ered degradation alike as men and as citizens。 It is not a question of exchanging one form of fort for another; the instinct which made an Englishman has in these cases perished。 Perhaps it is perishing from among us altogether; killed by new social and political conditions; one who looks at villages of the new type; at the working…class quarters of towns; at the rising of 〃flats〃 among the dwellings of the wealthy; has little choice but to think so。 There may soon e a day when; though the word 〃fort〃 continues to be used in many languages; the thing it signifies will be discoverable nowhere at all。
XIV
If the ingenious foreigner found himself in some village of manufacturing Lancashire; he would be otherwise impressed。 Here something of the power of England might be revealed to him; but of England's worth; little enough。 Hard ugliness would everywhere assail his eyes; the visages and voices of the people would seem to him thoroughly akin to their surroundings。 Scarcely could one find; in any civilized nation; a more notable contrast than that between these two English villages and their inhabitants。
Yet Lancashire is English; and there among the mill chimneys; in the hideous little street; folk are living whose domestic thoughts claim undeniable kindred with those of the villagers of the kinder south。 But to understand how 〃fort;〃 and the virtues it implies; can exist amid such conditions; one must perate to the hearthside; the door must be shut; the curtain drawn; here 〃home〃 does not extend beyond the threshold。 After all; this grimy row of houses; ugliest that man ever conceived; is more representative of England to…day than the lovely village among the trees and meadows。 More than a hundred years ago; power passed from the south of England to t