely accurate mini sis of the delegation. It was u cleverly chosen delegation. Lord Robert Cecil, the idenlist, made Mr. Wilson perfectly nt home with it. Mr. Halfour, too, iu a less de giee. Lord Robert wns one of the lemarkable men of the conference. He was, you might sny, the point of con tact with America. When any Hritisher talked to the Americun press it was usually Loid Robert. He could talk of the league of nations more heartily Ihun Wilsou himself. Moreover, he wus convincing. You felt here was one man you could rely upon, oue in whom was no guile. You sensed, us Mr. Scott said, his religion, his tremendous sin cerity. I should say he wns the most honest man in Paris. And nn American economic adviser told me, furthermore, that upon the business bide of the pence ho was the ablest of the Hritish. A rcmarkuble man. A subtly wise choice, lie made every American feel thut after all Hri tnin wns a true cousin of ours, bad our ideals, Uiat she did not belong in the European mess. It was highly impor tant that Americans ut Paris should be made to feel this. I think Lord Robert was chosen for Mr. Wilson's especial benefit. They had the sanffc ideals, spoke the same language. Prob ably 31r. BonarLaw filled a similar role with respect to tho trench. And Mr. Lloyd George was tho connecting link of the British delegation. He could face one way on the general proposition and the other on the details, as Mr. Scott had said. He could stand for the league and the secret treaties, Mr. Wilson Wanted the league. Lloyd George wuh with him on that. M. Clemenceau wanted the nlllanc- of the victors, especially of France, England and tho United States, Lloyd George was with him on that; and in the end, after ho aided Mr. Wilson obtnin his league, he threw his strength wholly and openly to France, precipitating the calling of the George Washington to Brest, took part in blocking the Mon roo Doctrlno nmendment to the league until Franco received what M. Clemen ccau wanted the alliance. France wns ncccKsnry to England. The United States was necessary to England. Eng land had men In her dclcgntion ulmed at each country. Iu the cud her rather two-faced diplomacy succeeded. The President was forced Into nn alliance, although lie had said in his New York speech ot September 27, 1018, "the' United States will enter Into no spe cial arrangements or understandings with particular nations." This French alliance and the diplomacy by which It was reached was one of the deep dlsillusionments of the conference. Three Men Around a Table An earlier disillusionment xvas the Peace Conference itself. It was most of tbe Ume tho meeting of three men around a table. Soon the idea dawned upon me that I was virtually then see ing the league itself, thut that was what the league itself would bo In actual operation, three men around a table, sometning line me meeting of the polit ical bosses that decides what the neonle shall vote at the direct primaries. I aumittca to myseit tnut l was u tool even to have expected anything eise; that nothing else wus, humuniy speak ing, practical. But still there was the regret. This was not a new thing, no matter what they called It, but a very old thing ; not democracy, but what had ulwajs existed oven though thero might bo democratic-looking Instruments for carrying into effect the decisions reached Dy me mree men in me uucuroom. Then there was tho Issue of pub licity. "Open covenants openly arrived at" meant nt first, as officially inter nreted. that lha nress should see the i. covenants after they had been arrived ' s I at.- This ..was playing fast and Idose . with promises, eyea if they were im- MOB INFLUENCES ITS CHIEF JUST AS LEADER INFLUENCES THE MOB "Many Persons Accept Promises and Even Mere Phrases Without Stopping to Analyze Tliem, Without Ashing Their Practicability" EAGERNESS FOR A NEW FUTURE LIKE RUSH FOR NEW VEIN OF PURE GOLD "Everybody Listened to the J rcmutcdMr. Wilson Listened to What His Otvn 4 Country Was Saying, Often Anxiously" practicable promises. As n matter of fact, publicity took care of itself. After the Peace Conference lost self-confidence, tho delegates ran around seeking the newspaper men to pour secrets into their enrs, thus putting up their little trial balloons to test public opinion. A few secretH were well kept, like the embarrassing French nlliancc, but im the whole there never was n gathering in which there was a free publicity nor as much pressure of public opinion. It becamo ns lenky in the end as nn exec utive session of the United Stntes Senate. Then came the mandates. It looked liko mero playing with facts to in sist that there was some vast difference between tnkiug over the German colo nies in outright ownership nnd tnking a pcipetuul mandate for them, which could be only terminated by the ac quiescence, by vote in council, of the power holding the mnndate. If you hnve a thing that cannot be taken away from you without your consent, to nil practical intents you own it. The mnnda'to meant nt most thut tho hold ing of n colony was "affected with a public interest," but one hard to in sist upon. Then the fourteen points were strangely interpreted in Mr. AVilson's nbseuce by Colonel House, his ngcnt.-lo give many Germans to Poland ; to set up a Rlicuish republic, and a Saur vnl ley settlement provided for iu the secret treaties. , To be sure, the boches were greutly modified later, but they gave a disquieting glimpse of the secict trea ties, of tho control old diplomacy hnd over a meeting supposed to belong to u new nud better cia. Shantung Settlement And tiunlly came the Slinntiing set tlement, thnt filial proof of the dom ination of the secret treaties. Nobody defends the Shantung settlement. Mr. Wilson openly deplores its necessity. Mr. Lansing sns it wns agniust the fourteen points. It completed tho dis illusionment. The secret trcnties hnd Inrgely prcvniled. The new nge had not nt rived. Hnlnnco of power diplomacy meanwhile wns busy in extorting the French alliance from Mr. Wilson in set ting up a block of Slavic stntes friendly to England and Franco between Ger many nud Russia, iu encouraging u "spontaneous" recurrence of the Rhen ish lepublic nnd in the prohibition ngainst Austria's joining Germany, a clear violation ot the self-detcimiuation of peoples. These were my main disillusioumeuts at Paris. 1, for my pilrt, now know thnt I felt them more sharply than wus reasonable because of the extrav agant expectations with which I had gono to Paris. I had not thought clear ly about what could be accomplished there because no one, except n few cold und slteptieul persons like the journal ist Mr. White pointed out at Paris, could think clearly while we were all working ourselves up to n great faith in a new and perfectly organized future. You cannot go into tilings like the league of nations coldly and with all your wits about you. It was like u gold .rush. A grent vein of ore hnd been discovered and pcqple could bee gold at every seam in the rocks, I think I have shown that Mr. Wilsou had partly lost his owu power to think clear ly on his own confession in one In stance. And I am sure thnt I hnve shown thnt Uioso about him, intimately associated with him, had lost their power to think clearly. Two tbitigs re sulted : First, I, nud I tnkc it most of you, the mere spectators to tho scene, weremnduly dejected us a con sequence, for wo expected so much more than it wns reasonnble to expect nud got rather less than we might reason nbly have expected ; nnd becond, as n consequence of his preoccupations, Mr. Wilson, our negotiator und representa tive, wns in no fit stntc of mlntl for his tnsk. Up wns too possessed with one idea to sit in ou even terms hag gling about other things with cold, cal culating bargainers liko Mr. Lloyd Georgo and M. Clemenccau. Leaders' Kara to the Ground If I had not been led to expect too much I should have known that Paris would bo what It was, exactly like other pcaco conferences, except thut It would be a llttlo moro open and u little more responsive to the public opinion. Those two would come from changed condi tions, from a more democratic world. As a matter of fact they did ; for the publicity in tho end wus remarkable. The big three finished by having their ears to the ground for all the world like the tiraidest senator or representative iu Washington. Everybody listened to the growls of tho crowd In Germany and often trembled. Mr. MVllson listened to what his own country was saving. assiduously, often anxiously. Once when Ungmnd und i ranee caught nun in difficulties and intimated an un willingness to let him have a Monroe doctrine amendment to tho league covenant being demanded in Washing ton, ho was frightened. Mr. Llojd George, on ono occasion, rushed in to Mr. Wilson when thete was an especially loud crumble from home, threw a telegram down before the President saying: "Bco what 1 urn up against!" Moreover, both he and M, Clemenceau were terribly afraid to have the specific amount of damages to uo collected from Germany named In the treaty on account of nubile opinion in their own country. If one is looking for democratic control of tho peace-making as un evidence of progress, it was there, only the people were not equal to the task. They were, not well Informed enough, either here on anroaa. There In a saying thut the people get as good u governmept as they deserve. And one can say, after Paris, that they will always get us good a peace as they deserve. Moreover, If I had not been made to think that the world lu which bargains and compromises ruled had somehow given way to a world in which per fect justice got itself done uutomutlcallv the impartial justice Mr. Wilson spoke ot thut should go to the foe whether we liked it or not-! should whether we liked it or not-I should have expected Just the kind of trading that took place at Paris, and should Groivh of Germany and Often have been fnlrly well satisfied with the result. But I should have had n right to expect our own representatives to drive better bnrgnins than they ac tually did. Wo wero mooning when Wr" Sx?t,',W ,lavo ,lad our ' !otifc ua. Jir. Wilson was so taken up with his mission that ho neglected tho simp " precaution of sotting himself free Trim tho secret treaties nt the armlstlco con- EmS" ul V8-, I tIlInk' th Ins table result of tho psjchology of the crusade Moreover, Mr. Wilson, even liberated from this exalted mental state, probably Is not tbo best bar gainer in the world. Bargaining is a trade (n Itself. And Mr. Wilson's trade Is swaying great iT.ot L1en' ove,n BWy,nK tho whole world by his words. Details aro irk some to him, ns they always aro to Inm ?f hl?, typc : R0 is th conflict of vv lis in n limited circle around a coun cil, table. And. Mr. Wilson did not bring along a good bargainer with him to nid him. rVilniml tt,, ... chief agent, nnd Colonel House is too nf .li.n'h i J'"""181- t0 impatient of details himself and too ready a com promiser to drive a hard bargain. Mr. Wilson was best at n fight in the open in which ho could enlist nil the great moral forces of humanity on his side, Colonel House wus always an influ ence, perhaps just tho sufficient in lluencc. ngainst nnv snei. rsi- Lookiug upon it then as coldly as I can at this short distance of time, Paris turned out to bo a plucu of bargaining and wo were not the best bargainers. h c got nbout CO or CO per cent of what we should have got. But docs that prove that we must never do the thing again, as Senators Borah nn'd Johnson so solemnly assure us? That is not n very sportiug way of looking at it or a very American way. It is like a man's saying becuuse his first venture in busi ness turned out u half failure that he will never try business again. Such is not thu way great business successes are miidc. most of which nre founded on the lessons of the first failure. This time, nt Paris, we were totally inex perienced. Tho next time we shall have hud experience. This timo wo fooled ourselves. The next time wc shall send better bargainers, for uo President will ever venture to dispatch such a dele gation to n great international con ference as Mr. Wilbou sent to Paris. Membership Inevitable And by the next time I mean when we are members of the league of na tions which Messrs. Borah and Johnson so much dread. For I believe that membership in it is Inevitable. The combination wus not created at Paris: it was rather named at, Paris. That was all. Tho war has narrowed the world and we can't keep out of the ruling group whether wo will or uo, or if we can we cannot escape the conse quences of its actions. Wo did not es c1u , , c"sequeuces of the actions of the bulunce.of power In Europe when we thought we were completely Jso lu ' ". Mere drawn inevitably into the wnr thnt resulted from its mis tnkes. v The grent wnr was sure to end in a combination of the victorious nations for the purpose of ruling the world, the combination would probably havs .. uu auiuucc, openiy one and so i.?mvilI..,by nam(' Iiarsh and arbitrary. Mr. w ilson succeeded in getting it call ed n league of notions and In admitting others into Its deliberations, with, rather limited powers, to be sure, than Un three or four big nations that would have made up tho alliance. He also induced tho combination to adopt a pact which, in effect, is a ielf-denylng oVdl nunca by which members agree to b, governed by certain principles of Jus- wflla y their own cci We Americans sit In this organization and bv our nn f,if , t.r" 1 "i. npon its activities. If we don't lik .i Ltirono we run -cetr. w.. u .. !l have tho courage and strength of'charao VI n,iiIf.niei.dr! H?' enWr- tho n!lianeiAl WOUld Still havo heen th.rn T -,-..tl ,W' 1 have probably been composed of Eng. land, rrance nnd Japan, one of tht three being a slightly unfriendly powel or; at any rate, a power with 'a grievi unco nguinst us. We should have lid alliance. But when it went xvronff ol largo scale wo should have borne till fionsequences, Just as we .did when th balance of power went wrong. I don't think Mr. Wilson so mud got us into a world combination as ht got the world combination into whicl w-o almost Inevitably wcro forced to en, ter made fairly resnectable one pre senting reasonable hopes for the fu turc, one that substituted for the pun rule of might n bort of rudimentary In ternatlotial justice, not the perfec! thing, the "Impartial justice" he tallied about, but still some moro justice thai would otherwise havo been there. And a,s Allen Whlto said at Parl there remains the hope for tho futuri The politics of tbe world Is now In til hands of tho men who failed in the past whoso blindness and injustice brougS me wur. j.ne situation, as at larj uuuruuy iooks somewnat pad. 1 .., u. ...w ui,u, iiuevcrv is not these men, who will soon pass, but the young nicn who are ronilnr- km a who' learned the lessons of life on thl neiu 01 name ana in tne bitter tmcxl' flees of the trenches. And even no there nre men like General Smuts oni Lord Robert Cecil with a vision bayonl that of Tarls. You see all Uiat b left' of my faith the hot faith of the crusade days, I the belief that Mr. Wilson did not realh irento anything at Paris, but gave J name with some Inspiration in ft, aa a constitution with some possibility In It, to a thing Uiat surely existed k any event and which, left to Itself, wouS have been much narrower, harder, mor) arbitrary and mora dangerous thai that which is now in the hands of mair' hind. It is iji the hands of mankind It depends iu tho long future upon thl people. It will be as good B league, m the people of the world deserve to hum The best faith one can bold is that th people lu tho end will, as William Alice White (uilil. "fool tho feller"wao trlS ' At to fool .' f - a uaMfflWttJl r ' U. I 3. I