Page:"The next war"; an appeal to common sense (IA thenextwarappeal01irwi).pdf/92

 But the new warfare takes advantage of the limits of human imagination. If you bayonet a child, you see the spurt of blood, the curling up of the little body, the look in the eyes But if you loose a bomb on a town, you see only that you have made a fair hit. Time and again I have dined with French boy-aviators, British boy-aviators, American boy-aviators, home from raids. They were gallant, generous, kindly youths. And they were thinking and talking not of the effects of their bombs but only of “the hit.” If now and then a spurt of vision shot into their minds, they closed their imagination—as one must do in war.