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“States, whether autocracies or commonwealths, ultimately rest on duty, not on self-

interest or force.... The quickening principle of a state is a sense of devotion, an adequate

recognition somewhere in the minds of its subjects that their own interests are

subordinate to those of the state. The bond which unites them and constitutes them

collectively as a state is, to use the words of Lincoln, in the nature of dedication. Its

validity, like that of the marriage tie, is at root not contractual but sacramental. Its

foundation is not self-interest, but rather some sense of obligation, however conceived,

which is strong enough to over-master self-interest.” (16)

History for this Group, and especially for Curtis, presented itself as an age-long

struggle between the principles of autocracy and the principles of commonwealth,

between the forces of darkness and the forces of light, between Asiatic theocracy and

European freedom. This view of history, founded on the work of Zimmern, E. A.

Freeman, Lord Bryce, and A. V. Dicey, felt that the distinguishing mark between the two

hosts could be found in their views of law—the forces of light regarding law as manmade

and mutable, but yet above all men, while the forces of darkness regarded law as divine

and eternal, yet subordinate to the king. The one permitted diversity, growth, and

freedom, while the other engendered monotony, stultification, and slavery. The struggle

between the two had gone on for thousands of years, spawning such offspring as the

Persian Wars, the Punic Wars, and the struggles of Britain with the forces of Philip II, of

Louis XIV, of Napoleon, and of Wilhelm II. Thus, to this Group, Britain stood as the

defender of all that was fine or civilized in the modern world, just as Athens had stood for

the same values in the ancient world. (17) Britain's mission, under this interpretation, was

to carry freedom and light (that is, the principles of commonwealth) against the forces of

theocracy and darkness (that is, autocracy) in Asia—and even in Central Europe. For this

Group regarded the failure of France or Germany to utilize the English idea of

"supremacy of law" (as described by Dicey in his The Law of the Constitution, 1885) as

proof that these countries were still immersed, at least partially, in the darkness of

theocratic law. The slow spread of English political institutions to Europe as well as Asia

in the period before the First World War was regarded by the Group as proof both of their

superiority and of the possibility of progress. In Asia and Africa, at least, England's

civilizing mission was to be carried out by force, if necessary, for "the function of force is

to give moral ideas time to take root." Asia thus could be compelled to accept

civilization, a procedure justifiable to the Group on the grounds that Asians are obviously

better off under European rule than under the rule of fellow Asians and, if consulted,

would clearly prefer British rule to that of any other European power. To be sure, the

blessings to be extended to the less fortunate peoples of the world did not include

democracy. To Milner, to Curtis, and apparently to most members of the Group,

democracy was not an unmixed good, or even a good, and far inferior to rule by the best,

or, as Curtis says, by those who "have some intellectual capacity for judging the public

interest, and, what is no less important, some moral capacity for treating it as paramount

to their own."

This disdain for unrestricted democracy was quite in accordance with the ideas

revealed by Milner's activities in South Africa and with the Greek ideals absorbed at

Balliol or New College. However, the restrictions on democracy accepted by the Milner

Group were of a temporary character, based on the lack of education and background of

those who were excluded from political participation. It was not a question of blood or

birth, for these men were not racists.

This last point is important because of the widespread misconception that these people

were racially intolerant. They never were; certainly those of the inner circle never were.

On the contrary, they were ardent advocates of a policy of education and uplift of all

groups, so that ultimately all groups could share in political life and in the rich benefits of

the British way of life. To be sure, the members of the Group did not advocate the

immediate extension of democracy and self-government to all peoples within the Empire,

but these restrictions were based not on color of skin or birth but upon cultural outlook

and educational background. Even Rhodes, who is widely regarded as a racist because his

scholarships were restricted to candidates from the Nordic countries, was not a racist. He

restricted his scholarships to these countries because he felt that they had a background

sufficiently homogeneous to allow the hope that educational interchange could link them

together to form the core of the worldwide system which he hoped would ultimately

come into existence. Beyond this, Rhodes insisted that there must be no restrictions

placed on the scholarships on a basis of race, religion, skin color, or national origin.(18)

In his own life, Rhodes cared nothing about these things. Some of his closest friends were

Jews (like Beit), and in three of his wills he left Lord Rothschild as his trustee, in one as

his sole trustee. Milner and the other members felt similarly. Lionel Curtis, in his

writings, makes perfectly clear both his conviction that character is acquired by training

rather than innate ability and his insistence on tolerance in personal contact between

members of different races. In his The Commonwealth of Nations (1916) he says:

"English success in planting North America and the comparative failure of their rivals

must, in fact, be traced to the respective merits not of breed but of institutions"; and

again: "The energy and intelligence which had saved Hellas [in the Persian Wars] was the

product of her free institutions." In another work he protests against English mistreatment

of natives in India and states emphatically that it must be ended. He says: "The conduct

on the part of Europeans . . . is more than anything else the root cause of Indian unrest . . .

I am strongly of opinion that governors should be vested with powers to investigate

judicially cases where Europeans are alleged to have outraged Indian feelings. Wherever

a case of wanton and unprovoked insult such as those I have cited is proved, government

should have the power to order the culprit to leave the country.... A few deportations

would soon effect a definite change for the better."(19) That Dove felt similarly is clear

from his letters to Brand.

Without a belief in racism, it was perfectly possible for this Group to believe, as they

did, in the ultimate extension of freedom and self-government to all parts of the Empire.

To be sure, they believed that this was a path to be followed slowly, but their reluctance

was measured by the inability of "backward" peoples to understand the principles of a

commonwealth, not by reluctance to extend to them either democracy or self-

government.

Curtis defined the distinction between a commonwealth and a despotism in the

following terms: "The rule of law as contrasted with the rule of an individual is the

distinguishing mark of a commonwealth. In despotism government rests on the authority

of the ruler or of the invisible and uncontrollable power behind him. In a commonwealth

rulers derive their authority from the law and the law from a public opinion which is

competent to change it." Accordingly, "the institutions of a commonwealth cannot be