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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
If history is to giv us a tru picture of human life in the past, it cannot limit itself to political events. The chief end of man never was to frame, uphold, and overthro governments, stil les to wage war and sign treaties. These ar accidents or epiphenomena. Man's primary concern is and was from the first his daily fight for existence, the necessity of getting food and shelter, the desire of getting them with a minimum of painful exertion. Man does not merely adapt himself to his surroundings: he attempts to alter his surroundings so as to suit himself. Thus he creates new conditions from which new problems arise. Human society groes ever farther away from that brutish state of automatic adaptation which poets call the Erthly Paradise. From the erliest stone implement to the aeroplane, from the first concerted hunt to the elaborate insurance system of the German Empire, we see the progres of this warfare against nature. The result of these efforts is what we understand by civilization.
1 London, 1911, ii, p. 232.
2 This is exprest with great verve and some exaggeration in Victor Hugo's Réponse à un Acte d'Accusation.
3 Preface to History of English Literature; Lafontaine and his Fables.
4 Prof. Kuno Francke's Social Forces in German Literature.
5 Paul Gerade, Meine Beobachtungen und Erlebnisse als Dorfpastor, 1896.
6 Les Camelots du Roy.