The Better Germany in War Time: Being Some Facts Towards Fellowship

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CONTENTS

FOREWORD [1]

I. MILITARY PRISONERS.

II. CIVILIAN PRISONERS. Resident Enemy Nationals.

III. PRISONERS IN PREVIOUS WARS. Some Previous Records.

IV REPRISALS OF GOOD.

V. WHAT THE GERMAN MAY BE. A Witness from Serbia.

APPENDIX

INDEX

Being some Facts towards Fellowship.

BY

HAROLD PICTON.

THE NATIONAL LABOUR PRESS, LIMITED,
Manchester and London.

TO THE
BRITISH AND THE GERMAN PEOPLES
AND
IN MEMORY OF
MY MOTHER
WHO KNEW AND LOVED
THEM BOTH.

“Forsooth, brothers, fellowship is heaven, and lack of fellowship is Hell.”—A Dream of John Ball.

“Either we are all citizens of the same city and war between us, a civil war, a monstrous iniquity to be forgotten, as soon as it may bring in peace; or else there is no city and no home for man in the universe, but only an everlasting conflict between creatures that have nothing in common and no place where they can together be at rest.”—Times Literary Supplement, Nov. 11, 1915.

“He had to be extremely careful, said Lord Newton at Knutsford last Saturday, because if he made any statement which did not accuse the Germans of brutality he was denounced by many people as pro-German.”—Common Sense, April 20, 1918.

“Des faits de ce genre mÉritent dÊtre mis en evidence. Il faudrait, dans ce dÉchaÎnement d’horreurs et de haines, insister sur les quelques traits capables d’adoucir les Âmes.”—La Guerre vue d’une Ambulance par L’AbbÉ FÉlix Klein.

“Hate as a policy is either inadequate to deal with the crimes (real and invented) of our enemies, or, if adequate, so recoils on the hater that he himself becomes ruined as a moral agent.”—G. Jarvis Smith, M.C. (late Chaplain at the Western Front). Nation, Nov. 2, 1918.

“The belief at home that the individual enemy is an incurable barbarian is simply wrong ...”—Second-Lieut. A. R. Williams, killed in action August, 1917.

“I will go on fighting as long as it is necessary to get a decision in this war.... But I will not hate Germans to the order of any bloody politician; and the first thing I shall do after I am free will be to go to Germany and create all the ties I can with German life.”—J. H. Keeling (B.E.F., December, 1915).

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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