An Englishman Looks at the World by H. G. (Herbert George) Wells
page 24 of 329 (07%)
page 24 of 329 (07%)
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a floating population going about the world, uprooted, delocalised, and
even, it may be, denationalised, with wide interests and wide views, developing no doubt, customs and habits of its own, a morality of its own, a philosophy of its own, and yet from the point of view of current politics and legislation unorganised and ineffective. Most of the forces of international finance and international business enterprise will be with it. It will develop its own characteristic standards of art and literature and conduct in accordance with its new necessities. It is, I believe, the mankind of the future. And the last thing it will be able to do will be to legislate. The history of the immediate future will, I am convinced, be very largely the history of the conflict of the needs of this new population with the institutions, the boundaries the laws, prejudices, and deep-rooted traditions established during the home-keeping, localised era of mankind's career. This conflict follows as inevitably upon these new gigantic facilities of locomotion as the _Mauretania_ followed from the discoveries of steam and steel. OF THE NEW REIGN (_June, 1911_.) The bunting and the crimson vanish from the streets. Already the vast army of improvised carpenters that the Coronation has created set |
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