The Times of Thursday summarized a remarkable 'analysis of Mr.
Lloyd George's character written by M. Philippe Millet, the well-known correspondent of the Petit- Parisien. M. Millet is such an old and well-proved friend of Britain" that we are sure that his analysis will have been read gratefully by thousands of persons as a sincere contribution to the problems of Genoa. M. Millet regards Mr. Lloyd George's difficulties as the direct outcome of his temperament. He refuses to join with most Frenchmen-in • regarding Mr. Lloyd George as an enemy of France. He says that Mr. Lloyd George's passion for the Allied• cause, and for France as a principal representative of that cause,• was a genuine passion throughout the War. His point of view is that Mr. Lloyd George is not now consciously an enemy of France, but that his mystical passion has been directed in a new direction by the economic sufferings of Europe.