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Title: The State Author: Randolph Bourne Date: 1919 Language: en Topics: nationalism, the State, United States, war Source: Retrieved on November 18, 2010 from http://fair-use.org/randolph-bourne/the-state/ Notes: From Untimely Papers (1919) Randolph Bourne left an unfinished, unpaginated draft of The State when he died during the flu pandemic of 1918. The draft was published posthumously, with some material incorrectly ordered, in Untimely Papers (1919). This edition follows the corrected ordering used in most printed editions of Bourne’s work.
To most Americans of the classes which consider themselves significant
the war brought a sense of the sanctity of the State which, if they had
had time to think about it, would have seemed a sudden and surprising
alteration in their habits of thought. In times of peace, we usually
ignore the State in favour of partisan political controversies, or
personal struggles for office, or the pursuit of party policies. It is
the Government rather than the State with which the politically minded
are concerned. The State is reduced to a shadowy emblem which comes to
consciousness only on occasions of patriotic holiday.
Government is obviously composed of common and unsanctified men, and is
thus a legitimate object of criticism and even contempt. If your own
party is in power, things may be assumed to be moving safely enough; but
if the opposition is in, then clearly all safety and honor have fled the
State. Yet you do not put it to yourself in quite that way. What you
think is only that there are rascals to be turned out of a very
practical machinery of offices and functions which you take for granted.
When we say that Americans are lawless, we usually mean that they are
less conscious than other peoples of the august majesty of the
institution of the State as it stands behind the objective government of
men and laws which we see. In a republic the men who hold office are
indistinguishable from the mass. Very few of them possess the slightest
personal dignity with which they could endow their political role; even
if they ever thought of such a thing. And they have no class distinction
to give them glamour. In a republic the Government is obeyed
grumblingly, because it has no bedazzlements or sanctities to gild it.
If you are a good old-fashioned democrat, you rejoice at this fact, you
glory in the plainness of a system where every citizen has become a
king. If you are more sophisticated you bemoan the passing of dignity
and honor from affairs of State. But in practice, the democrat does not
in the least treat his elected citizen with the respect due to a king,
nor does the sophisticated citizen pay tribute to the dignity even when
he finds it. The republican State has almost no trappings to appeal to
the common man’s emotions. What it has are of military origin, and in an
unmilitary era such as we have passed through since the Civil War, even
military trappings have been scarcely seen. In such an era the sense of
the State almost fades out of the consciousness of men.
With the shock of war, however, the State comes into its own again. The
Government, with no mandate from the people, without consultation of the
people, conducts all the negotiations, the backing and filling, the
menaces and explanations, which slowly bring it into collision with some
other Government, and gently and irresistibly slides the country into
war. For the benefit of proud and haughty citizens, it is fortified with
a list of the intolerable insults which have been hurled toward us by
the other nations; for the benefit of the liberal and beneficent, it has
a convincing set of moral purposes which our going to war will achieve;
for the ambitious and aggressive classes, it can gently whisper of a
bigger role in the destiny of the world. The result is that, even in
those countries where the business of declaring war is theoretically in
the hands of representatives of the people, no legislature has ever been
known to decline the request of an Executive, which has conducted all
foreign affairs in utter privacy and irresponsibility, that it order the
nation into battle. Good democrats are wont to feel the crucial
difference between a State in which the popular Parliament or Congress
declares war, and the State in which an absolute monarch or ruling class
declares war. But, put to the stern pragmatic test, the difference is
not striking. In the freest of republics as well as in the most
tyrannical of empires, all foreign policy, the diplomatic negotiations
which produce or forestall war, are equally the private property of the
Executive part of the Government, and are equally exposed to no check
whatever from popular bodies, or the people voting as a mass themselves.
The moment war is declared, however, the mass of the people, through
some spiritual alchemy, become convinced that they have willed and
executed the deed themselves. They then, with the exception of a few
malcontents, proceed to allow themselves to be regimented, coerced,
deranged in all the environments of their lives, and turned into a solid
manufactory of destruction toward whatever other people may have, in the
appointed scheme of things, come within the range of the Government’s
disapprobation. The citizen throws off his contempt and indifference to
Government, identifies himself with its purposes, revives all his
military memories and symbols, and the State once more walks, an august
presence, through the imaginations of men. Patriotism becomes the
dominant feeling, and produces immediately that intense and hopeless
confusion between the relations which the individual bears and should
bear toward the society of which he is a part.
The patriot loses all sense of the distinction between State, nation,
and government. In our quieter moments, the Nation or Country forms the
basic idea of society. We think vaguely of a loose population spreading
over a certain geographical portion of the earth’s surface, speaking a
common language, and living in a homogeneous civilization. Our idea of
Country concerns itself with the non-political aspects of a people, its
ways of living, its personal traits, its literature and art, its
characteristic attitudes toward life. We are Americans because we live
in a certain bounded territory, because our ancestors have carried on a
great enterprise of pioneering and colonization, because we live in
certain kinds of communities which have a certain look and express their
aspirations in certain ways. We can see that our civilization is
different from contiguous civilizations like the Indian and Mexican. The
institutions of our country form a certain network which affects us
vitally and intrigues our thoughts in a way that these other
civilizations do not. We are a part of Country, for better or for worse.
We have arrived in it through the operation of physiological laws, and
not in any way through our own choice. By the time we have reached what
are called years of discretion, its influences have molded our habits,
our values, our ways of thinking, so that however aware we may become,
we never really lose the stamp of our civilization, or could be mistaken
for the child of any other country. Our feeling for our fellow
countrymen is one of similarity or of mere acquaintance. We may be
intensely proud of and congenial to our particular network of
civilization, or we may detest most of its qualities and rage at its
defects. This does not alter the fact that we are inextricably bound up
in it. The Country, as an inescapable group into which we are born, and
which makes us its particular kind of a citizen of the world, seems to
be a fundamental fact of our consciousness, an irreducible minimum of
social feeling.
Now this feeling for country is essentially noncompetitive; we think of
our own people merely as living on the earth’s surface along with other
groups, pleasant or objectionable as they may be, but fundamentally as
sharing the earth with them. In our simple conception of country there
is no more feeling of rivalry with other peoples than there is in our
feeling for our family. Our interest turns within rather than without,
is intensive and not belligerent. We grow up and our imaginations
gradually stake out the world we live in, they need no greater conscious
satisfaction for their gregarious impulses than this sense of a great
mass of people to whom we are more or less attuned, and in whose
institutions we are functioning. The feeling for country would be an
uninflatable maximum were it not for the ideas of State and Government
which are associated with it. Country is a concept of peace, of
tolerance, of living and letting live. But State is essentially a
concept of power, of competition: it signifies a group in its aggressive
aspects. And we have the misfortune of being born not only into a
country but into a State, and as we grow up we learn to mingle the two
feelings into a hopeless confusion.
The State is the country acting as a political unit, it is the group
acting as a repository of force, determiner of law, arbiter of justice.
International politics is a “power politics” because it is a relation of
States and that is what States infallibly and calamitously are, huge
aggregations of human and industrial force that may be hurled against
each other in war. When a country acts as a whole in relation to another
country, or in imposing laws on its own inhabitants, or in coercing or
punishing individuals or minorities, it is acting as a State. The
history of America as a country is quite different from that of America
as a State. In one case it is the drama of the pioneering conquest of
the land, of the growth of wealth and the ways in which it was used, of
the enterprise of education, and the carrying out of spiritual ideals,
of the struggle of economic classes. But as a State, its history is that
of playing a part in the world, making war, obstructing international
trade, preventing itself from being split to pieces, punishing those
citizens whom society agrees are offensive, and collecting money to pay
for all.
Government on the other hand is synonymous with neither State nor
Nation. It is the machinery by which the nation, organized as a State,
carries out its State functions. Government is a framework of the
administration of laws, and the carrying out of the public force.
Government is the idea of the State put into practical operation in the
hands of definite, concrete, fallible men. It is the visible sign of the
invisible grace. It is the word made flesh. And it has necessarily the
limitations inherent in all practicality. Government is the only form in
which we can envisage the State, but it is by no means identical with
it. That the State is a mystical conception is something that must never
be forgotten. Its glamor and its significance linger behind the
framework of Government and direct its activities.
Wartime brings the ideal of the State out into very clear relief, and
reveals attitudes and tendencies that were hidden. In times of peace the
sense of the State flags in a republic that is not militarized. For war
is essentially the health of the State. The ideal of the State is that
within its territory its power and influence should be universal. As the
Church is the medium for the spiritual salvation of man, so the State is
thought of as the medium for his political salvation. Its idealism is a
rich blood flowing to all the members of the body politic. And it is
precisely in war that the urgency for union seems greatest, and the
necessity for universality seems most unquestioned. The State is the
organization of the herd to act offensively or defensively against
another herd similarly organized. The more terrifying the occasion for
defense, the closer will become the organization and the more coercive
the influence upon each member of the herd. War sends the current of
purpose and activity flowing down to the lowest levels of the herd, and
to its remote branches. All the activities of society are linked
together as fast as possible to this central purpose of making a
military offensive or military defense, and the State becomes what in
peacetimes it has vainly struggled to become — the inexorable arbiter
and determinant of men’s businesses and attitudes and opinions. The
slack is taken up, the cross-currents fade out, and the nation moves
lumberingly and slowly, but with ever accelerated speed and integration,
towards the great end, towards that “peacefulness of being at war,” of
which L. P. Jacks has spoken so unforgettably.
The classes which are able to play an active and not merely a passive
role in the organization for war get a tremendous liberation of activity
and energy. Individuals are jolted out of their old routine, many of
them are given new positions of responsibility, new techniques must be
learnt. Wearing home times are broken and women who would have remained
attached with infantile bonds are liberated for service overseas. A vast
sense of rejuvenescence pervades the significant classes, a sense of new
importance in the world. Old national ideals are taken out, re-adapted
to the purpose and used as the universal touchstones, or molds into
which all thought is poured. Every individual citizen who in peacetimes
had no living fragment of hte State becomes an active amateur agent of
the Government in reporting spies and disloyalists, in raising
Government funds, or in propagating such measures as are considered
necessary by officialdom. Minority opinion, which in times of peace was
only irritating and could not be dealt with by law unless it was
conjoined with actual crime, becomes with the outbreak of war, a case
for outlawry. Criticism of the State, objections to war, lukewarm
opinions concerning the necessity or the beauty of conscription, are
made subject to ferocious penalties, far exceeding [in] severity those
affixed to actual pragmatic crimes. Public opinion, as expressed in the
newspapers, and the pulpits and the schools, becomes one solid block.
“Loyalty,” or rather war orthodoxy, becomes the sole test for all
professions, techniques, occupations. Particularly is this true in the
sphere of the intellectual life. There the smallest taint is held to
spread over the whole soul, so that a professor of physics is ipso facto
disqualified to teach physics or hold honorable place in a university —
the republic of learning — if he is at all unsound on the war. Even mere
association with persons thus tainted is considered to disqualify a
teacher. Anything pertaining to the enemy becomes taboo. His books are
suppressed wherever possible, his language is forbidden. His artistic
products are considered to convey in the subtlest spiritual way taints
of vast poison to the soul that permits itself to enjoy them. So enemy
music is suppressed, and energetic measures of opprobrium taken against
those whose artistic consciences are not ready to perform such an act of
self-sacrifice. The rage for loyal conformity works impartially, and
often in diametric opposition to other orthodoxies and traditional
conformities or ideals. The triumphant orthodoxy of the State is shown
at its apex perhaps when Christian preachers lose their pulpits for
taking in more or less literal terms the Sermon on the Mount, and
Christian zealots are sent to prison for twenty years for distributing
tracts which argue that war is unscriptural.
War is the health of the State. It automatically sets in motion
throughout society those irresistible forces for uniformity, for
passionate cooperation with the Government in coercing into obedience
the minority groups and individuals which lack the larger herd sense.
The machinery of government sets and enforces the drastic penalties. The
minorities are either intimidated into silence, or brought slowly around
by subtle process of persuasion which may seem to them really to be
converting them. Of course, the ideal of perfect loyalty, perfect
uniformity is never really attained. The classes upon whom the amateur
work of coercion falls are unwearied in their zeal, but often their
agitation, instead of converting merely serves to stiffen their
resistance. Minorities are rendered sullen, and some intellectual
opinion bitter and satirical. But in general, the nation in wartime
attains a uniformity of feeling, a hierarchy of values culminating at
the undisputed apex of the State ideal, which could not possibly be
produced through any other agency than war. Other values such as
artistic creation, knowledge, reason, beauty, the enhancement of life,
are instantly and almost unanimously sacrificed, and the significant
classes who have constituted themselves the amateur agents of the State,
are engaged not only in sacrificing these values for themselves but in
coercing all other persons into sacrificing them.
War — or at least modern war waged by a democratic republic against a
powerful enemy — seems to achieve for a nation almost all that the most
inflamed political idealist could desire. Citizens are no longer
indifferent to their Government, but each cell of the body politic is
brimming with life and activity. We are at last on the way to full
realization of that collective community in which each individual
somehow contains the virtue of the whole. In a nation at war, every
citizen identifies himself with the whole and feels immensely
strengthened in that identification. The purpose and desire of the
collective community live in each person who throws himself
whole-heartedly into the cause of war. The impeding distinction between
society and the individual is almost blotted out. At war, the individual
becomes almost identical with his society. He achieves a superb
self-assurance, an intuition of the rightness of all his ideas and
emotions, so that in the suppression of opponents or heretics he is
invincibly strong; he feels behind him all the power of the collective
community. The individual as social being in war seems to have achieved
almost his apotheosis. Not for any religious impulse could the American
nation have been expected to show such devotion en masse, such sacrifice
and labor. Certainly not for any secular good, such as universal
education or the subjugation of nature, would it have poured forth its
treasure and its life, or would it have permitted such stern coercive
measures to be taken against it, such as conscripting its money and its
men. But for the sake of a war of offensive self-defense, undertaken to
support a difficult cause to the slogan of “democracy,” it would reach
the highest level ever known of collective effort.
For these secular goods, connected with the enhancement of life, the
education of men and the use of the intelligence to realize reason and
beauty in the nation’s communal living, are alien to our traditional
ideal of the State. The State is intimately connected with war, for it
is the organization of the collective community when it acts in a
political manner, and to act in a political manner towards a rival group
has meant, throughout all history — war.
There is nothing invidious in the use of the term, “herd,” in connection
with the State. It is merely an attempt to reduce closer to first
principles the nature of this institution in the shadow of which we all
live, move and have our being. Ethnologists are generally agreed that
human society made its first appearance as the human pack and not as a
collection of individuals or couples. The herd is in fact the original
unit, and only as it was differentiated did personal individuality
develop. All the most primitive tribes of men are shown to live in very
complex but very rigid social organization where opportunity for
individuation is scarcely given. These tribes remain strictly organized
herds, and the difference between them and the modern State is one of
degree of sophistication and variety of organization, and not of kind.
Psychologists recognize the gregarious impulse as one of the strongest
primitive pulls which keeps together the herds of the different species
of higher animals. Mankind is no exception. Our pugnacious evolutionary
history has prevented the impulse from ever dying out. This gregarious
impulse is the tendency to imitate, to conform to coalesce together, and
is most powerful when the herd believes itself threatened with attack.
Animals crowd together for protection, and men become most conscious of
their collectivity at the threat of war. Consciousness of collectivity
brings confidence and a feeling of massed strength, which in turn
arouses pugnacity and the battle is on. In civilized man, the gregarious
impulse acts not only to produce concerted action for defense, but also
to produce identity of opinion. Since thought is a form of behavior, the
gregarious impulse floods up into its realms and demands that sense of
uniform thought which wartime produces so successfully. And it is in
this flooding of the conscious life of society that gregariousness works
its havoc.
For just as in modern societies the sex-instinct is enormously
over-supplied for the requirements of human propagation, so the
gregarious impulse is enormously over-supplied for the work of
protection which it is called upon to perform. It would be quite enough
if we were gregarious enough to enjoy the companionship of others, to be
able to cooperate with them, and to feel a slight malaise at solitude.
Unfortunately, however, this impulse is not content with those
reasonable and healthful demands, but insists that like mindedness shall
prevail everywhere, in all departments of life, so that all human
progress, all novelty, and nonconformity must be carried against the
resistance of this tyrannical herd-instinct which drives the individual
into obedience and conformity with the majority. Even in the most modern
and enlightened societies this impulse shows little sign of abating. As
it is driven by inexorable economic demand out of the sphere of utility,
it seems to fasten itself ever more fiercely in the realm of feeling and
opinion, so that conformity comes to be a thing aggressively desired and
demanded.
The gregarious impulse keeps its hold all the more virulently because
when the group is in motion or is taking any positive action, this
feeling of being with and supported by the collective herd very greatly
feeds that will to power, the nourishment of which the individual
organism so constantly demands. You feel powerful by conforming, and you
feel forlorn and hopeless if you are out of the crowd. While even if you
do not get any access to power by thinking and feeling just as everybody
else in your group does, you get at least the warm feeling of obedience,
the soothing irresponsibility of protection.
Joining as it does to these very vigorous tendencies of the individual —
the pleasure in power and the pleasure of obedience — this gregarious
impulse becomes irresistible in society. War stimulates it to the
highest possible degree, sending the influence of its mysterious
herd-current with its inflations of power and obedience to the farthest
reaches of the society, to every individual and little group that can
possibly be affected. And it is these impulses which the State — the
organization of the entire herd, the entire collectivity — is founded on
and makes use of.
There is, of course, in the feeling towards the State a large element of
pure filial mysticism. The sense of insecurity, the desire for
protection, sends one’s desire back to the father and mother, with whom
is associated the earliest feelings of protection. It is not for nothing
that one’s State is still thought of as Father or Motherland, that one’s
relation towards it is conceived in terms of family affection. The war
has shown that nowhere under the shock of danger have these primitive
childlike attitudes failed to assert themselves again, as much in this
country as anywhere. If we have not the intense Father-sense of the
German who worships his Vaterland, at least in Uncle Sam we have a
symbol of protecting, kindly authority, and in the many Mother-posters
of the Red Cross, we see how easily in the more tender functions of war
service, the ruling organization is conceived in family terms. A people
at war have become in the most literal sense obedient, respectful,
trustful children again, full of that naive faith in the all-wisdom and
all-power of the adult who takes care of them, imposes his mild but
necessary rule upon them and in whom they lose their responsibility and
anxieties. In this recrudescence of the child, there is great comfort,
and a certain influx of power. On most people the strain of being an
independent adult weighs heavily, and upon none more than those members
of the significant classes who have bequeathed to them or have assumed
the responsibilities of governing. The State provides the convenientest
of symbols under which those classes can retain all the actual pragmatic
satisfaction of governing, but can rid themselves of the psychic burden
of adulthood. They continue to direct industry and government and all
the institutions of society pretty much as before, but in their own
conscious eyes and in the eyes of the general public, they are turned
from their selfish and predatory ways, and have become loyal servants of
society, or something greater than they — the State. The man who moves
from the direction of a large business in New York to a post in the war
management industrial service in Washington does not apparently alter
very much his power or his administrative technique. But psychically,
what a transformation has occurred! He is not now only the power but the
glory! And his sense of satisfaction is proportional not to the genuine
amount of personal sacrifice that may be involved in the change but to
the extent to which he retains the industrial prerogatives and sense of
command.
From members of this class a certain insuperable indignation arises if
the change from private enterprise to State service involves any real
loss of power and personal privilege. If there is to be any pragmatic
sacrifice, let it be, they feel, on the field of honor, in the
traditionally acclaimed deaths by battle, in that detour to suicide, as
Nietzsche calls war. The State in wartime supplies satisfaction for this
very real craving, but its chief value is the opportunity it gives for
this regression to infantile attitudes. In your reaction to an imagined
attack on your country or an insult to its government, you draw closer
to the herd for protection, you conform in word and deed, and you act
together. And you fix your adoring gaze upon the State, with a truly
filial look, as upon the Father of the flock, the quasi-personal symbol
of the strength of the herd, and the leader and determinant of your
definite action and ideas.
The members of the working-classes, that portion at least which does not
identify itself with the significant classes and seek to imitate it and
rise to it, are notoriously less affected by the symbolism of the State,
or, in other words, are less patriotic than the significant classes. For
theirs is neither the power nor the glory. The State in wartime does not
offer them the opportunity to regress, for, never having acquired social
adulthood, they cannot lose it. If they have been drilled and
regimented, as by the industrial regime of the last century, they go out
docilely enough to do battle for their State, but they are almost
entirely without that filial sense and even without that herd-intellect
sense which operates so powerfully among their “betters.” They live
habitually in an industrial serfdom, by which though nominally free,
they are in practice as a class bound to a system of a
machine-production, the implements of which they do not own, and in the
distribution of whose product they have not the slightest voice, except
what they can occasionally exert by a veiled intimidation which draws
slightly more of the product in their direction. From such serfdom,
military conscription is not so great a change. But into the military
enterprise they go, not with those hurrahs of the significant classes
whose instincts war so powerfully feeds, but with the same apathy with
which they enter and continue in the industrial enterprise.
From this point of view, war can be called almost an upper-class sport.
the novel interests and excitements it provides, the inflations of
power, the satisfaction it gives to those very tenacious human impulses
— gregariousness and parent-regression — endow it with all the qualities
of a luxurious collective game which is felt intensely just in
proportion to the sense of significant rule the person has in the
class-division of society. A country at war — particularly our own
country at war — does not act as a purely homogeneous herd. The
significant classes have all the herd-feeling in all its primitive
intensity, so that this feeling does not flow freely without impediment
throughout the entire nation. A modern country represents a long
historical and social process of disaggregation of the herd. The nation
at peace is not a group, it is a network of myriads of groups
representing the cooperation and similar feeling of men on all sorts of
planes and in all sorts of human interests and enterprises. In every
modern industrial country, there are parallel planes of economic classes
with divergent attitudes and institutions and interests — bourgeois and
proletariat — with their many subdivisions according to power and
function, and even their interweaving, such as those more highly skilled
workers who habitually identify themselves with the owning and
significant classes and strive to raise themselves to the bourgeois
level, imitating their cultural standards and manners. Then there are
religious groups with a certain definite, though weakening sense of
kinship, and there are the powerful ethnic groups which behave almost as
cultural colonies in the New World, clinging tenaciously to language and
historical tradition, though their herdishness is usually founded on
cultural rather than State symbols. There are certain vague sectional
groups. All these small sects, political parties, classes, levels,
interests, may act as foci for herd-feelings. They intersect and
interweave, and the same person may be a member of several different
groups lying at different planes. Different occasions will set off his
herd-feeling in one direction or another. In a religious crisis he will
be intensely conscious of the necessity that his sect — or sub-herd —
may prevail; in a political campaign, that his party shall triumph.
To the spread of herd-feeling, therefore, all these smaller herds offer
resistance. To the spread of that herd-feeling which arises from the
threat of war, and which would normally involve the entire nation, the
only groups which make serious resistance are those, of course, which
continue to identify themselves with the other nation from which they or
their parents have come. In times of peace they are for all practical
purposes citizens of their new country. They keep alive their ethnic
traditions more as a luxury than anything. Indeed these traditions tend
rapidly to die out except where they connect with some still unresolved
nationalistic cause abroad, with some struggle for freedom, or some
irredentism. If they are consciously opposed by a too invidious policy
of Americanism, they tend to be strengthened. And in time of war, these
ethnic elements which have any traditional connection with the enemy,
even though most of the individuals may have little real sympathy with
the enemy’s cause, are naturally lukewarm to the herd-feeling of the
nation which goes back to State traditions in which they have no share.
But to the natives imbued with State-feeling, any such resistance or
apathy is intolerable. This herd-feeling, this newly awakened
consciousness of the State, demands universality. The leaders of the
significant classes, who feel most intensely this State-compulsion,
demand a one hundred per cent Americanism, among one hundred per cent of
the population. The State is a jealous God and will brook no rivals. Its
sovereignty must pervade everyone and all feeling must be run into the
stereotyped forms of romantic patriotic militarism which is the
traditional expression of the State herd-feeling.
Thus arises conflict within the State. War becomes almost a sport
between the hunters and the hunted. The pursuit of enemies within
outweighs in psychic attractiveness the assault on the enemy without.
The whole terrific force of the State is brought to bear against the
heretics. The nation boils with a slow insistent fever. A white
terrorism is carried on by the Government against all pacifists,
Socialists, enemy aliens, and a milder unofficial persecution against
all persons or movements that can be imagined as connected with the
enemy. War, which should be the health of the State, unifies all the
bourgeois elements and the common people, and outlaws the rest. The
revolutionary proletariat that shows more resistance to this unification
is, as we have seen, psychically out of the current. Its vanguard as the
I.W.W. is remorselessly pursued, in spite of the proof that it is a
symptom, not a cause, and its prosecution increases the disaffection of
labor and intensifies the friction instead of lessening it.
But the emotions that play around the defense of the State do not take
into consideration the pragmatic results. A nation at war, led by its
significant classes, is engaged in liberating certain of its impulses
which have had all too little exercise in the past. It is getting
certain satisfactions and the actual conduct of the war or the condition
of the country are really incidental to the enjoyment of new forms of
virtue and power and aggressiveness. If it could be shown conclusively
that the persecution of slightly disaffected elements actually increased
enormously the difficulties of production and the organization of the
war technique, it would be found that public policy would scarcely
change. The significant classes must have their pleasure in hunting down
and chastising everything that they feel instinctively to be not imbued
with the current State-enthusiasm, though the State itself be actually
impeded in its efforts to carry out those objects for which they are
passionately contending. The best proof of this is that with a pursuit
of plotters that has continued with ceaseless vigilance ever since the
beginning of the war in Europe, the concrete crimes unearthed and
punished have been fewer than those prosecutions for the mere crime of
opinion or the expression of sentiments critical of the State or the
national policy. The punishment for opinion has been far more ferocious
and unintermittent than the punishment of pragmatic crime. Unimpeachable
Anglo-Saxon-Americans who were freer of pacifist or socialist utterance
than the State-obsessed ruling public opinion, received heavier
penalties, and even greater opprobrium, in many instances, than the
definitely hostile German plotter. A public opinion which, almost
without protest, accepts as just, adequate, beautiful, deserved, and in
fitting harmony with ideals of liberty and freedom of speech, a sentence
of twenty years in prison for mere utterances, no matter what they may
be, shows itself to be suffering from a kind of social derangement of
values, a sort of social neurosis, that deserves analysis and
comprehension. On our entrance into the war there were many persons who
predicted exactly this derangement of values, who feared lest democracy
suffer more at home from an America at war than could be gained for
democracy abroad. That fear has been amply justified. The question
whether the American nation would act like an enlightened democracy
going to war for the sake of high ideals, or like a State-obsessed herd,
has been decisively answered. The record is written and cannot be
erased. History will decide whether the terrorization of opinion, and
the regimentation of life was justified under the most idealistic of
democratic administrations. It will see that when the American nation
had ostensibly a chance to conduct a gallant war, with scrupulous regard
to the safety of democratic values at home, it chose rather to adopt all
the most obnoxious and coercive techniques of the enemy and of the other
countries at war, and to rival in intimidation and ferocity of
punishment the worst governmental systems of the age. For its former
unconsciousness and disrespect of the State ideal, the nation apparently
paid the penalty in a violent swing to the other extreme. It acted so
exactly like a herd in its irrational coercion of minorities that there
is no artificiality in interpreting the progress of the war in terms of
herd psychology. It unwittingly brought out into the strongest relief
the true characteristics of the State and its intimate alliance with
war. It provided for the enemies of war and the critics of the State the
most telling arguments possible. The new passion for the State ideal
unwittingly set in motion and encouraged forces that threaten very
materially to reform the State. It has shown those who are really
determined to end war that the problem is not the mere simple one of
finishing a war that will end war.
For war is a complicated way in which a nation acts, and it acts so out
of a spiritual compulsion which pushes it on perhaps against all its
interests, all its real desires, and all its real sense of values. It is
States that make wars and not nations, and the very thought and almost
necessity of war is bound up with the ideal of the State. Not for
centuries have nations made war; in fact the only historical example of
nations making war is the great barbarian invasions into Southern
Europe, invasions of Russia from the East, and perhaps the sweep of
Islam through Northern Africa into Europe after Mohammed’s death. And
the motivations for such wars were either the restless expansion of
migratory tribes or the flame of religious fanaticism. Perhaps these
great movements could scarcely be called wars at all, for war implies an
organized people drilled and led; in fact, it necessitates the State.
Ever since Europe has had any such organization, such huge conflicts
between nations — nations, that is, as cultural groups — have been
unthinkable. It is preposterous to assume that for centuries in Europe
there would have been any possibility of a people en masse — with their
own leaders, and not with the leaders of their duly constituted State —
rising up and overflowing their borders in a war raid upon a neighboring
people. The wars of the Revolutionary armies of France were clearly in
defense of an imperiled freedom, and moreover, they were clearly
directed not against other peoples, but against the autocratic
governments that were combining to crush the Revolution. Three is no
instance in history of genuinely national war. There are instances of
national defenses, among primitive civilizations such as the Balkan
peoples, against intolerable invasion by neighboring despots or
oppression. But war, as such, cannot occur except in a system of
competing States, which have relations with each other through the
channels of diplomacy.
War is a function of this system of States, and could not occur except
in such a system. Nations organized for internal administration, nations
organized as a federation of free communities, nations organized in any
way except that of a political centralization of a dynasty or the
reformed descendant of a dynasty, could not possibly make war upon each
other. They would not only have no motive for conflict, but they would
be unable to muster the concentrated force to make war effective. There
might be all sorts of amateur marauding, there might be guerrilla
expeditions of group against group, but there could not be that terrible
war en masse of the national state, that exploitation of the nation in
the interests of the State, that abuse of the national life and resource
in the frenzied mutual suicide which is modern war.
It cannot be too firmly realized that war is a function of States and
not of nations, indeed that it is the chief function of States. War is a
very artificial thing. It is not the naive spontaneous outburst of herd
pugnacity; it is no more primary than is formal religion. War cannot
exist without a military establishment, and a military establishment
cannot exist without a State organization. War has an immemorial
tradition and heredity only because the State has a long tradition and
heredity. But they are inseparably and functionally joined. We cannot
crusade against war without crusading implicitly against the State. And
we cannot expect, or take measures to ensure, that this war is a war to
end war, unless at the same time we take measures to end the State in
its traditional form. The State is not the nation, and the State can be
modified and even abolished in its present form, without harming the
nation. On the contrary, with the passing of the dominance of the State,
the genuine life-enhancing forces of the nation will be liberated. If
the State’s chief function is war, then the State must suck out of the
nation a large part of its energy for purely sterile purposes of defense
and aggression. It devotes to waste or to actual destruction as much as
it can of the vitality of the nation. No one will deny that war is a
vast complex of life-destroying and life-crippling forces. If the
State’s chief function is war, then it is chiefly concerned with
coordinating and developing the powers and techniques which make for
destruction. And this means not only the actual and potential
destruction of the enemy, but of the nation at home as well. For the
very existence of a State in a system of States means that the nation
lies always under a risk of war and invasion, and the calling away of
energy into military pursuits means a crippling of the productive and
life-enhancing process of the national life.
All this organizing of death-dealing energy and technique is not a
natural but a very sophisticated process. Particularly in modern
nations, but also all through the course of modern European history, it
could never exist without the State. For it meets the demands of no
other institution, it follows the desires of no religious, industrial,
political group. If the demand for military organization and a military
establishment seems to come not from the officers of the State but from
the public, it is only that it comes from the State-obsessed portion of
the public, those groups which feel most keenly the State ideal. And in
this country we have had evidence all too indubitable about how
powerless the pacifically minded officers of the State may be in the
face of a State-obsession of the significant classes. If a powerful
section of the significant classes feels more intensely the attitudes of
the State, then they will most infallibly mold the Government in time to
their wishes, bring it back to act as the embodiment of the State which
it pretends to be. In every country we have seen groups that were more
loyal than the King — more patriotic than the Government — the
Ulsterites in Great Britain, the Junkers in Prussia, l’Action Francaise
in France, our patrioteers in America. These groups exist to keep the
steering wheel of the State straight, and they prevent the nation from
ever veering very far from the State ideal.
Militarism expresses the desires and satisfies the major impulse only of
this class. The other classes, left to themselves, have too many
necessities and interests and ambitions, to concern themselves with so
expensive and destructive a game. But the State-obsessed group is either
able to get control of the machinery of the State or to intimidate those
in control, so that it is able through the use of the collective force
to regiment the other grudging and reluctant classes into a military
programme. State idealism percolates down through the strata of society,
capturing groups and individuals just in proportion to the prestige of
this dominant class. So that we have the herd actually strung along
between two extremes, the militaristic patriots at one end, who are
scarcely distinguishable in attitude and animus from the most
reactionary Bourbons of an Empire, and unskilled labor groups, which
entirely lack the State sense. But the State acts as a whole, and the
class that controls governmental machinery can swing the effective
action of the herd as a whole. The herd is not actually a whole,
emotionally. But by an ingenious mixture of cajolery, agitation,
intimidation, the herd is licked into shape, into an effective
mechanical unity, if not into a spiritual whole. Men are told
simultaneously that they will enter the military establishment of their
own volition, as their splendid sacrifice for their country’s welfare,
and that if they do not enter they will be hunted down and punished with
the most horrid penalties; and under a most indescribable confusion of
democratic pride and personal fear they submit to the destruction of
their livelihood if not their lives, in a way that would formerly have
seemed to them so obnoxious as to be incredible.
In this great herd-machinery, dissent is like sand in the bearings. The
State ideal is primarily a sort of blind animal push towards military
unity. Any interference with that unity turns the whole vast impulse
towards crushing it. Dissent is speedily outlawed, and the Government,
backed by the significant classes and those who in every locality,
however small, identify themselves with them, proceeds against the
outlaws, regardless of their value to other institutions of the nation,
or of the effect that their persecution may have on public opinion. The
herd becomes divided into the hunters and the hunted, and war-enterprise
becomes not only a technical game but a sport as well.
It must never be forgotten that nations do not declare war on each
other, nor in the strictest sense is it nations that fight each other.
Much has been said to the effect that modern wars are wars of whole
peoples and not of dynasties. Because the entire nation is regimented
and the whole resources of the country are levied on for war, this does
not mean that it is the country, our country which is fighting, and only
as a State would it possibly fight. So, literally, it is States which
make war on each other and not peoples. Governments are the agents of
States, and it is Governments which declare war on each other, acting
truest to form in the interests of the great State ideal which they
represent. There is no case known in modern times of the people being
consulted in the initiation of a war. The present demand for democratic
control of foreign policy indicates how completely, even in the most
democratic of modern nations, foreign policy has been the secret private
possession of the executive branch of Government.
However representative of the people Parliaments and Congresses may be
in all that concerns the internal administration of a country’s
political affairs, in international relations it has never been possible
to maintain that the popular body acted except as a wholly mechanical
ratifier of the Executive’s will. The formality by which Parliaments and
Congresses declare war is the merest technicality. Before such a
declaration can take place, the country will have been brought to the
very brink of war by the foreign policy of the Executive. A long series
of steps on the downward path, each one more fatally committing the
unsuspecting country to a warlike course of action will have been taken
without either the people or its representatives being consulted or
expressing its feeling. When the declaration of war is finally demanded
by the Executive, the Parliament or Congress could not refuse it without
reversing the course of history, without repudiating what has been
representing itself in the eyes of the other states as the symbol and
interpreter of the nation’s will and animus. To repudiate an Executive
at that time would be to publish to the entire world the evidence that
the country had been grossly deceived by its own Government, that the
country with an almost criminal carelessness had allowed its Government
to commit it to gigantic national enterprises in which it had no heart.
In such a crisis, even a Parliament which in the most democratic States
represents the common man and not the significant classes who most
strongly cherish the State ideal, will cheerfully sustain the foreign
policy which it understands even less than it would care for if it
understood, and will vote almost unanimously for an incalculable war, in
which the nation may be brought well nigh to ruin. That is why the
referendum which was advocated by some people as a test of American
sentiment in entering the war was considered even by thoughtful
democrats to be something subtly improper. The die had been cast.
Popular whim could derange and bungle monstrously the majestic march of
State policy in its new crusade for the peace of the world. The
irresistible State ideal got hold of the bowels of men. Whereas up to
this time, it had been irreproachable to be neutral in word and deed,
for the foreign policy of the State had so decided it, henceforth it
became the most arrant crime to remain neutral. The Middle West, which
had been soddenly pacifistic in our days of neutrality, became in a few
months just as soddenly bellicose, and in its zeal for witch-burning and
its scent for enemies within gave precedence to no section of the
country. The herd-mind followed faithfully the State-mind and, the
agitation for a referendum being soon forgotten, the country fell into
the universal conclusion that, since its Congress had formally declared
the war, the nation itself had in the most solemn and universal way
devised and brought on the entire affair.
Oppression of minorities became justified on the plea that the latter
were perversely resisting the rationally constructed and solemnly
declared will of a majority of the nation. The herd coalescence of
opinion which became inevitable the moment the State had set flowing the
war attitudes became interpreted as a prewar popular decision, and
disinclination to bow to the herd was treated as a monstrously
antisocial act. So that the State, which had vigorously resisted the
idea of a referendum and clung tenaciously and, of course, with entire
success to its autocratic and absolute control of foreign policy, had
the pleasure of seeing the country, within a few months, given over to
the retrospective impression that a genuine referendum had taken place.
When once a country has lapped up these State attitudes, its memory
fades; it conceives itself not as merely accepting, but of having itself
willed, the whole policy and technique of war. The significant classes,
with their trailing satellites, identify themselves with the State, so
that what the State, through the agency of the Government, has willed,
this majority conceives itself to have willed.
All of which goes to show that the State represents all the autocratic,
arbitrary, coercive, belligerent forces within a social group, it is a
sort of complexus of everything most distasteful to the modern free
creative spirit, the feeling for life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness. War is the health of the State. Only when the State is at war
does the modern society function with that unity of sentiment, simple
uncritical patriotic devotion, cooperation of services, which have
always been the ideal of the State lover. With the ravages of democratic
ideas, however, the modern republic cannot go to war under the old
conceptions of autocracy and death-dealing belligerency. If a successful
animus for war requires a renaissance of State ideals, they can only
come back under democratic forms, under this retrospective conviction of
democratic control of foreign policy, democratic desire for war, and
particularly of this identification of the democracy with the State. How
unregenerate the ancient State may be, however, is indicated by the laws
against sedition, and by the Government’s unreformed attitude on foreign
policy. One of the first demands of the more farseeing democrats in the
democracies of the Alliance was that secret diplomacy must go. The war
was seen to have been made possible by a web of secret agreements
between States, alliances that were made by Governments without the
shadow of popular support or even popular knowledge, and vague,
half-understood commitments that scarcely reached the stage of a treaty
or agreement, but which proved binding in the event. Certainly, said
these democratic thinkers, war can scarcely be avoided unless this
poisonous underground system of secret diplomacy is destroyed, this
system by which a nation’s power, wealth, and manhood may be signed away
like a blank check to an allied nation to be cashed in at some future
crisis. Agreements which are to affect the lives of whole peoples must
be made between peoples and not by Governments, or at least by their
representatives in the full glare of publicity and criticism.
Such a demand for “democratic control of foreign policy” seemed
axiomatic. Even if the country had been swung into war by steps taken
secretly and announced to the public only after they had been
consummated, it was felt that the attitude of the American State toward
foreign policy was only a relic of the bad old days and must be
superseded in the new order. The American President himself, the liberal
hope of the world, had demanded, in the eyes of the world, open
diplomacy, agreements freely and openly arrived at. Did this mean a
genuine transference of power in this most crucial of State functions
from Government to people? Not at all. When the question recently came
to a challenge in Congress, and the implications of open discussion were
somewhat specifically discussed, and the desirabilities frankly
commended, the President let his disapproval be known in no uncertain
way. No one ever accused Mr. Wilson of not being a State idealist, and
whenever democratic aspirations swung ideals too far out of the State
orbit, he could be counted on to react vigorously. Here was a clear case
of conflict between democratic idealism and the very crux of the concept
of the State. However unthinkingly he might have been led on to
encourage open diplomacy in his liberalizing program, when its
implication was made vivid to him, he betrayed how mere a tool the idea
had been in his mind to accentuate America’s redeeming role. Not in any
sense as a serious pragmatic technique had he thought of a genuinely
open diplomacy. And how could he? For the last stronghold of State power
is foreign policy. It is in foreign policy that the State acts most
concentratedly as the organized herd, acts with fullest sense of
aggressive-power, acts with freest arbitrariness. In foreign policy, the
State is most itself. States, with reference to each other, may be said
to be in a continual state of latent war. The “armed truce,” a phrase so
familiar before 1914, was an accurate description of the normal relation
of States when they are not at war. Indeed, it is not too much to say
that the normal relation of States is war. Diplomacy is a disguised war,
in which States seek to gain by barter and intrigue, by the cleverness
of wits, the objectives which they would have to gain more clumsily by
means of war. Diplomacy is used while the States are recuperating from
conflicts in which they have exhausted themselves. It is the wheedling
and the bargaining of the worn-out bullies as they rise from the ground
and slowly restore their strength to begin fighting again. If diplomacy
had been a moral equivalent for war, a higher stage in human progress,
an inestimable means of making words prevail instead of blows,
militarism would have broken down and given place to it. But since it is
a mere temporary substitute, a mere appearance of war’s energy under
another form, a surrogate effect is almost exactly proportioned to the
armed force behind it. When it fails, the recourse is immediate to the
military technique whose thinly veiled arm it has been. A diplomacy that
was the agency of popular democratic forces in their non-State
manifestations would be no diplomacy at all. It would be no better than
the Railway or Education commissions that are sent from one country to
another with rational constructive purpose. The State, acting as a
diplomatic-military ideal, is eternally at war. Just as it must act
arbitrarily and autocratically in time of war, it must act in time of
peace in this particular role where it acts as a unit. Unified control
is necessarily autocratic control.
Democratic control of foreign policy is therefore a contradiction in
terms. Open discussion destroys swiftness and certainty of action. The
giant State is paralyzed. Mr. Wilson retains his full ideal of the State
at the same time that he desires to eliminate war. He wishes to make the
world safe for democracy as well as safe for diplomacy. When the two are
in conflict, his clear political insight, his idealism of the State,
tells him that it is the naĂŻver democratic values that must be
sacrificed. The world must primarily be made safe for diplomacy. The
State must not be diminished.
What is the State essentially? The more closely we examine it, the more
mystical and personal it becomes. On the Nation we can put our hand as a
definite social group, with attitudes and qualities exact enough to mean
something. On the Government we can put our hand as a certain
organization of ruling functions, the machinery of lawmaking and
law-enforcing. The Administration is a recognizable group of political
functionaries, temporarily in charge of the government. But the State
stands as an idea behind them all, eternal, sanctified, and from it
Government and Administration conceive themselves to have the breath of
life. Even the nation, especially in times of war — or at least, its
significant classes — considers that it derives its authority and its
purpose from the idea of the State. Nation and State are scarcely
differentiated, and the concrete, practical, apparent facts are sunk in
the symbol. We reverence not our country but the flag. We may criticize
ever so severely our country, but we are disrespectful to the flag at
our peril. It is the flag and the uniform that make men’s heart beat
high and fill them with noble emotions, not the thought of and pious
hopes for America as a free and enlightened nation.
It cannot be said that the object of emotion is the same, because the
flag is the symbol of the nation, so that in reverencing the American
flag we are reverencing the nation. For the flag is not a symbol of the
country as a cultural group, following certain ideals of life, but
solely a symbol of the political State, inseparable from its prestige
and expansion. The flag is most intimately connected with military
achievement, military memory. It represents the country not in its
intensive life, but in its far-flung challenge to the world. The flag is
primarily the banner of war; it is allied with patriotic anthem and
holiday. It recalls old martial memories. A nation’s patriotic history
is solely the history of its wars, that is, of the State in its health
and glorious functioning. So in responding to the appeal of the flag, we
are responding to the appeal of the State, to the symbol of the herd
organized as an offensive and defensive body, conscious of its prowess
and its mystical herd strength.
Even those authorities in the present Administration, to whom has been
granted autocratic control over opinion, feel, though they are scarcely
able to philosophize over, this distinction. It has been authoritatively
declared that the horrid penalties against seditious opinion must not be
construed as inhibiting legitimate, that is, partisan criticism of the
Administration. A distinction is made between the Administration and the
Government. It is quite accurately suggested by this attitude that the
Administration is a temporary band of partisan politicians in charge of
the machinery of Government, carrying out the mystical policies of
State. The manner in which they operate this machinery may be freely
discussed and objected to by their political opponents. The Governmental
machinery may also be legitimately altered, in case of necessity. What
may not be discussed or criticized is the mystical policy itself or the
motives of the State in inaugurating such a policy. The President, it is
true, has made certain partisan distinctions between candidates for
office on the ground of support or nonsupport of the Administration, but
what he means was really support or nonsupport of the State policy as
faithfully carried out by the Administration. Certain of the
Administration measures were devised directly to increase the health of
the State, such as the Conscription and the Espionage laws. Others were
concerned merely with the machinery. To oppose the first was to oppose
the State and was therefore not tolerable. To oppose the second was to
oppose fallible human judgment, and was therefore, though to be
depreciated, not to be wholly interpreted as political suicide.
The distinction between Government and State, however, has not been so
carefully observed. In time of war it is natural that Government as the
seat of authority should be confused with the State or the mystic source
of authority. You cannot very well injure a mystical idea which is the
State, but you can very well interfere with the processes of Government.
So that the two become identified in the public mind, and any contempt
for or opposition to the workings of the machinery of Government is
considered equivalent to contempt for the sacred State. The State, it is
felt, is being injured in its faithful surrogate, and public emotion
rallies passionately to defend it. It even makes any criticism of the
form of Government a crime.
The inextricable union of militarism and the State is beautifully shown
by those laws which emphasize interference with the Army and Navy as the
most culpable of seditious crimes. Pragmatically, a case of capitalistic
sabotage, or a strike in war industry would seem to be far more
dangerous to the successful prosecution of the war than the isolated and
ineffectual efforts of an individual to prevent recruiting. But in the
tradition of the State ideal, such industrial interference with national
policy is not identified as a crime against the State. It may be
grumbled against; it may be seen quite rationally as an impediment of
the utmost gravity. But it is not felt in those obscure seats of the
herd mind which dictate the identity of crime and fix their proportional
punishments. Army and Navy, however, are the very arms of the State; in
them flows its most precious lifeblood. To paralyze them is to touch the
very State itself. And the majesty of the State is so sacred that even
to attempt such a paralysis is a crime equal to a successful strike. The
will is deemed sufficient. Even though the individual in his effort to
impede recruiting should utterly and lamentably fail, he shall be in no
wise spared. Let the wrath of the State descend upon him for his
impiety! Even if he does not try any overt action, but merely utters
sentiments that may incidentally in the most indirect way cause someone
to refrain from enlisting, he is guilty. The guardians of the State do
not ask whether any pragmatic effect flowed out of this evil will or
desire. It is enough that the will is present. Fifteen or twenty years
in prison is not deemed too much for such sacrilege.
Such attitudes and such laws, which affront every principle of human
reason, are no accident, nor are they the result of hysteria caused by
the war. They are considered just, proper, beautiful by all the classes
which have the State ideal, and they express only an extreme of health
and vigor in the reaction of the State to its non-friends.
Such attitudes are inevitable as arising from the devotees of the State.
For the State is a personal as well as a mystical symbol, and it can
only be understood by tracing its historical origin. The modern State is
not the rational and intelligent product of modern men desiring to live
harmoniously together with security of life, property, and opinion. It
is not an organization which has been devised as pragmatic means to a
desired social end. All the idealism with which we have been instructed
to endow the State is the fruit of our retrospective imaginations. What
it does for us in the way of security and benefit of life, it does
incidentally as a by-product and development of its original functions,
and not because at any time men or classes in the full possession of
their insight and intelligence have desired that it be so. It is very
important that we should occasionally lift the incorrigible veil of that
ex post facto idealism by which we throw a glamour of rationalization
over what is, and pretend in the ecstasies of social conceit that we
have personally invented and set up for the glory of God and man the
hoary institutions which we see around us. Things are what they are, and
come down to us with all their thick encrustations of error and
malevolence. Political philosophy can delight us with fantasy and
convince us who need illusion to live that the actual is a fair and
approximate copy — full of failings, of course, but approximately sound
and sincere — of that ideal society which we can imagine ourselves as
creating. From this it is a step to the tacit assumption that we have
somehow had a hand in its creation and are responsible for its
maintenance and sanctity.
Nothing is more obvious, however, than that every one of us comes into
society as into something in whose creation we had not the slightest
hand. We have not even the advantage of consciousness before we take up
our careers on earth. By the time we find ourselves here we are caught
in a network of customs and attitudes, the major directions of our
desires and interests have been stamped on our minds, and by the time we
have emerged from tutelage and reached the years of discretion when we
might conceivably throw our influence to the reshaping of social
institutions, most of us have been so molded into the society and class
we live in that we are scarcely aware of any distinction between
ourselves as judging, desiring individuals and our social environment.
We have been kneaded so successfully that we approve of what our society
approves, desire what our society desires, and add to the group our own
passionate inertia against change, against the effort of reason, and the
adventure of beauty.
Every one of us, without exception, is born into a society that is
given, just as the fauna and flora of our environment are given. Society
and its institutions are, to the individual who enters it, as much
naturalistic phenomena as is the weather itself. There is, therefore, no
natural sanctity in the State any more than there is in the weather. We
may bow down before it, just as our ancestors bowed before the sun and
moon, but it is only because something in us unregenerate finds
satisfaction in such an attitude, not because there is anything
inherently reverential in the institution worshiped. Once the State has
begun to function, and a large class finds its interest and its
expression of power in maintaining the State, this ruling class may
compel obedience from any uninterested minority. The State thus becomes
an instrument by which the power of the whole herd is wielded for the
benefit of a class. The rulers soon learn to capitalize the reverence
which the State produces in the majority, and turn it into a general
resistance toward a lessening of their privileges. The sanctity of the
State becomes identified with the sanctity of the ruling class, and the
latter are permitted to remain in power under the impression that in
obeying and serving them, we are obeying and serving society, the
nation, the great collectivity of all of us.
An analysis of the State would take us back to the beginnings of
society, to the complex of religious and personal and herd-impulses
which has found expression in so many forms. What we are interested in
is the American State as it behaves and as Americans behave towards it
in this twentieth century, and to understand that we have to go no
further back than the early English monarchy of which our American
republic is the direct descendant. How straight and true is that line of
descent almost nobody realizes. Those persons who believe in the
sharpest distinction between democracy and monarchy can scarcely
appreciate how a political institution may go through so many
transformations and yet remain the same. Yet a swift glance must show us
that in all the evolution of the English monarchy, with all its
broadenings and its revolutions, and even with its jump across the sea
into a colony which became an independent nation and then a powerful
State, the same State functions and attitudes have been preserved
essentially unchanged. The changes have been changes of form and not of
inner spirit, and the boasted extension of democracy has been not a
process by which the State was essentially altered to meet the shifting
of classes, the extension of knowledge, the needs of social
organization, but a mere elastic expansion by which the old spirit of
the State easily absorbed the new and adjusted itself successfully to
its exigencies. Never once has it been seriously shaken. Only once or
twice has it been seriously challenged, and each time it has speedily
recovered its equilibrium and proceeded with all its attitudes and
faiths reinforced by the disturbance.
The modern democratic state, in this light, is therefore no bright and
rational creation of a new day, the political form under which great
peoples are to live healthfully and freely in a modern world, but the
last decrepit scion of an ancient and hoary stock, which has become so
exhausted that it scarcely recognizes its own ancestor, does, in fact,
repudiate him while it clings tenaciously to the archaic and irrelevant
spirit that made that ancestor powerful, and resists the new bottles for
the new wine that its health as a modern society so desperately needs.
So sweeping a conclusion might have been doubted concerning the American
State had it not been for the war, which has provided a long and
beautiful series of examples of the tenacity of the State ideal and its
hold on the significant classes of the American nation. War is the
health of the State and it is during war that one best understands the
nature of that institution. If the American democracy during wartime has
acted with an almost incredible trueness to form, if it has resurrected
with an almost joyful fury the somnolent State, we can only conclude
that the tradition from the past has been unbroken, and that the
American republic is the direct descendant of the English State.
And what was the nature of this early English State? It was first of all
a medieval absolute monarchy, arising out of the feudal chaos, which had
represented the first effort at order after the turbulent assimilation
of the invading barbarians by the Christianizing Roman civilization. The
feudal lord evolved out of the invading warrior who had seized or been
granted land and held it, souls and usufruct thereof, as fief to some
higher lord whom he aided in war. His own serfs and vassals were
exchanging faithful service for the protection which the warrior with
his organized band could give them. Where an invading chieftain retained
his power over his lesser lieutenants a petty kingdom would arise, as in
England, and a restless and ambitious king might extend his power over
his neighbors and consolidate the petty kingdoms only to fall before the
armed power of an invader like William the Conqueror, who would bring
the whole realm under his heel. The modern State begins when a prince
secures almost undisputed sway over fairly homogeneous territory and
people and strives to fortify his power and maintain the order that will
conduce to the safety and influence of his heirs. The State in its
inception is pure and undiluted monarchy; it is armed power, culminating
in a single head, bent on one primary object, the reducing to
subjection, to unconditional and unqualified loyalty of all the people
of a certain territory. This is the primary striving of the State, and
it is a striving that the State never loses, through all its myriad
transformations.
When the subjugation was once acquired, the modern State had begun. In
the King, the subjects found their protection and their sense of unity.
From his side, he was a redoubtable, ambitious, and stiff-necked
warrior, getting the supreme mastery which he craved. But from theirs,
he was a symbol of the herd, the visible emblem of that security which
they needed and for which they drew gregariously together. Serfs and
villains, whose safety under their petty lords had been rudely shattered
in the constant conflicts for supremacy, now drew a new breath under the
supremacy that wiped out this local anarchy. King and people agreed in
the thirst for order, and order became the first healing function of the
State. But in the maintenance of order, the King needed officers of
justice; the old crude group-rules for dispensing justice had to be
codified, a system of formal law worked out. The King needed ministers,
who would carry out his will, extensions of his own power, as a machine
extends the power of a man’s hand. So the State grew as a gradual
differentiation of the King’s absolute power, founded on the devotion of
his subjects and his control of a military band, swift and sure to
smite. Gratitude for protection and fear of the strong arm sufficed to
produce the loyalty of the country to the State.
The history of the State, then, is the effort to maintain these personal
prerogatives of power, the effort to convert more and more into stable
law the rules of order, the conditions of public vengeance, the
distinction between classes, the possession of privilege. It was an
effort to convert what was at first arbitrary usurpation, a perfectly
apparent use of unjustified force, into the taken for granted and the
divinely established. The State moves inevitably along the line from
military dictatorship to the divine right of Kings. What had to be at
first rawly imposed becomes through social habit to seem the necessary,
the inevitable. The modern unquestioning acceptance of the State comes
out of long and turbulent centuries when the State was challenged and
had to fight its way to prevail. The King’s establishment of personal
power — which was the early State — had to contend with the impudence of
hostile barons, who saw too clearly the adventitious origin of the
monarchy and felt no reason why they should not themselves reign. Feuds
between the King and his relatives, quarrels over inheritance, quarrels
over the devolution of property, threatened constantly the existence of
the new monarchial State. The King’s will to power necessitated for its
absolute satisfaction universality of political control in his
dominions, just as the Roman Church claimed universality of spiritual
control over the whole world. And just as rival popes were the
inevitable product of such a pretension of sovereignty, rival kings and
princes contended for that dazzling jewel of undisputed power.
Not until the Tudor regime was there in England an irresponsible
personal monarchy on the lines of the early State ideal, governing a
fairly well organized and prosperous nation. The Stuarts were not only
too weak-minded to inherit the fruition of William the Conqueror’s
labors, but they made the fatal mistake of bringing out to public view
and philosophy the idea of Divine Right implicit in the State, and this
at a time when a new class of country gentry and burghers were attaining
wealth and self-consciousness backed by the zeal of a theocratic and
individualistic religion. Cromwell might certainly, if he had continued
in power, revised the ideal of the State, perhaps utterly transformed
it, destroying the concepts of personal power and universal sovereignty,
substituting a sort of Government of Presbyterian Soviets under the
tutelage of a celestial Czar. But the Restoration brought back the old
State under a peculiarly frivolous form. The Revolution was the merest
change of monarchs at the behest of a Protestant majority which insisted
on guarantees against religious relapse. The intrinsic nature of the
monarchy as the symbol of the State was not in the least altered. In
place of the inept monarch who could not lead the State in person or
concentrate in himself the royal prerogatives, a coterie of courtiers
managed the State. But their direction was consistently in the interest
of the monarch and of the traditional ideal, so that the current of the
English State was not broken.
The boasted English Parliament of Lords and commoners possessed at no
time any vitality which weakened or threatened to weaken the State
ideal. Its original purpose was merely to facilitate the raising of the
King’s revenues. The nobles responded better when they seemed to be
giving their consent. Their share in actual government was subjective,
but the existence of Parliament served to appease any restiveness at the
autocracy of the King. The significant classes could scarcely rebel when
they had the privilege of giving consent to the King’s measures. There
was always outlet for the rebellious spirit of a powerful lord in
private revolt against the King. The only Parliament that seriously
tried to govern outside of and against the King’s will precipitated a
civil war that ended with the effectual submission of Parliament to a
more careless and corrupt autocracy than had yet been known. By the time
of George III Parliament was moribund, utterly unrepresentative either
of the new bourgeois classes or of peasants and laborers, a mere
frivolous parody of a legislature, despised both by King and people. The
King was most effectively the State and his ministers the Government,
which was run in terms of his personal whim, by men whose only interest
was personal intrigue. Government had been for long what it has never
ceased to be — a series of berths and emoluments in Army, Navy and the
different departments of State, for the representatives of the
privileged classes.
The State of George III was an example of the most archaic ideal of the
English State, the pure, personal monarchy. The great mass of the people
had fallen into the age-long tradition of loyalty to the crown. The
classes that might have been restive for political power were placated
by a show of representative government and the lucrative supply of
offices. Discontent showed itself only in those few enlightened elements
which could not refrain from irony at the sheer irrationality of a State
managed on the old heroic lines for so grotesque a sovereign and by so
grotesque a succession of courtier-ministers. Such discontent could by
no means muster sufficient force for a revolution, but the Revolution
which was due came in America where even the very obviously shadowy
pigment of Parliamentary representation was denied the colonists. All
that was vital in the political thought of England supported the
American colonists in their resistance to the obnoxious government of
George III.
The American Revolution began with certain latent hopes that it might
turn into a genuine break with the State ideal. The Declaration of
Independence announced doctrines that were utterly incompatible not only
with the century-old conception of the Divine Right of Kings, but also
with the Divine Right of the State. If all governments derive their
authority from the consent of the governed, and if a people is entitled,
at any time that it becomes oppressive, to overthrow it and institute
one more nearly conformable to their interests and ideals, the old idea
of the sovereignty of the State is destroyed. The State is reduced to
the homely work of an instrument for carrying out popular policies. If
revolution is justifiable a State may even be criminal sometimes in
resisting its own extinction. The sovereignty of the people is no mere
phrase. It is a direct challenge to the historic tradition of the State.
For it implies that the ultimate sanctity resides not in the State at
all or in its agent, the government, but in the nation, that is, in the
country viewed as a cultural group and not specifically as a
king-dominated herd. The State then becomes a mere instrument, the
servant of this popular will, or of the constructive needs of the
cultural group. The Revolution had in it, therefore, the makings of a
very daring modern experiment — the founding of a free nation which
should use the State to effect its vast purposes of subduing a continent
just as the colonists’ armies had used arms to detach their society from
the irresponsible rule of an overseas king and his frivolous ministers.
The history of the State might have ended in 1776 as far as the American
colonies were concerned, and the modern nation which is still striving
to materialize itself have been born.
For awhile it seemed almost as if the State was dead. But men who are
freed rarely know what to do with their liberty. In each colony that
fatal seed of the State had been sown; it could not disappear. Rival
prestige and interests began to make themselves felt. Fear of foreign
States, economic distress, discord between classes, the inevitable
physical exhaustion and prostration of idealism which follows a
protracted war — all combined to put the responsible classes of the new
States into the mood for a regression to the State ideal. Ostensibly
there is no reason why the mere lack of a centralized State should have
destroyed the possibility of progress in the new liberated America,
provided the inter-state jealousy and rivalry could have been destroyed.
But there were no leaders for this anti-State nationalism. The
sentiments of the Declaration remained mere sentiments. No constructive
political scheme was built on them. The State ideal, on the other hand,
had ambitious leaders of the financial classes, who saw in the excessive
decentralization of the Confederation too much opportunity for the
control of society by the democratic lower-class elements. They were
menaced by imperialistic powers without and by democracy within. Through
their fear of the former they tended to exaggerate the impossibility of
the latter. There was no inclination to make the State a school where
democratic experiments could be worked out as they should be. They were
unwilling to give reconstruction the term that might have been necessary
to build up this truly democratic nationalism. Six short years is a
short time to reconstruct an agricultural country devastated by a six
years’ war. The popular elements in the new States had only to show
their turbulence; they were given no time to grow. The ambitious leaders
of the financial classes got a convention called to discuss the
controversies and maladjustments of the States, which were making them
clamor for a revision of the Articles of Confederation, and then, by one
of the most successful coups d’etat in history, turned their assembly
into the manufacture of a new government on the strongest lines of the
old State ideal.
This new constitution, manufactured in secret session by the leaders of
the propertied and ruling classes, was then submitted to an approval of
the electors which only by the most expert manipulation was obtained,
but which was sufficient to override the indignant undercurrent of
protest from those popular elements who saw the fruits of the Revolution
slipping away from them. Universal suffrage would have killed it
forever. Had the liberated colonies had the advantage of the French
experience before them, the promulgation of the Constitution would
undoubtedly have been followed by a new revolution, as very nearly
happened later against Washington and the Federalists. But the ironical
ineptitude of Fate put the machinery of the new Federalist
constitutional government in operation just at the moment that the
French Revolution began, and by the time those great waves of Jacobin
feeling reached North America, the new Federalist State was firmly
enough on its course to weather the gale and the turmoil.
The new State was therefore not the happy political symbol of a united
people, who in order to form a more perfect union, etc., but the
imposition of a State on a loose and growing nationalism, which was in a
condition of unstable equilibrium and needed perhaps only to be
fertilized from abroad to develop a genuine political experiment in
democracy. The preamble to the Constitution, as was soon shown in the
hostile popular vote and later in the revolt against the Federalists,
was a pious hope rather than actuality, a blessedness to be realized
when by the force of government pressure, the creation of idealism, and
mere social habit, the population should be welded and kneaded into a
State. That this is what has actually happened, is seen in the fact that
the somewhat shockingly undemocratic origins of the American State have
been almost completely glossed over and the unveiling is bitterly
resented, by none so bitterly as the significant classes who have been
most industrious in cultivating patriotic myth and legend. American
history, as far as it has entered into the general popular emotion, runs
along this line. The Colonies are freed by the Revolution from a
tyrannous King and become free and independent States; there follow six
years of impotent peace, during which the Colonies quarrel among
themselves and reveal the hopeless weakness of the principle under which
they are working together; in desperation the people then create a new
instrument, and launch a free and democratic republic, which was and
remains — especially since it withstood the shock of civil war — the
most perfect form of democratic government known to man, perfectly
adequate to be promulgated as an example in the twentieth century to all
people, and to be spread by propaganda, and, if necessary, the sword, in
all unregenerately Imperial regions. Modern historians reveal the
avowedly undemocratic personnel and opinions of the Convention. They
show that the members not only had an unconscious economic interest but
a frank political interest in founding a State which should protect the
propertied classes against the hostility of the people. They show how,
from one point of view, the new government became almost a mechanism for
overcoming the repudiation of debts, for putting back into their place a
farmer and small trader class whom the unsettled times of reconstruction
had threatened to liberate, for reestablishing on the securest basis of
the sanctity of property and the State, their class-supremacy menaced by
a democracy that had drunk too deeply at the fount of Revolution. But
all this makes little impression on the other legend of the popular
mind, because it disturbs the sense of the sanctity of the State and it
is this rock to which the herd-wish must cling.
Every little school boy is trained to recite the weaknesses and
inefficiencies of the Articles of Confederation. It is taken as
axiomatic that under them the new nation was falling into anarchy and
was only saved by the wisdom and energy of the Convention. These hapless
Articles have had to bear the infamy cast upon the untried by the
radiantly successful. The nation had to be strong to repel invasion,
strong to pay to the last loved copper penny the debts of the propertied
and the provident ones, strong to keep the unpropertied and improvident
from ever using the government to secure their own prosperity at the
expense of moneyed capital. Under the Articles the new States were
obviously trying to reconstruct themselves in an alarming tenderness for
the common man impoverished by the war. No one suggests that the anxiety
of the leaders of the heretofore unquestioned ruling classes desired the
revision of the Articles and labored so weightily over a new instrument
not because the nation was failing under the Articles, but because it
was succeeding only too well. Without intervention from the leaders,
reconstruction threatened in time to turn the new nation into an
agrarian and proletarian democracy. It is impossible to predict what
would have materialized into a form of society very much modified from
the ancient State. All we know is that at a time when the current of
political progress was in the direction of agrarian and proletarian
democracy, a force hostile to it gripped the nation and imposed upon it
a powerful form against which it was never to succeed in doing more than
blindly struggle. The liberating virus of the Revolution was definitely
expunged, and henceforth if it worked at all it had to work against the
State, in opposition to the armed and respectable power of the nation.
The propertied classes, seated firmly in the saddle by their
Constitutional coup d’etat have, of course, never lost their ascendancy.
The particular group of Federalists who engineered the new machinery and
enjoyed the privilege of setting it in motion were turned out in a dozen
years by the “Jeffersonian democracy” whom their manner had so deeply
offended. But the Jeffersonian democracy never meant in practice any
more than the substitution of the rule of the country gentlemen for the
rule of the town capitalist. The true hostility between their interests
was small as compared with the hostility of both towards the common man.
When both were swept away by the irruption of the Western democracy
under Andrew Jackson and the rule of the common man appeared for a while
in its least desirable forms, it was comparatively easy for the two
propertied classes to form a tacit coalition against them. The new West
achieved an extension of suffrage and a jovial sense of having come
politically into its own, but the rule of the ancient classes was not
seriously challenged. Their squabbles over a tariff were family affairs,
for the tariff could not materially affect the common man of either East
or West. The Eastern and Northern capitalists soon saw the advantage of
supporting Southern country gentleman slave-power as against the
free-soil pioneer. Bad generalship on the part of this coalition allowed
a Western free-soil minority President to slip into office and brought
on the Civil War, which smashed the slave power and left Northern
capital in undisputed possession of a field against which the pioneer
could make only sporadic and ineffective revolts.
From the Civil War to the death of Mark Hanna, the propertied capitalist
industrial classes ran a triumphal career in possession of the State. At
various times, as in 1896, the country had to be saved for them from
disillusioned, rebellious hordes of small farmers and traders and
democratic idealists, who had in the overflow of prosperity been
squeezed down into the small end of the horn. But except for these
occasional menaces, business, that is to say, aggressive expansionist
capitalism, had nearly forty years in which to direct the American
republic as a private preserve, or laboratory, experimenting,
developing, wasting, subjugating, to its heart’s content, in the midst
of a vast somnolence of complacency such as has never been seen and
contrast strangely with the spiritual dissent and constructive
revolutionary thought which went on at the same time in England and the
Continent.
That era ended in 1904 like the crack of doom, which woke a whole people
into a modern day which they had overslept, and for which they had
become acutely and painfully aware of the evils of the society in which
they had slumbered and they snatched at one after the other idea,
programme, movement, ideal, to uplift them out of the slough in which
they had slept. The glory of those shining figures — captains of
industry — went out in a sulphuric gloom. The head of the State, who
made up in dogmatism what he lacked in philosophy, increased the
confusion by reviving the Ten Commandments for political purposes, and
belaboring the wicked with them. The American world tossed in a state of
doubt, of reawakened social conscience, of pragmatic effort for the
salvation of society. The ruling classes — annoyed, bewildered, harassed
— pretended with much bemoaning that they were losing their grip on the
State. Their inspired prophets uttered solemn warnings against political
novelty and the abandonment of the tried and tested fruits of
experience.
These classes actually had little to fear. A political system which had
been founded in the interests of property by their own spiritual and
economic ancestors, which had become ingrained in the country’s life
through a function of 120 years, which was buttressed by a legal system
which went back without a break to the early English monarchy was not
likely to crumble before the anger of a few muck-rakers, the
disillusionment of a few radical sociologists, or the assaults of
proletarian minorities. Those who bided their time through the Taft
interregnum, which merely continued the Presidency until there could be
found a statesman to fill it, were rewarded by the appearance of the
exigency of the war, in which business organization was imperatively
needed. They were thus able to make a neat and almost noiseless
coalition with the Government. The mass of the worried middle classes,
riddled by the campaign against American failings, which at times
extended almost to a skepticism of the American State itself, were only
too glad to sink back to a glorification of the State ideal, to feel
about them in war, the old protecting arms, to return to the old
primitive robust sense of the omnipotence of the State, its matchless
virtue, honor and beauty, driving away all the foul old doubts and
dismays.
That the same class which imposed its constitution on the nascent
proletarian and agrarian democracy has maintained itself to this day
indicates how slight was the real effect of the Revolution. When that
political change was consolidated in the new government, it was found
that there had been a mere transfer of ruling-class power across the
seas, or rather that a ruling commercial class in the colonies had been
able to remove through a war fought largely by the masses a vexatious
overlordship of the irresponsible coteries of ministers that surrounded
George III. The colonies merely exchanged a system run in the interest
of the overseas trade of English wealth for a system run in the interest
of New England and Philadelphia merchanthood, and later of Southern
slavocracy. The daring innovation of getting rid of a king and setting
up a kingless State did not apparently impress the hard headed farmers
and small traders with as much force as it has their patriotic
defenders. The animus of the Convention was so obviously monarchial that
any executive they devised could be only a very thinly disguised king.
The compromise by which the presidency was created proved but to be the
means by which very nearly the whole mass of traditional royal
prerogatives was brought over and lodged in the new state.
The President is an elected king, but the fact that he is elected has
proved to be of far less significance in the course of political
evolution than the fact that he is pragmatically a king. It was the
intention of the founders of the Constitution that he be elected by a
small body of notables, representing the ruling propertied classes, who
could check him up every four years in a new election. This was no
innovation. Kings have often been selected this way in European history,
and the Roman Emperor was regularly chosen by election. That the
American President’s term was limited merely shows the confidence which
the founders felt in the buttressing force of their instrument. His
election would never pass out of the hands of the notables, and so the
office would be guaranteed to be held by a faithful representative of
upper-class demands. What he was most obviously to represent was the
interests of that body which elected him, and not the mass of the people
who were still disenfranchised. For the new State started with no
Quixotic belief in universal suffrage. The property qualifications which
were in effect in every colony were continued. Government was frankly a
function of those who held a concrete interest in the public weal, in
the shape of visible property. The responsibility for the security of
property rights could safely lie only with those who had something to
secure. The “stake” in the commonwealth which those who held office most
possess was obviously larger.
One of the larger errors of political insight which the sage founders of
the Constitution committed was to assume that the enfranchised watchdogs
of property and the public order would remain a homogeneous class.
Washington, acting strictly as the mouthpiece of the unified State
ideal, deprecated the growth of parties and factions which horridly keep
the State in turbulence or threaten to render it asunder. But the
monarchial and repressive policies of Washington’s own friends promptly
generated an opposition democratic party representing the landed
interests of the ruling classes, and the party system was fastened on
the country. By the time the electorate had succeeded in reducing the
electoral college to a mere recorder of the popular vote, or in other
words, had broadened the class of notables to the whole property-holding
electorate, the parties were firmly established to carry on the
selective and refining and securing work of the electoral college. The
party leadership then became, and has remained ever since, the nucleus
of notables who determine the presidency. The electorate having won an
apparently democratic victory in the destruction of the notables, finds
itself reduced to the role of mere ratification or selection between two
or three candidates, in whose choice they have only a nominal share. The
electoral college which stood between even the propertied electorate and
the executive with the prerogatives of a king, gave place to a body
which was just as genuinely a bar to democratic expression, and far less
responsible for its acts. The nucleus of party councils which became,
after the reduction of the Electoral College, the real choosers of the
Presidents, were unofficial, quasi-anonymous, utterly unchecked by the
populace whose rulers they chose. More or less self-chosen, or chosen by
local groups whom they dominated, they provided a far more secure
guarantee that the State should remain in the hands of the ruling
classes than the old electoral college. The party councils could be
loosely organized entirely outside of the governmental organization,
without oversight by the State or check from the electorate. They could
be composed of the leaders of the propertied classes themselves or their
lieutenants, who could retain their power indefinitely, or at least
until they were unseated by rivals within the same charmed domain. They
were at least entirely safe from attack by the officially constituted
electorate, who, as the party system became mor and more firmly
established, found they could vote only on slates set up for them by
unknown councils behind an imposing and all-powerful “Party.”
As soon as this system was organized into a hierarchy extending from
national down to state and county politics, it became perfectly safe to
broaden the electorate. The clamors of the unpropertied or the less
propertied to share in the selection of their democratic republican
government could be graciously acceded to without endangering in the
least the supremacy of those classes which the founders had meant to be
supreme. The minority were now even more effectually protected from the
majority than under the old system, however indirect the election might
be. The electorate was now reduced to a ratifier of slates, both of
which were pledged to upper-class domination; the electorate could have
the freest, most universal suffrage, for any mass-desire for political
change, any determined will to shift the class balance, would be obliged
to register itself through the party machinery. It could make no frontal
attack on the Government. And the party machinery was directly devised
to absorb and neutralize this popular shock, handing out to the
disgruntled electorate a disguised stone when it asked for political
bread, and effectually smashing any third party which ever avariciously
tried to reach government except through the regular two-party system.
The party system succeeded, of course, beyond the wildest dreams of its
creators. It relegated the founders of the Constitution to the role of
doctrinaire theorists, political amateurs. Just because it grew up
slowly to meet the needs of ambitious politicians and was not imposed by
ruling-class fiat, as was the Constitution, did it have a chance to
become assimilated, worked into the political intelligence and instinct
of the people, and be adopted gladly and universally as a genuine
political form, expressive both of popular need and ruling-class demand.
It satisfied the popular demand for democracy. The enormous sense of
victory which followed the sweeping away of property qualifications of
suffrage, the tangible evidence that now every citizen was participating
in public affairs, and that the entire manhood democracy was now
self-governing, created a mood of political complacency that lasted
uninterruptedly into the twentieth century. The party system was thus
the means of removing political grievance from the greater part of the
populace, and of giving to the ruling classes the hidden but genuine
permanence of control which the Constitution had tried openly to give
them. It supplemented and repaired the ineptitudes of the Constitution.
It became the unofficial but real government, the instrument which used
the Constitution as its instrument.
Only in two cases did the party system seem to lose its grip, was it
thrown off base by the inception of a new party from without — in the
elections of Jackson and Lincoln. Jackson came in as the representative
of a new democratic West which had no tradition of suffrage
qualifications, and Lincoln as a minority candidate in a time of
factional sectional strife. But the discomfiture of the party
politicians was short. The party system proved perfectly capable of
assimilating both of these new movements. Jackson’s insurrection was
soon captured by the old machinery and fed the slavocracy, and Lincoln’s
party became the property of the new bonanza capitalism. Neither Jackson
nor Lincoln made the slightest deflection in the triumphal march of the
party-system. In practically no other contests has the electorate had
for all practical purposes a choice except between two candidates,
identical as far as their political role would be as representatives of
the significant classes in the State. Campaigns such as Bryan’s, where
one of the parties is captured by an element which seeks a real
transference of power from the significant to the less significant
classes, split the party, and sporadic third party attacks merely throw
the scale one way or the other between the big parties, or, if
threatening enough, produce a virtual coalition against them.