第64部分 (第4/7頁)
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Further; is there not some hypocrisy in such cavilling in an age when all the great nations of the world are arming themselves to the teeth for that Armageddon which one day must e? And do not some of the very papers in which it appears fill their columns with nauseous and most particular accounts of dreadful and degrading crimes; such as the betrayal and butchery of a defenceless woman; dilating on them from day to day till the reader is sickened? Of which is it the more harmful to read — of a fight between the splendid Zulu impis; faithful to death; of old Umslopogaas holding the stair against overpowering odds; or; let us say; of the dismemberment of a wife or the massacre of little children by some human brute or lunatic?
Personally I hate war; and all killing; down to the destruction of the lower animals for the sake of sport; has bee abominable to me。 But while the battle…clouds bank up I do not think that any can be harmed by reading of heroic deeds or of frays in which brave men lose their lives。
What I deem undesirable are the tales of lust; crime; and moral perversion with which the bookstalls are strewn by dozens。
Chapter 17 POLITICS AND TOWN LIFE
H。 R。 H。‘s political views — Bred a Tory — Cross…bench mind — Strong Imperialist — Asked to stand for King’s Lynn — Declined — Co…director of African Review — Undertook later to contest East Norfolk — Difficult constituency for Conservative — Beaten by 198 votes — Stood in the agricultural interest — Specially interested in S。 African affairs — Cecil Rhodes — Retired from African Review — Death of H。 R。 H。‘s father — Elected chairman of local bench — Major Burnham — Some of his adventures — Major Cheyne。
Ever since I came to manhood I have taken an interest in politics;