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<text id=93HT1398>
<title>
Man of Year 1940: Winston Churchill
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
January 6, 1941
Man of the Year
Winston Churchill
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Those who write history with words sometimes forget that
history is made with words. The course of the 20th Century has
been shaped by three stupendous movements. Each movement has been
led by a man of words, who used words as instruments of policy,
of persuasion and of power, who epitomized the character of his
movement in words of historic simplicity.
</p>
<p>-- In the autumn of 1917, in Smolny Institute in Petrograd,
Nikolai Lenin quietly said: We shall now proceed to construct the
Socialist State.
</p>
<p>-- In the autumn of 1924, in Landsberg Fortress in Bavaria,
Adolf Hitler wrote in Mein Kampf: I, however, resolved now to
become a politician.
</p>
<p>-- On May 13, 1940, in his first statement as Prime Minister
to the British House of Commons, Winston Leonard Spencer
Churchill declared: I have nothing to offer but blood, toil,
tears and sweat.
</p>
<p> Those eleven burning words summed up the nature of Britain's
war, turned Britain's back on the weaknesses of the past, set her
face toward the unknown future. Because of them the rest of that
speech has been forgotten. It should not be forgotten, for it is
not only a great example of Winston Churchill's eloquence, but
the epitome of the movement which he leads.
</p>
<p> After a brief report on the formation of his Government,
Winston Churchill said: "You ask, what is our policy? I say it is
to wage war by land, sea and air--war with all our might and
with all the strength God has given us--and to wage war against
a monstrous tyranny never surpassed in the dark and lamentable
catalogue of human crime. That is our policy.
</p>
<p> "You ask, what is our aim? I can answer in one word. It is
victory. Victory at all costs. Victory in spite of all terrors.
Victory, however long and hard the road may be, for without
victory there is no survival.
</p>
<p> "Let that be realized. No survival for the British Empire,
no survival for all that the British Empire has stood for, no
survival for the urge, the impulse of the ages, that mankind
shall move forward toward his goal."
</p>
<p> December 31, 1940, was not only the end of a year; it was
the end of a decade--the most terrifying of the 20th Century.
The decade which ended in 1920 had seen a war that was to prove
inconclusive. It had seen a revolution that was to lie quiescent
after establishing itself in the largest country of the world.
The decade which ended in 1930 was one of confusion and wasted
energy--the wasted energy of gambling and gin-drinking in the
U.S., of civil war in the Far East, of misdirected revolutionary
effort from the U.S.S.R., of the attempt in Europe to hold
resurgent peoples in check. The decade which ended this week saw
the failure of that attempt and the unleashing of ruthless war.
It saw the Far East's battle of warlords turn into a war for the
supremacy of one people. It saw the U.S. turn to a feverish
effort to protect itself and its neighbors. It saw, in the Battle
of Britain, the life-&-death struggle of the greatest empire the
world has ever known.
</p>
<p> The Candidates of 1940. No artist, no athlete, no scientist,
only a man whose place was on the stage of world politics, could
be Man of 1940--last and stormiest year of a stormy decade.
</p>
<p> The obvious U.S. candidate for that title was Franklin
Delano Roosevelt, who got himself elected for an unprecedented
third term. But Franklin Roosevelt's other accomplishments of
1940 were not breathtaking.
</p>
<p> On the score of leadership Wendell Willkie, who, although a
businessman, convinced 22,500,000 voters that he spoke for a
vital cause, performed more strikingly. But in the end Willkie
did not succeed in leading his crusade to victory.
</p>
<p> The great accomplishments of 1940 belonged, if anywhere,
across the waters as they did in 1938 when Man of the Year Hitler
conquered without fighting in Austria and at Munich, as they did
in 1939 when Man of the Year Stalin got half of Poland by a
shrewd deal and a free hand to work his will on Finland. But 1940
did not fall like a plum into the lap of the dictators. One of
them, Benito Mussolini, thinking conquest was easy, proved the
year's greatest flop. Another, Joseph Stalin, lost several teeth
before he chewed off an edge of tough little Finland. A third,
Adolf Hitler, was more successful.
</p>
<p> Hitler during the year conquered five nations by arms--among
them France, his most powerful opponent on the Continent--and
subjugated part of the Balkans by threats. His conquests
were on a par with those of Napoleon Bonaparte. But in one vital
respect he failed. He did not master Britain, as scheduled,
before the summer was out. He did not bring the war to a
victorious conclusion. At year's end he had a tiring people at
home, and a war abroad, a war which, unless he could end it
swiftly, might ultimately prove Germany's undoing. All his
victories had not saved him from jeopardy nor won him real
success. Before the end of fateful 1941 Hitler may be Man of the
Century--if Britain falls. If Britain still stands at the end
of 1941, Adolf Hitler may be on his way to join the distinguished
company of Benito Mussolini, Generals Gamelin and Almazan, and
John Llewellyn Lewis, those men of high hopes who failed to come
through in the crisis year of 1940.
</p>
<p> Among other Europeans who had made their mark in 1940, one
was short, squat General John Metaxas, Premier of the Greeks, who
had made a monkey of Benito Mussolini. Another was Britain's
Union Leader Ernest Bevin, who became a tower of strength in
Britain's Government, who rallied Labor to Britain's cause, who
became a symbol of the breakdown of class distinctions by which
Britain achieved a new unity to fight her battle.
</p>
<p> Yet the curious fact was that in most men's minds
everywhere--even in Germany, to judge by Nazi denunciations--Winston
Churchill outranked all others as Man of 1940. He came to power
as Prime Minister just as the Blitzkrieg descended upon Britain's
outposts. In his first few weeks in office they toppled about him
like ninepins. Norway had already been lost. Then fell The
Netherlands, Belgium, France.
</p>
<p> Against this roll call of defeats, all the victories which
Churchill gave his countrymen, aside from isolated successes at
sea, were such that any Cockney could count them on his thumbs:
1) the gallant evacuation at Dunkirk, really a disaster in which,
although upwards of 335,000 men were saved, the equipment of
virtually the entire British Expeditionary Force was lost; 2) the
Battle of the Marmarica which smashed the Italian Army in Egypt.
</p>
<p> But Churchill was not without accomplishment. He gave his
countrymen exactly what he promised them--blood, toil, tears,
sweat--and one thing more: untold courage. It was the last that
counted, not only in Britain but in democracies throughout the
world.
</p>
<p> One evening just before year's end millions of U.S. citizens
sat silent before their radios and heard their President identify
the future of their country with the future of Great Britain. But
more than six months before, when France was tottering, it was
Winston Churchill who raised his brandy-harsh voice and made that
identification real, saying:
</p>
<p> "We shall defend our island whatever the cost may be; we
shall fight on beaches, landing grounds, in fields, in streets
and on the hills. We shall never surrender and even if, which I
do not for the moment believe, this island or a large part of it
were subjugated and starving, then our empire beyond the seas,
armed and guarded by the British Fleet, will carry on the
struggle until in God's good time the New World with all its
power and might, sets forth to the liberation and rescue of the
Old."
</p>
<p> Anglo-American. As a symbol of Anglo-American unity Winston
Churchill is a paradox because his Americanism is more British
than American--more British even, than average-British. This
seven-month child of a British peer and an American heiress went
back to Elizabethan times to find his spiritual forebears; he
grew to maturity with a stomach for strong food and drink, with a
lust for adventure, with a tongue and pen that shaped the English
language into the virile patterns of a Donne, a Marlowe or a
Shakespeare. His father he worshiped, but never got close to; his
mother he respectfully admired.
</p>
<p> He had money, a name and a flair for publicity; he had Lord
Randolph Churchill's "force, caprice and charm"; and he had an
incomparable gift for words. During his years of eclipse between
the two World Wars he was an articulate and consistent critic of
British Empire policy, the most feared politician in Britain by
the narrow-minded men who made that policy. He was the one man in
the British Empire most obviously equipped to lead the Empire in
war, and it was small credit to Britain that he was not chosen to
lead it until the Empire rocked on its heels.
</p>
<p> The year 1940 found the man, as well as the man the year. It
found him speaking, not only as a Briton, but as an American,
taking his words from Oscar Hammerstein and Edna Ferber: "These
two great organizations of the English-speaking democracies, the
British Empire and the United States, will have to be somewhat
mixed up together in some of their affairs for mutual and general
advantage. For my own part, looking out upon the future, I do not
view the process with any misgivings. No one can stop it. Like
the Mississippi, it just keeps rolling along. Let it roll. Let it
roll on in full flood, inexorable, irresistible, to broader lands
and better days."
</p>
<p> War of Words. Adolf Hitler and Winston Churchill are the two
men alive in the world today who best understand the power of
words as weapons of warfare. Their techniques are different.
Hitler uses words as poison gas; Churchill uses them as a
broadsword. Yet he, too, can be cunning. Last May he wrote a
letter to Benito Mussolini couched in the sort of language
Captain John Smith might have used to a savage chieftain:
</p>
<p> "I...feel a desire to speak words of good will to you,
as chief of the Italian nation, across what seems to be a swiftly
widening gulf...We can, no doubt, inflict grievous injuries
upon one another and maul each other cruelly and darken the
Mediterranean with our strife. If you so decree, it must be so.
But I declare that I have never been the enemy of Italian
greatness, nor ever at heart the foe of the Italian lawgiver...Down
the ages, above all other calls, come the cry that the
joint heirs of Latin and Christian civilization must not be
ranged against one another in mortal strife. Hearken to it, I
beseech you in all honor and respect, before the dread signal is
given. It will never be given by us."
</p>
<p> This plea failed, but last week Winston Churchill made it
again, this time over the head of Il Duce in a broadcast directly
to the Italian people. This time he used his broadsword. He said:
"One man and one man alone has ranged the Italian people in
deadly struggle against the British Empire and has deprived Italy
of the sympathy and intimacy of the United States of America...One
man has arrayed the trustees and inheritors of ancient Rome
upon the side of the ferocious pagan barbarians...There lies
the tragedy of Italian history and there stands the criminal who
has wrought the deed of folly and of shame." How many Italians
hearkened to these words no one knows, but it was necessary for
King Vittorio Emanuele to make a plea for unity to his people and
for Crown Princess Marie Jose publicly to join the Fascist Party.
(National Broadcasting Co. picked up British Broadcasting Corp.'s
broadcast of the speech in Italian, rebroadcast it over short
wave to Italy.)
</p>
<p> The Men. Man-of-the-Year Churchill does not stand alone.
Neither does Runner-up Hitler. Beside and behind Hitler stand the
German armed forces, the superbly destructive machine fashioned
by Goring, Brauchitsch, Raeder and hundreds of others. Beside and
behind Churchill stands a very small man multiplied a
millionfold. He is just an Englishman. He was born in the
country, or in one of the big cities of the Midlands, or in a
grey house in a London suburb. The hands that reared him were
hard. His food was tepid or cold: butter and bread, jam and
strong black tea, mutton and what was left over of the Sunday
joint. His boyhood was tough. At school he was caned. He grew to
know history in a simple way; he grew to love his King as he
loved the mist in the park on a summer's morning, the hedges and
the downs and the beaches. But he never spoke of these things.
</p>
<p> When the war came he did not like it. For a moment he knew
fear, then he lit his pipe and poured himself a whiskey. When the
blackout came he groused. Churchill took over: the right man for
the job. Then came Dunkirk: a bloody shame. Then the stuff fell:
St. Paul's, the club, women and children, London afire. He got
mad, but he did not show it. There was too much to do: business
to carry on, children to be sent to the country, people to be dug
out of shelters, sleep to be got somehow. A bloody nuisance.
</p>
<p> On his behavior hung the shape of the future. His civilized
toughness, his balanced courage and his simple pride altered the
course of history in 1940. Without him there could have been no
Churchill.
</p>
<p> "Their Finest Hour." Great history makes great literature.
Seven years after the Spanish Armada an Englishman wrote:
</p>
<p> In times of action literature is the words of men of action.
Afterward come the poets. To the small men of Britain in 1940
Winston Churchill spoke words that may live as long as
Shakespeare's:
</p>
<p> Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duty and so bear
ourselves that if the British Commonwealth and Empire last for a
thousand years, men will still say "This was their finest hour!"
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>