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The Human Slaughter-House: Scenes from the War that is Sure to Come

The Human Slaughter-House: Scenes from the War that is Sure to Come

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The Human Slaughter-House: Scenes from the War that is Sure to Come, translated from the German of Wilhelm Lamszus by Oakley Williams, with an Introduction by Alfred Noyes


CONTENTS

The Human Slaughter-House: Scenes from the War that is Sure to Come
Introduction
Wilhelm Lamszus
1. A reign of terror has dawned on the Netherlands.
2. A star has risen against the sky of despair.
3. The call has come.
4. A pleasant farm hidden away in a garden.
5. The groups have assembled.
6. It came to fighting. It came to murder.
Chapter 1. Mobilization
Chapter 2. Soldier
Chapter 3. Our Father Which Art in Heaven
Chapter 4. The Last Night
Chapter 5. The Departure
Chapter 6. Like the Promise of May
Chapter 7. Blood and Iron
Chapter 8. The Swamp
Chapter 9. The Whirling Earth


Introduction

There is one thing that will certainly be said about this book by some of its readers. It will certainly be said to exaggerate the horrors of modern war; and, just as certainly, that is a thing which this book does not do. It is appallingly reticent; and, for every touch of horror in its pages, the actual records of recent warfare could supply an obscure and blood-stained mass of detail which, if it were once laid before the public, would put an end to militarism in a year. It is not the opponents of militarism who are given over to “cant” and “hypocrisy” and “emotionalism.” It is the supporters of militarism who on the eve of a great war go about crying for suppression of facts, censorship of the facts not only of military plans, but of human suffering. For if there is one thing that the military journalist dreads it is the sight and smell of blood. “Let us enjoy this pleasant compaign. Let us present our readers with a little military music played upon the brass bands of the press. But for God’s sake do not waft over Europe the smell of iodoform, or of the slaughter-house. Man is a fighting animal; let us enjoy the fight. And--pollice verso!”

Unfortunately for these gentlemen, whose good taste is so impeccable that they shrink from the whole truth, man is also a fighting god. ‘And the next thing we are going to fight is militarism. There is hardly a great commander in the history of modern warfare who has not described his own profession as “a dirty trade” and war itself as hell. The party of “bad taste” which is going to destroy militarism is not likely to reject the testimony of Wellington, Grant and Napier in favor of the sensational journalist. This book deals chiefly with the physical and mental horrors of war. It presents just that one side of the case; but it must not be forgotten that there are vast battalions of logic and common sense on the same side. From a logical point of view a war between civilized peoples is as insane as it is foul and evil. The pacificists are fighting the noblest battle of the present day. They are not going to win without a struggle; but they will win. And they will win because they have on their side the common good of mankind, common sense, common justice, and common truth.

Alfred Noyes.

Wilhelm Lamszus

Few books of its size--one hundred and eleven pages in the original edition--can perhaps of recent years claim the striking and instantaneous success of Wilhelm Lamszus’s “Menschenschlachthaus.” In appraising this success, I am less concerned with the number of copies sold (which now, three months after publication, approximates, I believe, one hundred thousand) than with the impression it has left on the mind of its readers in Germany and elsewhere on the Continent. Within a few days of its publication the author awoke to find himself famous--or infamous, according to the point of view adopted--in his own country. The fact that his book has been, or is being, translated into no less than eight European languages is evidence that its appeal is not confined to the conditions of one country, or of a single nationality.

Its appeal is broad-based. It is addressed to the conscience of civilized humanity, and as was to have been expected, the conscience of the individual has reacted to its stimulus in various ways.

Continued...
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