Part 4 (1/2)

”So!” he repeated. ”No occupation! Well, that is what in Germany we know nothing of. Every one must work, or must take up the army as a permanent profession. You are, perhaps, one of those Englishmen of whom one reads, who give up all their time to sport?”

Norgate shook his head.

”As a matter of fact,” he said, ”I have worked rather hard during the last five or six years. It is only just recently that I have lost my occupation.”

Herr Selingman's curiosity was almost childlike in its transparency, but Norgate found himself unable to gratify it. In any case, after his denial of any knowledge of the German language, he could scarcely lay claim to even the most indirect connection with the diplomatic service.

”Ah, well,” Herr Selingman declared, ”opportunities will come. You have perhaps lost some post. Well, there are others. I should not, I think, be far away from the truth, sir, if I were to surmise that you had held some sort of an official position?”

”Perhaps,” Norgate a.s.sented.

”That is interesting,” Herr Selingman continued. ”Now with the English of commerce I talk often, and I know their views of me and my country. But sometimes I have fancied that among your official cla.s.ses those who are ever so slightly employed in Government service, there is--I do not love the word, but I must use it--a distrust of Germany and her peace-loving propensities.”

”I have met many people,” Norgate admitted, ”who do not look upon Germany as a lover of peace.”

”They should come and travel here,” Herr Selingman insisted eagerly.

”Look out of the windows. What do you see? Factory chimneys, furnaces everywhere. And further on--what? Well-tilled lands, clean, prosperous villages, a happy, domestic people. I tell you that no man in the world is so fond of his wife and children, his simple life, his simple pleasures, as the German.”

”Very likely,” Norgate a.s.sented, ”but if you look out of the windows continually you will also see that every station-master on the line wears a military uniform, that every few miles you see barracks. These simple peasants you speak of carry themselves with a different air from ours. I don't know much about it, but I should call it the effect of their military training. I know nothing about politics. Very likely yours is a nation of peace-loving men. As a casual observer, I should call you more a nation of soldiers.”

”But that,” Herr Selingman explained earnestly, ”is for defence only.”

”And your great standing army, your wonderful artillery, your Zeppelins and your navy,” Norgate asked, ”are they for defence only?”

”Absolutely and entirely,” Herr Selingman declared, with a new and ponderous gravity. ”There is nothing the most warlike German desires more fervently than to keep the peace. We are strong only because we desire peace, peace under which our commerce may grow, and our wealth increase.”

”Well, it seems to me, then,” Norgate observed, ”that you've gone to a great deal of expense and taken a great deal of trouble for nothing. I don't know much about these things, as I told you before, but there is no nation in the world who wants to attack Germany.”

Herr Selingman laid his finger upon his nose.

”That may be,” he said. ”Yet there are many who look at us with envious eyes. I am a good German. I know what it is that we want. We want peace, and to gain peace we need strength, and to be strong we arm. That is everything. It will never be Germany who clenches her fist, who draws down the black clouds of war over Europe. It will never be Germany, I tell you. Why, a war would ruin half of us. What of my crockery? I sell it all in England. Believe me, young gentleman, war exists only in the brains of your sensational novelists. It does not come into the world of real purpose.”

”Well, it's very interesting to hear you say so,” Norgate admitted. ”I wish I could wholly agree with you.”

Herr Selingman caught him by the sleeve.

”You are just a little,” he confided, ”just a little suspicious, my young friend, you in your little island. Perhaps it is because you live upon an island. You do not expand. You have small thoughts. You are not great like we in Germany, not broad, not deep. But we will talk later of these things. I must tell you about our Kaiser.”

Norgate opened his lips and closed them again.

”Presently,” he muttered. ”See you later on.”

He strolled to his coupe, tried in vain to read, walked up and down the length of the train, smoked a cigarette, and returned to his compartment to find Herr Selingman immersed in the study of many doc.u.ments.

”Records of my customers and my transactions,” the latter announced blandly. ”I have a great fondness for detail. I know everything. I carry with me particulars of everything. That is where we Germans are so thorough. See, I place them now all in my bag.”

He did so and locked it with great care.

”We go to dinner, is it not so?” he suggested.