Section 5
Frederick Barnet’s Wander Jahre
is one of those autobiographical novels that were
popular throughout the third and fourth decades of
the twentieth century. It was published in 1970,
and one must understand Wander Jahre rather in a spiritual
and intellectual than in a literal sense. It
is indeed an allusive title, carrying the world back
to the Wilhelm Meister of Goethe, a century and a
half earlier.
Its author, Frederick Barnet, gives
a minute and curious history of his life and ideas
between his nineteenth and his twenty-third birthdays.
He was neither a very original nor a very brilliant
man, but he had a trick of circumstantial writing;
and though no authentic portrait was to survive for
the information of posterity, he betrays by a score
of casual phrases that he was short, sturdy, inclined
to be plump, with a ‘rather blobby’ face,
and full, rather projecting blue eyes. He belonged
until the financial debacle of 1956 to the class of
fairly prosperous people, he was a student in London,
he aeroplaned to Italy and then had a pedestrian tour
from Genoa to Rome, crossed in the air to Greece and
Egypt, and came back over the Balkans and Germany.
His family fortunes, which were largely invested in
bank shares, coal mines, and house property, were
destroyed. Reduced to penury, he sought to earn
a living. He suffered great hardship, and was
then caught up by the war and had a year of soldiering,
first as an officer in the English infantry and then
in the army of pacification. His book tells all
these things so simply and at the same time so explicitly,
that it remains, as it were, an eye by which future
generations may have at least one man’s vision
of the years of the Great Change.
And he was, he tells us, a ‘Modern
State’ man ‘by instinct’ from the
beginning. He breathed in these ideas in the class
rooms and laboratories of the Carnegie Foundation
school that rose, a long and delicately beautiful
facade, along the South Bank of the Thames opposite
the ancient dignity of Somerset House. Such thought
was interwoven with the very fabric of that pioneer
school in the educational renascence in England.
After the customary exchange years in Heidelberg and
Paris, he went into the classical school of London
University. The older so-called ‘classical’
education of the British pedagogues, probably the most
paralysing, ineffective, and foolish routine that ever
wasted human life, had already been swept out of this
great institution in favour of modern methods; and
he learnt Greek and Latin as well as he had learnt
German, Spanish, and French, so that he wrote and spoke
them freely, and used them with an unconscious ease
in his study of the foundation civilisations of the
European system to which they were the key. (This
change was still so recent that he mentions an encounter
in Rome with an ‘Oxford don’ who ’spoke
Latin with a Wiltshire accent and manifest discomfort,
wrote Greek letters with his tongue out, and seemed
to think a Greek sentence a charm when it was a quotation
and an impropriety when it wasn’t.’)
Barnet saw the last days of the coal-steam
engines upon the English railways and the gradual
cleansing of the London atmosphere as the smoke-creating
sea-coal fires gave place to electric heating.
The building of laboratories at Kensington was still
in progress, and he took part in the students’
riots that delayed the removal of the Albert Memorial.
He carried a banner with ‘We like Funny Statuary’
on one side, and on the other ’Seats and Canopies
for Statues, Why should our Great Departed Stand in
the Rain?’ He learnt the rather athletic aviation
of those days at the University grounds at Sydenham,
and he was fined for flying over the new prison for
political libellers at Wormwood Scrubs, ‘in
a manner calculated to exhilarate the prisoners while
at exercise.’ That was the time of the
attempted suppression of any criticism of the public
judicature and the place was crowded with journalists
who had ventured to call attention to the dementia
of Chief Justice Abrahams. Barnet was not a very
good aviator, he confesses he was always a little
afraid of his machine—there was excellent
reason for every one to be afraid of those clumsy
early types—and he never attempted steep
descents or very high flying. He also, he records,
owned one of those oil-driven motor-bicycles whose
clumsy complexity and extravagant filthiness still
astonish the visitors to the museum of machinery at
South Kensington. He mentions running over a dog
and complains of the ruinous price of ‘spatchcocks’
in Surrey. ‘Spatchcocks,’ it seems,
was a slang term for crushed hens.
He passed the examinations necessary
to reduce his military service to a minimum, and his
want of any special scientific or technical qualification
and a certain precocious corpulence that handicapped
his aviation indicated the infantry of the line as
his sphere of training. That was the most generalised
form of soldiering. The development of the theory
of war had been for some decades but little assisted
by any practical experience. What fighting had
occurred in recent years, had been fighting in minor
or uncivilised states, with peasant or barbaric soldiers
and with but a small equipment of modern contrivances,
and the great powers of the world were content for
the most part to maintain armies that sustained in
their broader organisation the traditions of the European
wars of thirty and forty years before. There was
the infantry arm to which Barnet belonged and which
was supposed to fight on foot with a rifle and be
the main portion of the army. There were cavalry
forces (horse soldiers), having a ratio to the infantry
that had been determined by the experiences of the
Franco-German war in 1871. There was also artillery,
and for some unexplained reason much of this was still
drawn by horses; though there were also in all the
European armies a small number of motor-guns with
wheels so constructed that they could go over broken
ground. In addition there were large developments
of the engineering arm, concerned with motor transport,
motor-bicycle scouting, aviation, and the like.
No first-class intelligence had been
sought to specialise in and work out the problem of
warfare with the new appliances and under modern conditions,
but a succession of able jurists, Lord Haldane, Chief
Justice Briggs, and that very able King’s Counsel,
Philbrick, had reconstructed the army frequently and
thoroughly and placed it at last, with the adoption
of national service, upon a footing that would have
seemed very imposing to the public of 1900. At
any moment the British Empire could now put a million
and a quarter of arguable soldiers upon the board
of Welt-Politik. The traditions of Japan and the
Central European armies were more princely and less
forensic; the Chinese still refused resolutely to
become a military power, and maintained a small standing
army upon the American model that was said, so far
as it went, to be highly efficient, and Russia, secured
by a stringent administration against internal criticism,
had scarcely altered the design of a uniform or the
organisation of a battery since the opening decades
of the century. Barnet’s opinion of his
military training was manifestly a poor one, his Modern
State ideas disposed him to regard it as a bore, and
his common sense condemned it as useless. Moreover,
his habit of body made him peculiarly sensitive to
the fatigues and hardships of service.
’For three days in succession
we turned out before dawn and—for no earthly
reason—without breakfast,’ he relates.
’I suppose that is to show us that when the
Day comes the first thing will be to get us thoroughly
uncomfortable and rotten. We then proceeded to
Kriegspiel, according to the mysterious ideas of those
in authority over us. On the last day we spent
three hours under a hot if early sun getting over
eight miles of country to a point we could have reached
in a motor omnibus in nine minutes and a half—I
did it the next day in that—and then we
made a massed attack upon entrenchments that could
have shot us all about three times over if only the
umpires had let them. Then came a little bayonet
exercise, but I doubt if I am sufficiently a barbarian
to stick this long knife into anything living.
Anyhow in this battle I shouldn’t have had a
chance. Assuming that by some miracle I hadn’t
been shot three times over, I was far too hot and
blown when I got up to the entrenchments even to lift
my beastly rifle. It was those others would have
begun the sticking….
’For a time we were watched
by two hostile aeroplanes; then our own came up and
asked them not to, and—the practice of aerial
warfare still being unknown—they very politely
desisted and went away and did dives and circles of
the most charming description over the Fox Hills.’
All Barnet’s accounts of his
military training were written in the same half-contemptuous,
half-protesting tone. He was of opinion that his
chances of participating in any real warfare were very
slight, and that, if after all he should participate,
it was bound to be so entirely different from these
peace manoeuvres that his only course as a rational
man would be to keep as observantly out of danger as
he could until he had learnt the tricks and possibilities
of the new conditions. He states this quite frankly.
Never was a man more free from sham heroics.