-8- too large." Thereupon there was a good deal of discussion, and at the end everybody agreed that I was probably right. For my part I have no doubt of it. My opinion that the Germans in most respects underestimated Americans before the war is no new one and is probably today generally recognized. As for their overestimate at the present time, at least in the case of the kind of people whom I saw, it seemed to me almost as obvious as the extravagance of the unfavorable criticism of America that one encounters in the daily press. Needless to say, I can form no estimate of how widely this new respectful admiration of America is distributed, but I should think it probably the characteristic of a very small element in the population of Germany and for the present a factor of absolutely no political importance. To one accustomed to the attitude of younger men twenty-five years ago, with whom I naturally associated at that time, the contrast is today, however, almost comic. Twenty-five years ago I often had a feeling that it was necessary to treat many of my contemporaries among the German on the intellectual level because of their naive self-satisfaction, much as one treats the newly rich on the social level. Today I feel the need to guard myself against over-respectful admiration of America on the part of the Germans. The atmosphere of fear, though it is perhaps exaggerated by liberals in Germany and here, is pretty conspicuous in the universities, and there is good ground for it. I was told the following story under circumstances which made the report seem entirely trustworthy. About a year ago two professors of the University of Leipsic found themselves at the end of the afternoon in the Professors' Room at the University, and one of them noticed as they were leaving that a colleague had forgotten his brief case lying on the table. They decided that they ought to look inside to find out the owner in order to return |