[The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse by Vicente Blasco Ibanez]@TWC D-Link bookThe Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse CHAPTER IV 21/88
The French of the Revolution and the Empire justified their invasions on the plea that they wished to liberate mankind and spread abroad new ideas.
Even the Spaniards of the sixteenth century, when battling with half of Europe for religious unity and the extermination of heresy, were working toward their ideals obscure and perhaps erroneous, but disinterested. All the nations of history had been struggling for something which they had considered generous and above their own interests.
Germany alone, according to this professor, was trying to impose itself upon the world in the name of racial superiority--a superiority that nobody had recognized, that she was arrogating to herself, coating her affirmations with a varnish of false science. "Until now wars have been carried on by the soldiery," continued Hartrott.
"That which is now going to begin will be waged by a combination of soldiers and professors.
In its preparation the University has taken as much part as the military staff.
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