T'he Days of a Man 



C1910 



The Case against War is an indictment as tremendous as can 

 be made against any human institution. But this has never 

 been fully studied out, and but a very small part of it has been 

 used in the usual plea for peace. The propaganda should be 

 international, each man chosen to take part working in his own 

 way as best he can. The following names might well be con- 

 sidered among the possible workers in Europe: 



Francis W. Hirst 



G. H. Perris 



J. A. Hobson 



Christian F. Lange 



Henri La Fontaine 



Leon Bourgeois 



Ralph Lane (Norman Angell) 



Charles Richer 



Theodore Ruyssen 



D'Estournelles de Constant 



Walter Schiicking 



Karl Lamprecht 



Alfred H. Fried 



Halfdan Koht 



Jacques Novicow 



Jacques Dumas 



London 



London 



London 



Brussels 



Brussels 



Paris 



Paris 



Paris 



Bordeaux 



La Fleche 



Marburg 



Leipzig 



Vienna 



Christiania 



Odessa 



Versailles 



In the United States there are many men available for such 

 work. 



One phase of the propaganda should consist of courses of 

 lectures in the chief universities on the Case against War and 

 on the development of peace through law. 



Another important line of work is that of the American School 

 Peace League and affiliated associations in Europe, through 

 which the ideas of peace and law are brought to the schools. 

 The development of rational textbooks in history after the type 

 of Green's History of the English People is a necessary part of 

 this school work. 

 2. The investigation of the nature, the causes, and the effects of 



war is one of the most important matters to he considered. 



This has several phases: (i) The historic use of war and war 

 scares as a weapon against democracy. (2) The cost of war 

 a study begun by Jean de Bloch, whose work needs revision, 



I 340 3 



