ACQUISITIONS OF TERRITORY To the British Empire 187o–P9oo 4,754,00o square miles ; 88,000,000 population.
To France 1884-1900 : 3,583,58o square miles ; 36,553,00o population.
To Germany 1884-1900 : 1,026,220 square miles ; 16,687,10o population.
But perhaps the chief and most frequent cause of war is war itself. In the Balkan Peninsula—where, whenever the fighting has ceased, nothing approaching a satisfactory settlement has ever been concluded—this is specially true. Eight or nine of the wars recorded concern the Balkans. Or take the Crimean War. Sir Spencer Walpole says : " From 1856 to 1878 the Continent of Europe was afflicted with five great wars—the Franco-Austrian War of 1859 ; the Danish of 1864 ; the Austro-Prussian of 1860 ; the Franco-German of 187o and the Russo-Turkish of 1878 : all of which can be lineally traced to the war of 1854," and one at least of those wars, as we know, sowed the seeds of future war. The war that is concluded by a dic .
tated peace, the war that leaves a sense of grievance and unsatisfied though legitimate claims, the war that inspires a lasting desire for revenge. inevitably leads to future war. Wars are never aggressive but always defensive on the part of those who are responsible for waging them. Wars are never defensive but always aggressive on the pa.rt of those against whom they are waged. The Ministers and monarchs do the quarrelling, the people believe the version they are told and obey. The people do the fighting and make the sacrifice, the Ministers and monarchs do the treaty-making without consulting them. The people's part is one of valiance, endurance, and suffering ; the part of the Ministers and monarchs is one too often marred by failure and frequently disfigured by intrigue and deception.
Cast your eye through these forty-two very brief records of wars. Think of the valour, the determination, and the heroism of the people, be they soldiers or civilians. Consider the noble part played by those who without question obeyed what they were led to believe was their country's call. And then look on the other side at the
results—the ineptitude of the statesmen, the patched-up treaties, the wortlaless agreements, the wars that led to further wars, the failure to secure a settlement after the soldier had done his part, and the unnecessary prolong ation of conflicts when agreement might have been reached by the exercise of a little wisdom and foresight. The contrast is remarkable between the actions on the battle field and the intrigue in the council chamber. Blood has been spilt, lives lost, and victories won often without any positive advantage being gained in the final result.
The wars are arranged according to date. Some were long-drawn-out struggles, others sharp confficts of a few months. The number of men engaged in any battle and the casualties if they could be tabulated would no doubt seem comparatively small to our modem eyes. The total loss of life in the Crimean War amounted to about 600,000 men.= An estimate of the loss in killed and wounded in some of the other great battles may be given as follows : Solferino (1859), 31,5oo ; Chickamauga (1863), 35,roo ; Gettysburg (1863), 37,000 ; Konigratz (1866), 26,894 ; Vionville (187o), 32,80o ; Gravelotte (187o), 30,000 ; Plevna (1877), 19,000 ; = The Boer War (1899--19o2) : British losses, 28,603 ; Boers killed, 4,000, prisoners 40,000 Mukden (i905), 131,000.
Wars to the generation that experiences them are un mixed evils engendering hatred and evil passions and bringing in their train loss, suffering, destruction, and impoverishment, all of which are acutely felt. The suc ceeding generation inherit their consequences in the shape of high taxation and the attempts to mend and reconstruct the dislocated national life. The horror has gone but the memory remains. To the succeeding generation they become episodes read of in the cold pages of history, and then at last they fade into mere names—a battle with a vaguely remembered date.