CHAPTER XXXV
THE FUTURE—ABOVE ALL, A LASTING PEACE
Will the future bring us peace; above all, a lasting
peace? Though nothing less is worth having, we cannot have war.
I saw M. Franklin-Bouillon in Paris and, though not perhaps in agreement with all he did in Syria, I maintain that his work in Moudania deserved thanks rather than criticism. He knows the Turks well, and affirms that he would have made peace at Lausanne. He possibly might have done so, but would it have been lasting peace?
On my way back to London we cross the channel in a Handley-Page Aeroplane. There is just time to prepare a conclusive answer to all questions about the harem; for no matter how eager we are to proceed, after six months' study of the Angora movement, to more important impressions, every newspaper correspondent asks about the harem.
Just as for those who, in the States; held me personally responsible for our policy in Ireland, I stole from Life a witty answer, compressed into this dramatic "tabloid," that "turned away American wrath":
"Pat: Wouldn't it be awful if England now gave us all we wanted?"
"Mike: Sure, and 'twould be like her to play us the dirty trick."
In like manner, I prepared two shots to kill "harem" inquiries:—
One: "Why has the Turk only one wife, to-day?
"When four wives meant four tillers of the ground,