💾 Archived View for library.inu.red › file › leo-tolstoy-patriotism-and-christianity.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 12:15:38. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
➡️ Next capture (2024-06-20)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Title: Patriotism and Christianity Author: Leo Tolstoy Date: 1894 Language: en Topics: religion Source: Original text from http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=10494, 2021.
The Franco-Russian festivities which took place in October 1894 in
France made me, and others, no doubt, as well, first amused, then
astonished, then indignant—feelings which I wished to express in a short
article.
But while studying further the chief causes of what had occurred, I
arrived at the reflections which I here offer to the reader.
The Russian and French peoples have lived for many centuries with a
knowledge of each other—entering sometimes into friendly, more often,
unfortunately, into very unfriendly, relations at the instigation of
their respective Governments—when suddenly, because two years ago a
French squadron came to Cronstadt, and its officers having landed, eaten
much, and drunk a variety of wine in various places, heard and made many
false and foolish speeches; and because last year a Russian squadron
arrived at Toulon, and its officers having gone to Paris and there eaten
and drunk copiously, heard and made a still greater number of silly and
untruthful speeches, it came to pass that not only those who ate, drank
and spoke, but every one who was present, and even those who merely
heard or read in the papers of these proceedings—all these millions of
French and Russians—imagined suddenly that in some especial fashion they
were enamored of each other; that is, that all the French love all the
Russians, and all the Russians all the French.
​These sentiments were expressed in France in the most unheard-of ways by
what took place in October.
The following description of these proceedings appeared in the Village
Review, a paper which collects its information from the daily Press:—
"When the French and Russian squadrons met they greeted each other with
salvos of artillery, and with ardent and enthusiastic cries of 'Hurrah!'
'Long live Russia!' 'Long live France!'
"To all this uproar the naval bands (there were orchestras also on most
of the hired steamboats) contributed, the Russian playing "God save the
Czar,' and the French the 'Marseillaise,' the public upon the steamboats
waving their hats, flags, handkerchiefs and nosegays. Many barges were
loaded entirely with men and women of the working class with their
children, waving nosegays and shouting 'Long live Russia!' with all
their might. Our sailors in view of such national enthusiasm, could not
restrain their tears.
"In the harbor all the French men-of-war present were ranged in two
divisions, and our fleet passed between them, the admiral's vessel
leading. A splendid moment was approaching.
"A salute of fifteen guns was fired from the Russian flagship in honor
of the French fleet, and the French flagship replied with thirty. The
Russian National Hymn pealed from the French lines: French sailors
mounted their masts and rigging: vociferations of welcome poured
uninterruptedly from both fleets, and from the surrounding vessels. The
sailors waved their caps, the spectators their hats and handkerchiefs in
honor of the dear guests. From all sides, sea and shore, thundered the
universal shout, 'Long live Russia!' 'Long live France!'
"According to the custom in naval visits, Admiral Avellan and the
officers of his staff came on shore in order to pay their respects to
the local authorities.
"At the landing stage they were met by the French naval staff and the
senior officials of the port of Toulon.
"Friendly greetings followed, accompanied by the thunder of artillery
and the pealing of bells. The naval band played the Russian National
Hymn, God save the Czar, which was received with a roar from the
spectators of 'Long live the Czar!' 'Long live Russia!'
"The shouting swelled into one mighty din, which drowned the music and
even the cannonade. Those present declare that the ​enthusiasm of the
huge crowd of people attained at that moment its utmost height, and that
it would be impossible to express in words the feelings which overflowed
the hearts of all upon the scene.
"Admiral Avellan, with uncovered head, and accompanied by the French and
Russian officers, then drove to the naval administration buildings,
where he was received by the French Minister of Marine.
"In welcoming the Admiral, the Minister said, 'Constadt and Toulon have
severally witnessed the sympathy which exists between the French and
Russian peoples. Everywhere you will be received as the most welcome of
friends.
"Our Government and all France greet you and your comrades on your
arrival as the representatives of a great and honorable nation.
"The admiral replied that he was unable to find language to express his
feelings. 'The Russian fleet, and all Russia,' he said, 'will be
grateful to you for this reception.'
"After some further speeches, the Admiral again, in taking leave of the
Minister, thanked him for his reception, and added, 'I cannot leave you
without pronouncing the words which are written in the hearts of every
Russian: 'Long live France!'"
Such was the reception at Toulon. In Paris the welcome and the
festivities were still more extraordinary.
The following is a description taken from the papers of the reception in
Paris:—
"All eyes are directed towards the Boulevard des Italiens, whence the
Russian sailors are expected to emerge. At length, far away, the murmur
of a whole hurricane of shouts and cheers is heard. The hurricane
approaches. The crowd surges in the Place. The police press forward to
clear the route to the Cercle Militaire, but the task is not an easy
one. The spectators lunge forward irrepressibly.. . . At last the head
of the cortège appears, and the Place is deluged at once with an
astounding shout of 'Long live Russia!' 'Long live the Russians!'
"All heads are uncovered; spectators fill the windows and balconies,
they even cover the house-tops; waving handkerchiefs, flags, hats,
cheering enthusiastically and flinging clouds of tricolor cockades from
the upper windows. A sea of handkerchiefs, hats, and flags waves over
the heads of the crowd below, shouting ​frantically 'Long live Russia!'
from a hundred thousand throats surging to and fro, and making wild
efforts to catch a glimpse of the dear guests, craning their necks,
hither and thither, and trying in every possible way to express its
enthusiasm."
Another correspondent writes that the rapture of the crowd was like a
delirium. A Russian journalist who was in Paris at the time thus
describes the entry of the Russian officers:—
"It may truthfully be said that this event is of universal importance,
astounding, sufficiently touching to produce tears, an elevating
influence on the soul, making it throb with that love which sees in men
brothers, which hates blood, and violence, and the snatching of children
from a beloved mother. I have been in a kind of torpor for the last few
hours. It seemed almost overpoweringly strange to stand in the terminus
of the Lyons Railway amid the representatives of the French Government
in their uniforms embroidered with gold, among the municipal authorities
in full dress, and to hear cries of 'Long live Russia!' 'Long live the
Czar!' and our national anthem played again and again.
"Where am I? I reflected. What has happened? What magic current has
floated all these feelings, these aspirations into one stream? Is not
this the sensible presence of the God of love and of fraternity; the
presence of the loftiest ideal descending in his supremest moments upon
man?
"My soul is so full of something beautiful, pure and elevated that my
pen is unable to express it. Words are weak in comparison with what I
saw and felt. It was not rapture, the word is too commonplace; it was
better than rapture. More picturesque, deeper, happier, more various. It
is impossible to describe what took place at the Cercle Militaire when
Admiral Avellan appeared on the balcony of the second story. Words here
are of no avail. During the 'Te Deum,' while the choir in the church was
singing, 'O Lord save Thy people,' through the open door was blown the
triumphal strains of the 'Marseillaise,' played by the brass bands in
the street.
"It produced an astounding, an inexpressible impression."
On arriving in France the Russian sailors passed during a fortnight,
from one festivity to another, and during or after each they ate, drank,
and made speeches. Information as to where and what ​they ate and drank
on Wednesday, and where and what on Friday, and what they said on these
occasions was purveyed by telegraph to the whole of Russia.
The moment one of the Russian commanders had drunk to the health of
France, it became known to the whole world; and the instant the Russian
Admiral had said "I drink to beautiful France," his effusion was
transmitted round the globe. More, for such was the solicitude of the
papers that they commemorated not merely the toasts, but the dishes, not
even omitting the hors-d'Ĺ“uvres or zakouskas which were consumed.
For instance, the following menu was published, with the comment that
the dinner it represented was a work of art.
Consommé de volailles; petits pâtés.
Mousse de homard parisienne.
Noisette de bœuf à la béarnaise.
Faisans Ă la PĂ©rigueux.
Casseroles de truffes au champagne.
Chaudfroid de volailles Ă la Toulouse.
Salade russe.
Croûte de fruits toulonnaise.
Parfaits Ă l'ananas.
Dessert.
In a second number was the following:—
Potage livonien et Saint-Germain.
ZĂ©phyrs Nantua.
Esturgeon braisé moldave.
Sel de daguet grand veneur.
And a following issue gave a third menu followed by a minute description
of the wine list—such vodka, such old Burgandy, Grand Moët, etc.
In an English journal the amount of intoxicating liquor drunk during the
festivities was given. The quantity mentioned was so enormous that one
hardly believes it would have been possible that all the drunkards in
France and Russia could account for so much in so short a time.
The speeches made were also published, but the menus were more varied
than the speeches. The latter, without exception, always consisted of
the same words in different combinations. The meaning of these words was
always the same—We love each other tenderly, and are enraptured to be so
tenderly in love. Our aim is not war, not a "revanche," not the recovery
of the lost provinces; ​our aim is only peace, the furtherance of peace,
the security of peace, the tranquility and peace of Europe.
Long live the Russian Emperor and Empress! We love them, and we love
peace. Long live the President of the Republic and his wife! We love
them and we love peace. Long live France, Russia, their fleets and their
armies! We love the army, and peace, and the commander of the Russian
fleet.
The speeches concluded for the most part, like some popular ditty, with
a refrain, "Toulon-Cronstadt," or "Cronstadt-Toulon." And the
reiteration of the names of these places, where so many different dishes
had been eaten and so many kinds of wine drunk, were pronounced as words
which should stimulate the representatives of either nation to the
noblest deeds—as words which require no commentary, being full of deep
meaning in themselves.
"We love each other; we love peace. Cronstadt-Toulon!" What more can be
said, especially to the sound of glorious music, performing at one and
the same time two national anthems—one glorifying the Czar and praying
for him all possible good fortune, the other cursing all Czars and
promising them destruction?
Those who expressed their sentiments of love especially well on these
occasions received orders and rewards. Others, either for the same
reason or from the exuberance of the feelings of the givers, were
presented with articles of the strangest and most unexpected kind. A
French Province presented to the Czar a book in which, it seems, nothing
was written—or, at least, nothing of any concern—and the Russian admiral
received an aluminum plow covered with flowers, and many other trifles
equally astonishing.
Moreover, all these strange acts were accompanied by yet stranger
religious ceremonies and society services to which one might suppose
Frenchmen have long since become unaccustomed. Since the time of the
Concordat scarcely so many prayers can have been pronounced as during
this short period. All the French suddenly became very religious, and
carefully deposited in the rooms of the Russian mariners the very images
which a short time previously they had as carefully removed from their
schools as harmful tools of superstition, and they said prayers
incessantly. The Cardinals and Bishops everywhere enjoined devotions,
and themselves pronounced some of the strangest. Thus a bishop at
Toulon, at the launch of a certain ironclad, addressed the God of ​Peace,
letting it, however, at the same time be felt that he could communicate
as readily, if the necessity arose, with the God of War.
"What its destination may be," said the bishop, alluding to the vessel,
"God only knows. Will it vomit death from its dreadful bowels? We do not
know. But if, having to-day pleaded with the God of Peace we may
hereafter have to call upon the God of War, we may be sure that it will
advance against the foe in rank with the powerful men-of-war whose crews
have to-day entered into so near and fraternal union with us. But let
this contingency be forgotten, and let the present festival leave none
but peaceful memories, like those that the Grand Duke
Constantine—(Constantine Nikolaevitch visited Toulon in 1857)—may
cherish, and may the friendship of France and Russia constitute of these
two nations the guardians of peace!"
At the same time tens of thousands of telegrams flew from Russia to
France and from France to Russia.
French women greeted Russian women, and Russian women tendered their
thanks to the French. A troupe of Russian actors greeted the French
actors; the French actors replied that they had laid deep in their
hearts the greetings of their Russian comrades.
The Russian law students of some Russian town or other expressed their
rapture to the French nation. General So-and-so thanked Madame
This-and-that; Madame This-and-that assured General So-and-so of the
ardor of her sentiments towards the Russian nation. Russian children
wrote greetings in verse to French children; the French children replied
in verse and prose. The Russian Minister of Education assured the French
Minister of Education of the sudden amity towards France of all the
children, clerks and scientists in his department. The members of the
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals expressed their warm
attachment towards the French. The Municipality of Kazan did the same.
The Canon of Arrare conveyed to the most reverend Dean of the Court
Clergy the assurance that a deep affection towards Russia, his Imperial
Majesty the Emperor, and all the Imperial Family, exists in the hearts
of all the French Cardinals and Bishops, and that the French and Russian
clergy profess almost a similar faith, and alike worship the Holy
Virgin. To this the ​most reverend dean replied that the prayers of the
French clergy for the Imperial Family were joyously echoed by all the
Russian people, lovingly attached to the Czar, and that as the Russian
nation also worships the Holy Virgin, France may count upon it in life
and death. The same kind of messages were sent by various generals,
telegraph clerks and shopkeepers.
Everyone sent congratulations to everyone else, and thanked somebody for
something.
The excitement was so great that some extraordinary things were done;
and yet no one remarked their strangeness, but on the contrary every one
approved of them, was charmed with them, and as if afraid of being left
behind, made haste to accomplish something of a similar kind in order
not to be outdone by the rest.
If at times protests, pronounced or even written and printed, against
this madness made their appearance, proving its unreasonableness they
were either hushed up or concealed.[1]
​Not to mention the millions of working days spent in these festivities,
the widespread drunkenness of all who took part in them involving even
those in command; not to speak of the senselessness of the speeches
which were made, the most insane and ruthless deeds were committed, and
no one paid them any attention.
For instance, several score of people were crushed to death, and no one
found it necessary to record the fact.
One correspondent wrote that he had been informed at a ball that there
was scarcely a woman in Paris who would not have been ready to forget
her duties to satisfy the desire of any of the Russian sailors.
And all this passed unremarked as something quite in the order of
things. There were also cases of unmistakable insanity brought about by
the excitement.
Thus one woman, having put on a dress composed of the colors of the
Franco Russian flags, awaited on a bridge the arrival of the Russian
sailors, and threw herself into the river, and was drowned.
In general the women on all these occasions played a more prominent part
than, and even directed the men. Besides the throwing of flowers and
various little ribbons and the presenting of gifts and addresses, the
French women in the streets threw themselves into the arms of the
Russian sailors and kissed them.
Some women brought their children, for some reason or other to be
kissed, and when the Russian sailors had granted this request, all
present were transported with joy and shed tears.
This strange excitement was so contagious that, as one correspondent
relates, a Russian sailor who appeared to be in perfect ​health, after
having witnessed these exciting scenes for a fortnight jumped overboard
in the middle of the day, and swam about crying "Long live France." When
pulled out of the water, and questioned as to his conduct he replied
that he had vowed to swim round his ship in honor of France.
Thus the unthwarted excitement grew and grew, like a ball of snow, and
finally attained such dimensions that not alone those on the spot, or
merely nervous predisposed persons, but strong healthy men were affected
by the general strain and were betrayed into an abnormal condition of
mind.
I remember even that whilst reading distractedly a description of these
festivities, I was suddenly overcome by strong emotion, and was almost
on the verge to tears, having to check with an effort this expression of
my feelings.
A professor of psychology, Sikorsky by name, has described in the Kief
University Review a psychical epidemic of, as he calls it, Malevanchina,
which he studied in the district of Vassilkoff. The feature of this
epidemic, according to M. Sikorsky, was the conviction in the minds of
the peasants of certain villages, under the influence of their leader,
Malevani, that the end of the world was at hand; in consequence of which
they changed their mood of life, began to dispose of their property, to
adorn their clothing, eat and drink of the best, and cease to work. The
professor considered this condition abnormal. He says, "Their remarkable
good humor often attained to a condition of exultation or euthanasia,
and from no apparent cause. They were sentimental, polite to excess,
talkative active in their movements, tears of happiness being readily
summoned to their eyes, and disappearing without leaving a trace. They
sold the necessaries of life in order to buy umbrellas, silk
handkerchiefs, and similar articles which, however, they only wore as
ornaments. They ate a great quantity of sweets. Their condition of mind
was always joyous, they led a perfectly idle life, visiting each other
and walking about together.
. . . When chid for the insanity of their conduct and their idleness,
they replied invariably with the same phrase:—'If it pleases me I will
work; if it does not, why compel myself to?'"
The learned professor regards this condition as a well defined epidemic
of morbid psychomachy, and in advising the Government ​to adopt measures
to prevent its extension, concludes, "This Malevanchina is the cry of a
sick population, a prayer for deliverance from drunkenness, and for
improved educational and sanitary conditions."
But if Malevanchina is the cry of a sick population for deliverance from
inebriety and from pernicious social conditions, what a terrible clamor
of a sick people, and what a perdition for a rescue from the effects of
wine and of a false social existence is that new disease which appeared
in Paris with such fearful suddenness, infecting the greater part of the
urban population of France, and almost the entire governmental,
privileged, and civilized classes of Russia?
But if we admit that danger exists in the psychical conditions of
Malevanchina, and that the Government did well in following the
professor's advice, by confining some the leaders of the Malevanchina in
asylums and monasteries, and by banishing others into distant lands, how
much more dangerous must we consider this new epidemic which has
appeared in Toulon and Paris, and spread thence throughout Russia and
France, and how much more needful is it that society—if the Government
refuse to interfere—should take decisive measures to prevent the
epidemic from spreading?
The analogy between the two diseases is complete. The same remarkable
good humor, passing into a vague and joyous ecstasy, the same
sentimental, exaggerated politeness, loquacity, emotional weeping,
without reason for its commencement or cessation, the same festal mood,
the same promenading and paying calls, the same wearing of gorgeous
clothes and fancy for choice food, the same misty and senseless
speeches, the same indolence, singing and music, the same direction on
the part of the women, the same clownish state of attitudes passionées,
which M. Sikorsky observed, and which corresponds, as I understand it,
with the various unnatural physical attitudes adopted by people during
triumphal receptions, acclamations and after-dinner speeches.
The resemblance is absolute. The difference, an enormous one for the
society in which these things take place, is merely that in one case a
few scores of poor country folk have gone out of their mind, people who,
living on their own small earnings, cannot do any violence to their
neighbors and infect others only by personal and vocal communication of
their condition, whereas in the other ​case millions of people have lost
their reason who possess immense sums of money and means of
violence—rifles, canon, fortresses, ironclads, mélinite, dynamite—and
with, moreover, at their disposal, the most effective means for
communicating their insanity: the post, telegraph, telephone, the entire
Press, and every class of magazine, which prints the infection with the
utmost haste, and distributes it throughout the world.
Another difference is that the former not only remain sober, but abstain
from all intoxicating drinks, while the latter are in a constant state
of semi-drunkenness which they do their best to foster.
Hence for the society in which such epidemics take place, the difference
between that at Kief, when according to M. Sikorsky, no violence nor
manslaughter was recorded, and that of Paris, where in one procession
more than twenty women were crushed to death, is equivalent to that
between the falling of a small piece of smoldering coal from the
fireplace upon the floor and a fire which has already obtained
possession of the floors and walls of the house.
At its worst the result of the outbreak at Kief will be that the
peasants of a millionth part of Russia may spend the earnings of their
own labor, and be unable to meet the Government taxes; but the outbreak
at Paris and Toulon, which has affected people who have great power,
immense sums of money, weapons of violence and means for the propagation
of their insanity, may and must have a terrible conclusion.
One may listen with compassion to the mouthings of a feeble old and
unarmed idiot in his cap and nightshirt, not contradicting and even
humourously acquiescing with him; but when a crowd of able bodied
mad-men escape from confinement, armed to the teeth with knives, swords
and revolvers, wild with excitement, waving their murderous weapons, one
not only ceases to acquiesce, but one is unable to feel secure for an
instant.
This case is very like that which has been evoked by the excitement of
the Franco-Russian receptions which has taken possession of Russian and
French society. Those who have succumbed to this psychical epidemic are
the masters of the most terrible weapons of slaughter and destruction.
It is true that it was constantly proclaimed in every speech made ​to
honor the toasts at these festivities, and in all the articles upon
them, that the object of what was taking place was the establishment of
peace. Even the partisans of war, the Russian correspondent previously
cited among them, speak not of any hatred towards the conquerors of the
lost provinces, but of a "love which somehow hates."
However, we are well aware of the cunning of mental sufferers, and we
can realize that this constant repetition of a desire for peace, and
silence as to the sentiments in every man's mind, is precisely a threat
of the worst significance.
In his reply at the dinner at the Elysée the Russian Ambassador said—
"Before proposing a toast to which everyone will respond from the depths
of his soul, not alone those within these walls, but all those, and with
the same enthusiasm, whose hearts are at the present moment beating in
unison with ours, far away or around us in great and beautiful France,
as in Russia, permit me to offer an expression of the deepest gratitude
for the welcome, addressed by you to the Admiral whom the Czar deputed
to return the Cronstadt visit. In the high position which you occupy
your words express the full meaning of the glorious and pacific
festivities which are now being celebrated with such remarkable
unanimity, loyalty, and sincerity."
The same entirely baseless reference to peace may be found in the speech
of the French President.
"The links of love which unite Russia and France," he said, "were
strengthened two years ago by the touching manifestations of which our
fleet was the object at Cronstadt, and are becoming every day more
binding; and the honest interchange of our friendly sentiments must
inspire all those who have at heart the welfare of peace, security, and
confidence," etc.
In both speeches the benefits of peace, and of peaceful festivities, are
alluded to quite unexpectedly and without any occasion.
The same thing is observable in the interchange of telegrams between the
Russian Emperor and the President of the Republic.
The Emperor telegraphs:—
"At the moment when the Russian fleet is leaving France it is my ardent
wish to express to you how I am touched by, and grateful for, the
chivalrous and splendid reception which my sailors have everywhere
experienced on French soil. The ​expressions of warm sympathy which have
been manifested once again with so much eloquence will add a fresh link
to those which unite the two countries, and will I trust contribute to
strengthen the general peace which is the object of our most constant
efforts and desires."
The French President replies:—
"The telegram, for which I thank your Majesty, reached me when on the
point of leaving Toulon to return to Paris.
"The magnificent fleet on which I had the great satisfaction of saluting
the Russian pennant in French waters, the cordial and spontaneous
reception which your brave sailors have everywhere received in France,
prove gloriously once again the sincere sympathies which unite our two
countries. They show at the same time a deep faith in the beneficent
influence which may weld together two great nations devoted to the cause
of peace."
Again, in both telegrams, without the slightest occasion, are allusions
to peace which have nothing at all to do with the reception of the
sailors.
There is no single speech nor article in which it is not said that the
purpose of all these orgies is the peace of Europe. At a dinner given by
the representatives of French literature, all breathe of peace. M. Zola,
who, a short time previously, had written that war was inevitable, and
even serviceable; M. de Vogué, who more than once has stated the same in
print, say, neither of them, a word as to war, but speak only of peace.
The sessions of Parliament open with speeches upon the past festivities;
the speakers mention that such festivities are an assurance of peace to
Europe.
It is as if a man should come into a peaceful company, and commence
energetically to assure everyone present that he has not the least
intention to knock out anyone's teeth, blacken their eyes, or break
their arms, but has only the most peaceful ideas for passing the
evening.
"But no one doubts it," one is inclined to say, "and if you really have
such evil intentions, at least do not presume to mention them."
In many of the articles describing the festivities a naĂŻve satisfaction
is clearly expressed that no one during them alluded to what it was
determined, by silent consent, to hide from everybody, and that only one
incautious fellow, who was immediately removed by the police, voiced
what all had in their minds by shouting, "Down with Germany!"
​In the same way children are often so delighted at being able to conceal
an escapade that their very high spirits betray them.
Why, indeed, be so glad that no one said anything about war, if the.
subject were not uppermost in our minds?
No one is thinking of war; only a milliard is being spent upon
preparations for it, and millions of men are under arms in France and
Russia.
"But all this is done to insure peace. Si vis pacem para bellum.
L'empire c'est la paix. La RĂ©publigue c'est la paix."
But if such be the case, why are the military advantages of a
Franco-Russian alliance in the event of a war with Germany not only
explained in every paper and magazine published for a so-called educated
people, but also in the Village Review, a paper published for the people
by the Russian Government? Why is it inculcated to this unfortunate
people, cheated by its own Government, that "to be in friendly relations
with France is profitable to Russia, because if, unexpectedly, the
before-mentioned States (Germany, Austria, and Italy) made up their
minds to declare war with Russia, then, though with God's help she might
be able to withstand them by herself, and defeat even so considerable an
alliance, the feat would not be an easy one, and great sacrifices and
losses would be entailed by success."
And why in all French schools is history taught from the primer of M.
Lavisse (twenty-first edition, 1889), in which the following is
inserted:—
"Since the insurrection of the Commune France has had no further
troubles. The day following the war she again resumed work. She paid
Germany without difficulty the enormous war indemnity of five milliards.
"But France lost her military renown during the war of 1870. She has
lost part of her territory. More than 15,000 inhabitants of our
departments on the Upper Rhine, Lower Rhine, and Moselle who were good
Frenchmen have been compelled to become Germans. But they are not
resigned to their fate. They detest Germany; they continue to hope that
they may once more be Frenchmen.
"But Germany appreciates its victory, and it is a great country, all the
inhabitants of which sincerely love their fatherland, and ​whose soldiers
are brave and well disciplined. In order to recover from Germany what
she took from us we must be good citizens and soldiers. It is to make
you good soldiers that your teachers instruct you in the history of
France.
"The history of France proves that in our country the sons have always
avenged the disasters of their fathers.
"Frenchmen in the time of Charles VII. avenged the defeat of their
fathers at Crécy, at Poictiers, at Agincourt.
"It is for you, boys, being educated in our schools, to avenge the
defeat of your fathers at Sedan and at Metz.
"It is your duty—the great duty of your life. You must ever bear that in
mind."
At the foot of the page is a series of questions upon the preceding
paragraph. The questions are the following:—
"What has France lost by losing part of her territory?"
"How many Frenchmen have become Germans by the loss of this territory?"
"Do these Frenchmen love Germany?"
"What must we do to recover some day what Germany has taken from us?"
In addition to these there are certain "Reflections on Book VII," where
it is said that "the children of France must not forget her defeat of
1870"; that they must bear on their hearts the burden of this
remembrance," but that "this memory must not discourage them, on the
contrary it must excite their courage."
So that if, in official speeches, peace is mentioned with such emphasis,
behind the scenes the lawfulness, profit and necessity of war is
incessantly urged upon the people, the rising generation, and all
Frenchmen and Russians.
"We do not think of war, we would only establish peace." One feels
inclined to inquire, "Qui diable trompe-e-on ici?" if the question were
worth asking, and it were not too evident who was the unhappy deluded
one.
The deceived are always the same eternally deluded, foolish
working-folk, those who, with horny hands, make all these ships, forts,
arsenals, barracks, cannon, steamers, harbors, piers, palaces, halls,
and places with triumphal arches for the public and who print all these
books and papers, and who procure and transport all these pheasants,
ortolans, oysters and wines which are to be eaten and drunk by those who
are brought up, educated ​and maintained by the working-class, and who,
in turn, deceive and prepare for it the worst disasters.
Always the same good-natured, foolish working-folk, who, yawning,
showing their white, healthy teeth, childishly and naively pleased at
the sight of admirals and presidents in full dress, of flags waving
above their heads, and fireworks, and triumphal music; for whom, before
they can look round, there will be no more admirals, nor presidents, nor
flags, nor music; but only a damp and empty field of battle, cold,
hunger, and pain; before them a murderous enemy, behind, relentless
officers preventing their escape; blood, wounds, putrefying bodies, and
senseless unnecessary death.
While, on the other hand, those who have been made much of at Paris and
Toulon will be seated, after a good dinner, with glasses of choice wine
beside them and cigars between their lips, in a warm cloth tent, marking
upon a map with pins such and such places upon which a certain amount of
"food for powder" is to be expended—"food" composed of those same
foolish people—in order finally to capture this fortified place or the
other, and to obtain a certain little ribbon or grade.
"But nothing of the kind exists; we have no sanguinary intentions," it
is replied. "All that has happened is the expression of mutual sympathy
between two nations. What can be amiss in the triumphal and honorable
reception of the representatives of a friendly nation by the
representatives of another nation? What can be wrong in this, even if we
admit that the alliance is significant of a protection from a dangerous
neighbor who threatens Europe with war?"
It is wrong, because it is false—a most evident and insolent falsehood,
inexcusable, iniquitous.
It is false, this suddenly begotten love of Russians for French and
French for Russians. And it is false, this insinuation of our dislike to
the Germans, and our distrust of them. And more false still is it that
the aim of all these indecent and insane orgies is supposed to be the
preservation of the peace of Europe.
We are all aware that we neither felt before nor have felt since, any
special love for the French, or any animosity towards the Germans.
​We are told that Germany has projects against Russia, that the Triple
Alliance threatens to destroy our peace and that of Europe and that our
alliance with France will secure an equal balance of power and be a
guarantee of peace.
In order that such a condition should be attained it would be necessary
to make the Powers mathematically equal.
If the preponderance were on the side of the Franco-Russian alliance,
the danger would be the same, or even greater, because if Wilhelm, who
is at the head of the Triple Alliance, is a menace to peace. France, who
cannot be reconciled to the loss of her provinces, would be a still
greater menace. The Triple Alliance is called an alliance of peace,
whereas for us it proved an alliance of war. Just so now the
Franco-Russian alliance can only be viewed truly as an alliance for war.
Moreover, if peace depend upon an even balance of power, how are those
units to be defined between which the balance is to be established?
England asserts that the Franco-Russian alliance is a menace to her
security, which necessitates a new alliance on her part. And into
precisely how many units is Europe to be divided that this even balance
may be attained?
"Indeed, if there be such a necessity for equilibrium in every society
of men, a man stronger than his fellows is already a danger, against
which the rest must join defensive alliances.
It is demanded, "What is wrong in France and Russia expressing their
mutual sympathies for the preservation of peace?" The expression is
wrong because it is false, and a falsehood once pronounced never ends
harmlessly.
The devil "was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the
truth." Falsehood always lead to murder; and most of all in such a case
as this.
Just what is now taking place occurred before our last Turkish war, when
a sudden love on our part was supposed to have been awakened towards
certain Slavonic brethren none had heard of for centuries; though
French, Germans, and English always have been, and are, incomparably
nearer and dearer to us than a few Bulgarians, Servians, or
Montenegrins. And on that occasion just the same enthusiasm, receptions,
and solemnities were to be observed, blown into existence by men like
Aksakov and Katkoff, who are already mentioned in Paris as model
patriots, Then, as ​now, the suddenly begotten love of Russ for Slav was
only a thing of words.
Then in Moscow as now in Paris when the affair began, people ate, drank,
talked nonsense to each other, were much affected by their noble
feelings, spoke of union and of peace, passing over in silence the main
business—the project against Turkey.
The press goaded on the excitement, and by degress the government took a
hand in the game. Servia revolted. Diplomatic notes began to circulate
and semiofficial articles to appear. The Press lied more and more,
invented and gave vent to the irritation; and in the end Alexander II.,
who really did not desire war, was obliged to consent to it and what we
know took place, the loss of hundreds of thousands of innocent men, and
the brutalizing and befooling of millions.
What took place at Paris and Toulon, and has since been fomented by the
Press, is evidently leading to a like or a worse calamity.
At first, in the same manner, to the strains of the "Marseillaise" and
"God save the Czar," certain generals and ministers drink to France and
Russia in honor of various regiments and fleets; the Press publishes its
falsehoods; idle crowds of wealthy people, not knowing how to apply
their strength and time, chatter patriotic speeches, stirring up
animosity against Germany; and in the end, how peaceful soever Alexander
III. may be, circumstances will so unite that he will be unable to avoid
war, which will be demanded by all who surround him, by the Press, and,
as always seems in such cases, by the entire public opinion of the
nation. And before we can look round, the usual ominous absurd
proclamation will appear in the papers—
"We, by God's grace, the autocratic great Emperor of All Russia, King of
Poland, Grand Duke of Finland, &c., &c., proclaim to all our true
subjects, that, for the welfare of these our beloved subjects,
bequeathed by God into our care, we have found it our duty before God to
send them to slaughter. God be with us."
The bells will peal, long-haired men will dress in golden sacks to pray
for successful slaughter. And the old story will begin again, the awful
customary acts.
The editors of the daily Press will begin virulently to stir men up to
hatred and manslaughter in the name of patriotism, happy ​in the receipt
of an increased income. Manufacturers, merchants, contractors for
military stores will hurry joyously about their business, in the hope of
double receipts.
All sorts of Government officials will buzz about, foreseeing a
possibility of purloining something more than usual. The military
authorities hurry hither and thither, drawing double pay and rations,
and with the expectation of receiving for the slaughter of other men
various silly little ornaments which they so highly prize, as ribbons,
crosses, orders, and stars. Idle ladies and gentlemen will make a great
fuss, entering their names in advance for the Red Cross Society, and
ready to bind up the wounds of those whom their husbands and brothers
will mutilate, and they will imagine that in so doing they are
performing a most Christian work.
And, smothering despair within their souls by songs, licentiousness, and
wine, men will trail along, torn from peaceful labor, from their wives,
mothers and children—hundreds of thousands of simple-minded,
good-natured men with murderous weapons in their hands—anywhere they may
be driven.
They will march, freeze, hunger, suffer sickness, and die from it, or
finally come to some place where they will be slain by thousands, or
kill thousands themselves with no reason—men whom they have never seen
before, and who neither have done nor could do them any mischief.
And when the number of sick, wounded, and killed becomes so great that
there are not hands enough left to pick them up, and when the air is so
infected with the putrifying scent of the "food for powder" that even
the authorities find it disagreeable, a truce will be made, the wounded
will be picked up anyhow, the sick will be brought in and huddled
together in heaps, the killed will be covered with earth and lime, and
once more all the crowd of deluded men will be led on and on till those
who have devised the project weary of it, or till those who thought to
find it profitable receive their spoil.
And so once more men will be made savage, fierce, and brutal, and love
will wane in the world, and the Christianizing of mankind, which has
already begun, will lapse for scores and hundreds of years. And so once
more the men who reaped profit from it all, will assert with assurance
that since there has been a war there must needs have been one, and that
other wars must follow, and they will again prepare future generations
for a continuance of slaughter, depraving them from their birth.
Hence, when such patriotic demonstrations as the Toulon festivities take
place—though they only constrain from a distance the wills of men, and
bind them to those accustomed villainies which are always the outcome of
patriotism—everyone who realizes the true import of these festivities
cannot but protest against what is tacitly included in them. And,
therefore, when those gentlemen, the journalists, assert that every
Russian sympathizes with what took place at Constadt, Toulon, and Paris,
and that this alliance for life and death is sealed by the desire of the
entire nation; and when the Russian Minister of Education assures the
French Minister that all his brigade of children, clerks, and scientists
share his feelings; or when the commander of a Russian squadron assures
the French that all Russia will be grateful to them for their reception,
and when arch-priests answer for their flock, and assert that the
prayers of Frenchmen for the welfare of the Imperial house are joyously
echoed in the hearts of the Russian Czar-loving nation; and when the
Russian Ambassador in Paris, as the representative of the Russian
people, states, after a dish of ortolans à la soubise, or logopèdes
glacés, with a glass of grand Moët champagne in his hand, that all
Russian hearts, beating in unison with his heart, are filled with sudden
and exclusive love for beautiful France—then we, men not yet idiots,
regard it as a sacred duty, not only for ourselves, but for tens of
millions of Russians, to protest most energetically against such a
statement, and to affirm that our hearts do not beat in unison with
those of these gentlemen—the journalists, ministers of education,
commanders of squadrons, arch-priests, and ambassadors; but on the
contrary, are filled with indignation and disgust at the pernicious
falsehood and wrong which, consciously or unconsciously, they are
spreading by their words and deeds. Let them drink as much Moët as they
please; let them write articles and make speeches from themselves and
for themselves; but we who regard ourselves as Christians, cannot admit
that what all these gentlemen write and say is binding upon us.
This we cannot admit because we know what lies hidden beneath at these
tipsy ecstacies, speeches and embracings which resemble, not a
confirmation of peace, as we are assured, but rather those orgies and
revelings to which criminals are addicted when planning their joint
crimes.
About four years ago the first swallow of this Toulon spring, a
well-known French agitator for a war with Germany, came to Russia to
prepare the way for the Franco-Russian alliance, and paid a visit to us
in the country. He came to us when we were all engaged cutting the hay
crop, and when we had come into lunch and made our guest's acquaintance,
he began at once to tell us how he had fought, been taken prisoner, made
his escape, and finally pledged himself as a patriot—a fact of which he
was evidently proud—never to cease agitating for a war with Germany
until the boundaries and glory of France had been reestablished.
All our guest's arguments as to the necessity of an alliance of France
with Russia in order to reconstruct the former boundary, power and glory
of his country, and to assure our security against the evil intentions
of Germany, had no success in our circle.
To his arguments that France could never settle down until she had
recaptured her lost provinces, we replied that neither could Russia be
at rest till she had been avenged for Jena, and that f the revanche of
France should happen to be successful, Germany in her turn would desire
revenge, and so on without end.
To his arguments that it was the duty of France to recover the sons who
had been snatched from her, we replied that the condition of the
majority of the working population of Alsace-Lorraine under the rule of
Germany had probably suffered no change for the worse since the days
when it was ruled by France, and the fact that some of the Alsatians
preferred to be registered as Frenchmen and not as Germans, and that he,
our guest, wished to reestablish the fame of the French arms, was no
reason to renew the awful calamities which a war would cause, or even to
sacrifice a single human life.
To his arguments that it was very well for us to talk like that, who had
never endured what France had, and that we would speak very differently
if the Baltic provinces or Poland were to be taken from us, we replied
that the loss of the Baltic provinces or Poland could in no wise be
considered as a calamity, but rather as an advantage, as it would
decrease the necessity of armed forces and State expenses; and that from
the Christian point of view one can never admit the justice of war, as
war demands murder; ​while Christianity not only prohibits all killing,
but demands of us the betterment of all men, regarding all men as
brothers, without distinction of nationalities.
A Christian nation, we said, which engages in war, ought, in order to be
logical, not only to take down the cross from its church steeples, turn
the churches to some other use, give the clergy other duties, having
first prohibited the preaching of the Gospel, but also ought to abandon
all the requirements of morality, which flow from the Christian law.
"C'est Ă prendre ou Ă laisser," we said. Until Christianity be abolished
it is only possible to attract mankind towards war by cunning and fraud,
as now practiced. We who see this fraud and cunning cannot give way to
it.
Since, during this conversation, there was neither music nor champagne,
nor anything to confuse our senses, our guest merely shrugged his
shoulders, and, with the amiability of a Frenchman, said he was very
grateful for the cordial welcome he had experienced in our house, but
was sorry that his views were not as well received.
After this conversation we went out into the hay-field, where our guest,
hoping to find the peasants more in sympathy with his ideas, asked me to
translate to an old, sickly peasant, Prokophy by name—who, though
suffering from severe hernia, was still working energetically, mowing
with us—his plan for putting pressure on Germany from both sides, the
Russian and the French.
The Frenchman explained this to him graphically, by pressing with his
white fingers on either side of the mower's coarse shirt, which was damp
with heat.
I well remember Prokophy's goodhumored smile of astonishment when I
explained the meaning of the Frenchman's words and action. He evidently
took the proposal to squeeze the Germans as a joke, not conceiving that
a full-grown and educated man would quietly and soberly speak of war as
being desirable.
"Well, but if we squeeze him from both sides," he answered, smiling,
giving one pleasantry for another, "he will be fixed too fast to move.
We shall have to let him out somewhere."
I translated this answer to my guest.
"Tell him we love the Russians," he said.
​These words astonished Prokophy even more than the proposal to squeeze
the Germans, and awoke in him a certain feeling of suspicion.
"Whence does he come?" he inquired.
I replied that he was a wealthy Frenchman.
"And what business has brought him here?" he asked.
When I replied that the Frenchman had come in the hope of persuading the
Russians to enter into an alliance with the French in the event of a war
with Germany, Prokophy was clearly entirely displeased, and, turning to
the women who were sitting close by on a cock of hay, called out to
them, in an angry voice, which unwittingly displayed the feelings which
had been aroused in him, to go and stack the rest of the hay.
"Well, you crows," he cried, "you are all asleep! Go and stack! A nice
time for squeezing the Germans! Look there, the hay has not been turned
yet, and it looks as if we might have to begin on the corn on
Wednesday." And then, as if afraid of having offended our visitor, he
added, smiling good-naturedly and showing his worn teeth," Better come
and work with us, and bring the Germans too. And when we have finished
we will have some feasting, and make the Germans join us. They are men
like ourselves."
And so saying Prokophy took his hands from the fork of the rake on which
he had been leaning, lifted it on to his shoulder, and went off after
the women.
"Oh, the dear fellow!" exclaimed the polite Frenchman, laughing. And
thus was concluded for the time his diplomatic mission to the Russian
people.
The different aspects of these two men—one shining with freshness and
high spirits, dressed in a coat of the latest cut, displaying with his
white hands, which had never known labor, how the Germans should be
squeezed; the other coarse, with haydust in his hair, shrunken with hard
work, sunburnt, always weary, and, notwithstanding his severe complaint,
always at work: Prokophy, with his fingers swollen with toil, in his
large home-made trousers, worn-out shoes, and a great heap of hay upon
his shoulders, moving slowly along with that careful economy of stride
common to all working men—the different aspects of these two men made
much clear to me at the time, which has come back to me vividly since
the Toulon-Paris festivities.
​One of them represented the class fed and maintained by the people's
labor, who in return use up that people as "food for powder"; while the
other was that very "food for powder" which feeds and maintains those
who afterwards so dispose of it.
"But France has lost two provinces—children torn from a beloved mother.
And Russia cannot permit Germany to make laws for her and rob her of her
historical mission in the East, nor risk the chance of losing, like
France, her Baltic provinces, Poland, or the Caucasus.
"And Germany cannot hear of the loss of those advantages which she has
won at such a sacrifice. And England will yield to none her naval
supremacy."
After such words it is generally supposed that a Frenchman, Russian,
German, or Englishman should be ready to sacrifice anything, to regain
his lost provinces, establish his influence in the East, secure national
unity, or keep his control of the seas.
It is assumed that patriotism is, to start with, a sentiment natural to
all men, and that secondly, it is so highly moral a sentiment that it
should be induced in all who have it not.
But neither is one nor the other true. I have lived half-a-century amid
the Russian people, and in the great mass of laborers, during that
period, I have never once seen nor heard any manifestation or expression
of this sentiment cf patriotism, unless one should count those patriotic
phrases which are learned by heart in the army, and repeated from books
by the more superficial and degraded of the populace. I have never heard
from the people any expression of patriotism, but, on the contrary, I
have often listened to expressions of indifference, and even contempt,
for any kind of patriotism, by the most venerable and serious of working
folk. I have observed the same thing among the laboring classes of other
nations, and have received confirmation from educated Frenchmen, Germans
and Englishmen, from observation of their respective working classes.
The working classes are too much occupied supporting the lives of
themselves and of their families, which duty engrosses all their
attention, to be able to take an interest in those political questions
which are the chief motives of patriotism.
Questions as to the influence of Russia in the East, the unity of
​Germany, the recovery by France of her lost provinces, or the concession
of such a part of one State to another State, do not interest the
working man, not only because, for the most part, he is unacquainted
with the circumstances which evoke such questions, but also because the
interests of his life are altogether independent of the State and of
politics. For a laboring man is altogether indifferent where
such-and-such a frontier may be delimitated, to whom Constantinople may
belong, whether Saxony or Brunswick shall or shall not be a member of
the German Federation, whether Australia or Montebello shall belong to
England, or even to what Government they may have to pay taxes, or into
what army to send their sons.
But it is always a matter of importance to them to know what taxes they
will have to pay, how long to serve in the army, how much to pay for
their land, and how much to receive for their labor—all questions
entirely independent of State and political interests. This is the
reason why, notwithstanding the energetic means employed by Governments
to inculcate patriotism, which is not natural to the people, and to
destroy Socialism, the latter continues to penetrate further into the
laboring masses, whereas patriotism, though so assiduously inculcated,
not only makes no headway, but disappears constantly more and more, and
is now solely a possession of the upper classes to whom it is
profitable. And if, as sometimes happens, that patriotism takes hold of
the masses, as lately in Paris, it is only when the masses have been
subjected to some special hypnotic influence by the Government and
ruling class, and such patriotism only lasts as long as the influence is
continued.
Thus, for instance, in Russia, where patriotism, in the form of love for
and devotion to the faith, Czar, and country, is instilled into the
people, with extraordinary energy by every means in the hands of the
Government—the Church, schools, literature, and every sort of pompous
ceremony—the Russian working-man, the hundred millions of the working
people, in spite of their undeserved reputation for devotion to faith,
Czar, and country, are a people singularly unduped by patriotism and
such devotion.
They are not for the most part, even acquainted with the orthodox
official faith to which they are supposed to be so attached, and
whenever they do make acquaintance with it they leave it and become
rationalists—that is, they adopt a creed which ​cannot be attacked and
need not be defended; and notwithstanding the constant, energetic
insistance of devotion to the Czar, they regard in general, all
authority founded on violence either with condemnation or with total
indifference; their country, if by that word anything is meant outside
their village and district, they either do not realize at all, or, if
they do, would make no distinctions between it and other countries. So
that where formerly Russians would emigrate into Austria or Turkey, they
now go with equal indifference to another part of Russia, Turkey, or
China.
An old friend of mine, who passed the winters alone in the country while
his wife whom he visited from time to time, lived in Paris, often
conversed during the long autumn evenings with his steward an illiterate
but shrewd and venerable peasant, who used to come to him in the evening
to receive his orders, and my friend once mentioned among other things
the advantages of the French system of government compared with our own.
The occasion was a short time previous to the last Polish insurrection
and the intervention of the French Government in our affairs. At that
time the patriotic Russian Press was burning with indignation at this
interference, and so excited the ruling classes that our political
relations became very strained, and there were rumors of an approaching
war with France.
My friend, having read the papers, explained to this peasant the
misunderstanding between France and Russia; and coming under the
influence of the journal, and being an old military man, said that were
war to be declared he would reenter the army and fight with France. At
that time a revanche against the French for Sebastapol was considered a
necessity by patriotic Russians.
"For what should we fight with them?" asked the peasant.
"Why how can we permit France to dictate to us?"
"Well, you said yourself that they were better governed than we,"
replied the peasant quite seriously; let them arrange things as well in
Russia."
And my friend told me that he was so taken aback by this argument that
he did not know what to reply and burst into laughter, as one who has
just awaked from a delusive dream.
The same argument may be heard from every Russian workman ​if he has not
come under the hypnotic influence of the Government. People speak of the
Russian's love for his faith, Czar, and country ; and yet a single
community of peasants could not be found in Russia which would hesitate
one moment had they to choose of two places for emigration—one in
Russia, under the "Father-Czar " (as he is termed only in books), and
the holy orthodox faith of his idolized country, but with less or worse
land and the other without the "White-father-Czar," and without the
orthodox faith, somewhere outside Russia in Prussia, China, Turkey,
Austria, only with more and better land—the choice would be in favor of
the latter as we have often had opportunity to observe.
The question as to who shall govern him (and he knows that under any
Government he will be equally robbed) is for the Russian peasant of
infinitely less significance than the question (setting aside even the
matter of water), is the clay soft and will cabbage thrive in it?
But it might be supposed that this indifference on the part of Russians
arises from the fact that any Government under which they might live
would be an improvement on their own, because in Europe there is none
worse. But that is not so; for as far as I can judge, one may witness
the same indifference among English, Dutch and German peasants
emigrating to America, and among the various nationalities which have
emigrated to Russia.
Passing from the control of one European Government to another—from
Turkish to Austrian, or from French to German—alters so slightly the
position of the genuine working classes that in no case would the change
excite any discontent, if only ct be not effected artificially by the
Government and the ruling ilasses.
Usually, for a proof of the existence of patriotism one is referred to
the display of patriotic sentiment by the people on certain solemn
occasions, as in Russia, at the coronation of the Czar, or his reception
after the railway accident on October 17; in France, on the proclamation
of war with Prussia; in Germany at the rejoicings after the war; or
during the Franco-Russian festivities.
But one ought to take into consideration the way these manifestations
are arranged. In Russia, for example, during every ​progress of the
Emperor, delegates are commanded to appear from every peasant community,
and materials requisitioned for the reception and welcome of the Czar.
The enthusiasm of the crowd is for the most part artificially prepared
by those who require it, and the degree of enthusiasm exhibited by the
crowd is only a clue to the refinements in the art of those who organize
such exhibitions. The art has been practiced for long, hence the
specialists in it have acquired great adroitness in its preparation.
When Alexander II. was still heir apparent, and commanded, as is usual,
the Préobajensky Regiment, he once paid an after dinner visit to the
regiment, which was in camp at the time.
As soon as his calèche came in sight, the soldiers, who were only in
their shirts at the time, ran out to welcome their "august commander,"
as the phrase is, with such enthusiasm, that they all followed the
carriage, and many, while running, made the sign of the cross, gazing
upon the prince. All who witnessed this reception were deeply moved by
this simple attachment of the Russian soldier to the Czar and his son,
and by the genuinely religious, and evidently spontaneous, enthusiasm
expressed in their faces, movements, and especially by the signing of
the cross.
And yet all this had been artificially prepared in the following
manner:—
After a review on the previous day the Prince told the commander of the
brigade that he would revisit the regiment on the following day.
"When are we to expect your Imperial Highness?"
"Probably in the evening, only, pray, do not expect me: and let there be
no preparation."
As soon as the Prince was gone, the commander of the brigade called all
the captains of companies together, and gave orders that on the
following day all the men should have clean shirts, and the moment the
Prince's carriage should come in sight (special signalmen were to be
sent out to give warning of it) everyone should run to meet it, and with
shouts of "Hurrah!" run after it, and, moreover, that every tenth man in
each company should cross himself whilst running. The color-sergeants
drew up the companies, and told off every tenth man to cross himself,
"One, two, three,
. . . . eight, nine, ten. Sidorenko, you are to cross yourself. One,
two, three
. . . . Ivanoff, to cross yourself."
​Thus, what was ordered was accomplished, and an impression of
spontaneous enthusiasm was produced upon the Prince and upon all who saw
it, even upon the soldiers and officers, and even upon the commander of
the brigade himself.
The same thing is done, though less peremptorily, wherever patriotic
manifestations take place. Thus the Franco-Russian festivities, which
strike us as the spontaneous outcome of the nation's feelings, did not
happen of their own accord, but were very cleverly prepared and arranged
for by the foresight of the French Government.
As soon as the advent of the Russian fleet was settled, "at once," I
again quote from that official organ, the Village Review, "not only in
large towns upon the somewhat lengthy route from Toulon to Paris, but in
many places far removed from it, the organization of festivities was
commenced by special committees.
"Contributions were everywhere received to defray the expenses of the
welcome. Many towns sent deputations to our Ambassador in Paris, praying
that our sailors should be permitted to visit them even for a day or an
hour.
"The municipalities of all those towns which our sailors were directed
to visit voted vast sums of money—more than a hundred thousand rubles—to
promote various festivities and merrymakings, and expressed their
readiness to devote even a larger sum to the purpose, if necessary, to
make the welcome as magnificent as possible.
"In Paris itself, in addition to the sum voted by the town unicipality,
a large amount was collected in voluntary contributions by a private
committee for the series of entertainments, and the French Government
decreed over a hundred thousand rubles for the reception of the Russian
visitors by the Ministers and other authorities. In many places which
our sailors were unable to visit it was decided to keep October 1 as a
festal day in honor of Russia. A number of towns and departments decided
to send to Toulon and Paris special deputies to welcome the Russian
visitors, to give them presents in memory of France, or to send them
addresses and telegrams of welcome.
"It was decided everywhere to regard October 1 as a national feast day,
and to give a day's holiday to all the school-children, and in Paris two
days.
"Soldiers undergoing certain sentences were pardoned, in order ​that they
might remember with thankfulness the joyous October 1 in the annals of
France.
"To enable the public who wished to visit Toulon to participate in the
reception of the Russian squadron, the railways reduced their fares to
one-half, and arranged for special trains."
And thus when, by a series of measures undertaken everywhere and at the
same time—always thanks to the power in its hands at the command of the
Government—a certain portion of the people, chiefly the froth, the town
crowds, is brought into an unnaturally excited state, it is said. Look
at this spontaneous action of the will of the whole nation.
Such manifestations as those of Toulon and Paris, as those which take
place in Germany at the receptions of the Emperor or of Bismarck, or at
the manœuvres in Lothringen, as those which are always repeated in
Russia at all pompously arranged receptions, only prove that the means
of exciting a nation artificially which are at present in the hands of
the Governments and ruling classes, can always evoke any patriotic
manifestations they choose, and afterwards label it as the outcome of
the patriotic sentiments of the people.
Nothing, on the contrary, proves so clearly the absence of patriotism in
the people, as these same excessive measures now used for its artificial
excitement and the small results attained with so much effort.
If patriotic sentiments are so natural to a people, why then is it not
allowed to express itself of its own accord, instead of being stirred up
by every ordinary and extraordinary means?
If only the attempt were made for a time in Russia to abolish at the
coronation of the Czar the taking of the oath of allegiance by the
people, the solemn repetition of the prayers for the Czar during every
church service; to forego the festivals of his birth and saints' days,
with illuminations, the pealing of bells and compulsory idleness, to
cease the public exhibition of his portrait, and in prayer-books,
calendars, and books of study, to print no more the family names of
himself and of his family, and of even the pronouns alluding to them, in
large letters; to cease to honor him by special books and papers
published for that purpose; to put an end to imprisonment for the least
word of disrespect concerning him—let us see these things altered for a
time, and then we could know how far it is inherent in the people, in
the genuine, ​working-class. Prokophy and Ivan the steward, as they are
always assured, and as every foreigner is assured, idolize the Czar, who
one way or another betrays them into the hands of landowners and of the
rich in general.
So it is in Russia. But if only in like manner the ruling classes in
Germany, France, Italy, England, and America were to do what they so
persistently accomplish in the inculcation of patriotism, attachment and
obedience to the existing Government, we should be able to see how tar
this supposed patriotism is natural to the nations of our time.
From infancy, by every possible means—class-books, church services,
sermons, speeches, books, papers, songs, poetry, monuments—the people is
stupefied in one direction; and then either by force or by bribe,
several thousands of the people are assembled, and when these, joined by
the idlers always present at every sight, to the sound of cannon and
music, and inflamed by the glitter and brilliance about them, will
commence to shout out what others are shouting in front of them, we are
told that this is the expression of the sentiment of the entire nation.
But, in the first place, these thousands, or even tens of thousands, who
shout something or other on these occasions are only a mere
ten-thousandth part of the whole nation; and, in the second, of these
ten thousand men who shout and wave their hats, the greater, part, if
not collected by the authorities, as in Russia, is artificially
attracted by some kind of bait; and in the third place, of all these
housands there are scarcely a hundred who know the real meaning of what
is taking place, and the majority would shout and wave their hats in
just the same way for an exactly opposite intention; and in the fourth
place, the police is present with power to quiet and silence at once any
who might attempt to shout in a fashion not desired nor demanded by
Government, as was energetically done during the Franco-Russian
festivities.
In France, war with Russia welcomed with just the same zest in the reign
of Napoleon I., then the war against Alexander I., then that of the
allied forces under Napoleon III.; the Bourbons have been welcomed in
the same fashion as the House of Orleans, the Republic, Napoleon III.,
and Boulanger. And in Russia the same welcome has been accorded to
Peter, Catherine, Paul, Alexander, Constantino, Nicolas, the Duke of
Leichtenberg, the "brotherly Slavonians," the King of Prussia, the
French sailors, and any ​Others the authorities desired to welcome. And
just the same thing has taken place in England, America, Germany, and
Italy.
What is called patriotism in our time is, on the one hand, only a
certain disposition of mind, constantly produced and sustained in the
minds of the people in a direction desired by the existing Government by
schools, religion, and a subsidized Press; and on the other hand it is a
temporary excitement of the lowest stratum, morally and intellectually,
of the people, produced by special means by the ruling classes, and
finally acclaimed as the permanent expression of the people's will.
The patriotism of States oppressed by a foreign Power presents no
exception. It is equally unnatural to the working masses, and
artificially induced by the higher classes.
"But if the common people have no sentiment of patriotism it is because
they have not yet developed this elevated feeling natural to every
educated man. If they do not possess this nobility of sentiment, it must
be cultivated in them. And it is this the Government does."
So say, generally, the ruling classes, with such assurance that
patriotism is a noble feeling, and that the simple populace who are
ignorant of it, think themselves, in consequence at fault, and try to
persuade themselves that they really possess it, or at least pretend to
have it.
But what is this elevated sentiment which, according to the opinon of
the ruling classes, must be educated in the people?
The sentiment, in its simplest definition, is merely the preference for
one's own country or nation above the country or nation of any one else;
a sentiment perfectly expressed in the German patriotic song,
"Deutschland, Deutschland ĂĽber Alles," in which one need only substitute
for the first two words, "Russland," "Frankreich," "Italien," or the
name of any other country, to obtain a formula of the elevated sentiment
of patriotism for that country.
It is quite possible that this sentiment is both of use to, and to be
desired by the Government, and of service to the unity of the State, but
one must see that this sentiment is by no means an elevated one, but on
the contrary, very stupid and immoral. Stupid, because if every country
were to consider itself superior to others, it is evident that all but
one would be in error, and immoral because it leads all ​who possess it
to aim at benefiting their own country or nation at the expense of every
other—an inclination exactly at variance with the fundamental moral law,
which all admit "Do not unto others as you would not wish them to do
unto you."
Patriotism may have been a virtue in the ancient world when it compelled
men to serve the highest idea of those days,—the fatherland. But how can
patriotism be a virtue in these days when it requires of men an ideal
exactly opposite to that of our religion and morality—an admission not
of the equality and fraternity of all men but of the dominance of one
country or nations over all others? But not only is this sentiment no
virtue in our times, but it is indubitably a vice; for this sentiment of
patriotism cannot now exist, because there is neither material nor moral
foundation for its conception.
Patriotism might have had some meaning in the ancient world, more or
less uniform in composition, professing one national faith and subject
to the unrestrained authority of its great and adored sovereign
representing as it were, an island in an ocean of barbarians who sought
to overflow it.
It is conceivable that in such circumstances patriotism—the desire of
protection from barbarian assault, ready not only to destroy the social
order, but threatening it with plunder, slaughter, captivity, slavery,
and the violation of its women—was a natural feeling: and it is
conceivable that men, in order to defend themselves and their
fellow-countrymen, might prefer their own nation to any other, and
cherish a feeling of hatred towards the surrounding barbarians, and
destroy them for self-protection.
But what significance can this feeling have in these Christian days?
On what grounds and for what reason can a man of our time follow this
example—a Russian, for instance, kill Frenchmen; or a Frenchman,
Germans—when he is well aware, however uneducated he may be, that the
men of the country or nation against whom his patriotic animosity is
excited are no barbarians, but men. Christians, like himself, often of
the same faith as himself, and, like him, desirous of peace and the
peaceful interchange of labor; and besides, bound to him, for the most
part, either by the interest of a common effort, or by mercantile or
spiritual endeavors, or even by both ? So that very often people of one
​country are nearer and more needful to their neighbors than are these
latter to one another, as in the case of laborers in the service of
foreign employers of labor, of commercial houses, scientists and the
followers of art.
Moreover, the very conditions of life are now so changed, that what we
call fatherland, and which we are asked to distinguish from everything
else, has ceased to be clearly defined, as with the ancients, when men
of the same country were of one nationality one state, and one religion.
The patriotism of an Egyptian, a Jew, a Greek is comprehensible who in
defending his country defended his religion, his nationality, his
fatherland, and his state.
But in what terms can one express to-day the patriotism of an Irishman
in the United States, who by his religion belongs to Rome, by his
nationality, to Ireland, by his citizenship to the United States? In the
same position is a Bohemian in Austria, a Pole in Russia, Prussia, or
Austria; a Hindu, in England; a Tartar or Armenian in Russia or Turkey.
Not to mention the people of these particular conquered nations, the
people of the most homogeneous countries, Russia, France, Prussia, can
no longer possess the sentiment of patriotism which was natural to the
ancients, because very often the chief interests of their lives—of the
family, for instance, where a man is married to a woman of another
nationality—commercial, where his capital is invested abroad; spiritual,
scientific or artistic—are no longer contained within the limits of his
country, but outside it, in the very State, perhaps, against which his
patriotic animosity is being excited.
But patriotism is chiefly impossible to-day, because, however much we
may have endeavored during 1800 years to conceal the meaning of
Christianity, it has nevertheless leaked into our lives, and controls
them to such an extent that the dullest and most unrefined of men must
see to-day the complete nonconformity of patriotism with the moral law
by which we live.
Patriotism was a necessity in the formation and consolidation of
powerful States composed of different nationalities and acting in mutual
defense against barbarians. But as soon as Christian enlightenment
transformed these States from within, giving to all an equal standing,
patriotism became not only needless, but the ​sole impediment to a union
between nations for which, by reason of their Christian consciousness,
they were prepared.
Patriotism to-day is the cruel tradition of an outlived period, which
exists not merely by its inertia, but because the Governments and ruling
classes, aware that not their power only, but their very existence,
depends upon it, excite and maintain it among the people persistently,
both by cunning and violence.
Patriotism to-day is like a scaffolding which was needful once to raise
the walls of the building, but which, though it presents the only
obstacle to the house being inhabited, is none the less retained,
because its existence is of profit to certain persons.
For a long while there has not been and cannot be any reason for
dissension between Christian nations. It is even impossible to imagine,
how and for what, Russian and German workmen, peace- fully and
conjointly working on the frontiers or in the capitals, should quarrel.
And much less easily can one imagine animosity between some Kazan
peasant who supplies Germans with wheat, and a German who supplies him
with scythes and machines.
It is the same between French, German, and Italian workmen. And it would
be even ridiculous to speak of the possibility of a quarrel between men
of science, art and letters of different nationalities, who have the
same objects of common interest independent of nationalities or of
Governments.
But the various Governments cannot leave the nations in peace, because
the chief, if not the sole justification for the existence of
Governments is the pacification of nations, and the settlement of their
hostile relationships. Hence Governments evoke such hostile
relationships under the aspect of patriotism, in order to exhibit their
powers of pacification. Somewhat like a gypsy, who having put some
pepper under a horse's tail and beaten it in its stall, brings it out,
and hanging on to the rems pretends that he can hardly control the
excited animal.
We are told that Governments are very careful to maintain peace between
nations. How then do they maintain it? People live on the Rhine in
peaceful communication with each other. Suddenly, owing to certain
quarrels and intrigues between kings and emperors a war commences; and
we learn that the French Government has considered it necessary to
regard this peaceful people as Frenchmen. Centuries pass, the population
has become accustomed to their position when animosity again begins
among ​the Governments of the great nations, and a war is started upon
the most empty pretext, because the German Government considers it
necessary to regard this population as Germans: and between all
Frenchmen and Germans is kindled a mutual feeling of ill-will.
Or else Germans and Russians live in friendly fashion on their
frontiers, pacifically exchanging the results of their labor; when a of
sudden those same institutions, which only exist to maintain the peace
of nations, begin to quarrel, are guilty of, one stupidity after
another, and finally are unable to invent anything better than a most
childish method of self-punishment in order to have their own way, and
do a bad turn to their opponent, which in this case is especially easy,
as those who arrange a war of tariffs are not the sufferers from it; it
is others who suffer and so arrange such a war of tariffs as took place
not long ago between Russia and Germany. And so between Russians and
Germans, a feeling of animosity is fostered, which is still more
inflamed by the Franco Russian festivities, and may lead atone moment or
another to a bloody war.
I have mentioned these last two examples of the influence of a
Government over the people used to excite their animosity against
another people, because they have occurred in our times: but in all
history there is no war which was not hatched by a Government
independent of the interests of the people, to whom war is always
pernicious even when successful.
The Government assures the people that they are in danger from the
invasion of another nation, or from foes in their midst, and that the
only way to escape this danger is by slavish obedience of the people to
their Government. This fact is seen most prominently during revolutions
and dictatorships, but it exists always and everywhere that the power of
the Government exists. Every Government explains its existence, and
justifies its deeds of violence by the argument that if it did not exist
the condition of things would be very much worse. After assuring the
people of its danger the Government subordinates it to control, and when
in this condition compels it to attack other nations. And thus the
assurance of the Government is corroborated in the eyes of the people,
as to the danger of attack from other nations, "Divide et impera."
Patriotism in its simplest, clearest and most indubitable ​signification
is nothing else but a means of obtaining for the rulers their ambitions
and covetous desires, and for the ruled the abdication of human dignity,
reason and conscience, and a slavish enthrallment to those in power. And
as such it is recommended wherever it may be preached.
Patriotism is slavery.
Those who preach peace by arbitration argue thus. Two animals cannot
divide their prey otherwise than by fighting; as also is the case with
children, savages and savage nations. But reasonable people settle their
differences by argument, persuasion, and by referring the decision of
the question to other impartial and reasonable persons. So the nations
should act to-day. This argument seems quite correct. The nations of our
time have reached the period of reasonableness, have no animosity
towards each other, and might decide their differences in a peaceful
fashion.
But this argument applies only so far as it has reference to the people
and only to the people who are not under the control of a Government.
But the people that subordinate themselves to a Government cannot be
reasonable, because this subordination is in itself a sign of a want of
reason.
How can we speak of the reasonableness of men who promise in advance to
accomplish everything, including murder, that the Government—that is,
certain men who have attained a certain position—may command? Men who
can accept such obligations, and resignedly subordinate themselves to
anything that may be prescribed by persons unknown to them in St.
Petersburg, Vienna, Berlin, Paris, cannot be considered reasonable; and
the Governments, that is those who are in possession of such power, can
still less be considered reasonable, and cannot but misuse it, and
become dazed by such insane and dreadful power.
This is why peace between nations cannot be attained by reasonable
means, by conventions, arbitration, and so forth, as long as the
subordination of the people to the Goverment continues, a condition
always unreasonable and always pernicious.
But the subordination of people to Governments will exist as long as
patriotism exists, because all governmental authority is founded upon
patriotism, that is upon the readiness of people to subordinate
themselves to authority in order to defend their nation, country, or
state from dangers which are supposed to threaten.
The power of the French kings over their people before the ​Revolution
was founded upon patriotism; upon it too was based the power of the
Consistory of Public Welfare after the Revolution; upon it the power of
Napoleon, was erected, both as Consul and as Emperor; upon it, after the
downfall of Napoleon, was based the power of the Bourbons, then that of
the Republic, Louis Philippe, and again of the Republic; then of
Napoleon III., and again of the Republic, and upon it finally rested the
power of M. Boulanger.
It is dreadful to say so, but there is not, nor has there been, any
conjoint violence of some people against others which was not
accomplished in the name of patriotism. In its name the Russians fought
the French, and the French the Russians, Russians and French are
preparing to fight the Germans, and the Germans to wage war on both
sides.
And such is the case not only with wars. In the name of patriotism the
Russians stifle the Poles, the Germans persecute the Slavonians, the men
of the Commune killed those of Versailles, and those of Versailles the
men of the Commune.
It would seem that, owing to the spread of education, of speedier
locomotion, of greater intercourse between different nations, to the
widening of literature, and chiefly to the decrease of danger from other
nations, the fraud of patriotism ought daily to become more difficult
and at length impossible to practice.
But the truth is that this same spread of general external education,
facilitated locomotion, intercourse, and widening of literature, being
captured by, and constantly more and more under the control of
Government, confers on the latter such possibilities of exciting a
feeling of mutual animosity between nations, that in degree as the
uselessness and harmfulness of patriotism has become manifest, so also
has increased the power of the Government and ruling class to excite
patriotism among the people.
The difference between that which was and that which is consists solely
in the fact that now a much larger number of men participate in the
advantages which patriotism confers on the upper classes, hence a much
larger number of men are employed in spreading and sustaining this
astounding superstition.
​The more difficult the Government finds it to retain its power, the more
numerous are the men who share it.
In former times a small band of rulers held the reins of power,
emperors, kings, dukes, their soldiers and assistants; whereas now the
power and its profits are shared not alone by Government officials and
by the clergy, but by capitalists—great and small, landowners, bankers,
members of Parliament, professors, village officials, men of science,
and even artists, but particularly by authors and journalists.
And all these people, consciously, or unconsciously, spread the deceit
of patriotism, which is indispensable to them if the profits of their
position are to be preserved.
And the fraud, thanks to the means for its propagation, and to the
participation in it of a much larger number of people, having become
more powerful, is continued so successfully, that, notwithstanding the
increased difficulty of deceiving, the extent to which the people are
deceived is the same as ever.
A hundred years ago the uneducated classes, who had no idea of what
their Government was composed, or by what nations they were surrounded,
blindly obeyed those local Government officials and nobles by whom they
were enslaved, and it was sufficient for the Government, by bribes and
rewards, to remain on good terms with these nobles and officials, in
order to squeeze from the people all that was required.
Whereas now, when the people can, for the most part, read, know more or
less of what their Government is composed, and what nations surround
them; when working men constantly and easily move from place to place,
bringing back information of what is happening in the world, the simple
demand that the orders of the Government must be accomplished is not
sufficient; it is needful as well to cloud those true ideas about life
which the people have, and to inculcate unnatural ideas as to the
condition of their existence, and the relationship to it of other
nations.
And so, thanks to the development of literature, reading and the
facilities of travel, Governments which have their agents everywhere, by
means of statutes, sermons, schools, and the Press, inculcate everywhere
upon the people the most savage and erroneous ideas as to their utility,
the relationship of nations, their quatities and intentions; and the
people, so crushed by labor that they have neither the time nor the
power to deliberate upon and test ​the truth of the ideas which are
forced upon them or of demands made upon them in the name of their
welfare, put themselves unmurmuringly under the yoke.
Whereas working men who have freed themselves from unremitting labor and
become educated, and who have therefore, it might be supposed, the power
of seeing through the fraud which is practiced upon them are subjected
to such a coercion of threats, bribes, and all the hypnotic influence of
Governments, that, almost without exception, they desert to the side of
the Government, and by entering some well paid and profitable employment
as priest, schoolmaster, or other official, become participators in
spreading the deceit which is destroying their comrades.
It is as though nets were laid at the entrances to education, in which
those who, by some means or other, escape from the masses bowed down by
labor are inevitably caught.
At first, when one understands the cruelty of all this deceit, one feels
indignant in spite of oneself against those who from personal ambition
or greedy advantage propagate this cruel fraud which destroys the souls
as well as the bodies of men, and one feels inclined to accuse them of a
sly craftiness; but the fact is that they are deceitful with no wish to
deceive, but because they cannot be otherwise. And they deceive, not as
Machiavelli, but with no consciousness of their deceit, and usually with
the naive assurance r lat they are doing something excellent and
elevated, a view in which they are persistently encouraged by the
sympathy and approval of all who surround them.
It is true that, being dimly aware that on this fraud is founded their
power and advantageous position, they are unconsciously drawn toward it;
but their action is not based on any desire to delude the people, but
because they believe it to be of service to the people.
Thus emperors, kings, and their ministers, with all their coronations,
manœuvres, reviews, visiting each other, dressing up in various
uniforms, going from place to place, and deliberating with serious faces
as to how they may keep peace between nations supposed to be inimical to
each other—nations who would never dream of quarreling—feel quite sure
that what they are doing is very reasonable and useful.
In the same way the various ministers, diplomatists, and
officials—dressed up in uniforms, with all sorts of ribbons and ​crosses,
writing and docketing with great care, upon the best paper, their hazy,
involved, altogether needless communications, advice, projects—are quite
assured that, without their activity, the entire existence of nations
wouldl halt or become deranged.
In the same manner miitary men, got up in ridiculous costumes, arguing
seriously with what rifle or cannon men can be most expeditiously
destroyed, are quite certain that their field days and reviews are most
important and essential to the people.
So likewise the priests, journalists, writers of patriotic songs and
class books, who preach patriotism and receive liberal remuneration, are
equally satisfied.
And no doubt the organizers of festivities—like the Franco-Russian
fetes—are sincerely affected while pronouncing their patriotic speeches
and toasts.
All these people do what they are doing unconsciously, because they
must; all their life being founded upon deceit, and because they know
not how to do anything else: and coincidently these same acts call forth
the sympathy and approbation of all those people among whom they are
done. More than this, being all linked together, they approve and
justify each other's acts—emperor and king those of the soldiers,
officials and clergy ; and these latter in their turn the acts of
emperor and king. The populace, and especially the town populace, seeing
nothing comprehensible in what is being done by all these men,
unwittingly ascribe to them a special, almost a supernatural,
significance.
The people see, for instance, that a triumphal arch is being erected;
that men bedeck themselves with crowns, uniforms, robes; that fireworks
are let off, cannons fired, bells rung, regiments paraded with their
bands; that papers, telegrams, messengers fly from place to place; and
being unable to believe that all this is being done (as is indeed the
case) without the slightest necessity, attribute to it all a special
mysterious significance, and gaze with shouts and hilarity or with
silent awe. And reciprocally, this hilarity or silent awe confirms the
assurance of those people who are responsible for all these foolish
deeds.
So, for instance, not long ago, Wilhelm II. ordered a new throne for
himself, with some special kind of ornamentation, and having dressed up
in a white uniform, with a cuirass, tight breeches, and a helmet with a
bird on the top, and enveloped himself in a red mantle, came out to his
snbjects, and sat down on ​this new throne, perfectly assured that his
act was most necessary and important; and his subjects not only saw
nothing ridiculous in it, but thought the sight most imposing.
For some time the power of the Government over the people has not been
maintained by force, as was the case when one nation conquered another
and ruled it by force of arms, or when the rulers of an unarmed people
had separate legions of janissaries or guards.
The power of the Government has for some time been maintained by what is
termed public opinion.
A public opinion exists that patriotism is a fine moral sentiment, and
that it is right and our duty to regard one's own nation, one's own
State as the best in the world; and flowing naturally from this public
opinion is another, namely, that it is right and our duty to acquiesce
in the control of a Government over ourselves, to subordinate ourselves
to it, to serve in the army and submit ourselves to discipline, to give
our earnings to the Government in the form of taxes, to submit to the
decisions of the law-courts, and to consider the edicts of the
Government as divinely right. And when such public opinion exists, a
strong govermental power is formed possessing milliards of money, an
organized mechanism of administration, the postal service, telegraph,
telephone, army, law-courts, police, submissive clergy schools, even the
Press; and this power maintains in the people the public opinion which
it finds necessary to its own existence.
The power of the Government is maintained by public opinion, and with
this power the Government, by means of its organs—its officials,
law-courts, schools, churches, even the Press—can always maintain the
public opinion which they need. Public opinion constitutes the power,
and the power public opinion. And there appears to be no escape from
this position.
Nor indeed would there be, if public opinion were something fixed,
unchangeable, and Governments able to manufacture the exact opinion they
were in need of.
But, fortunately, such is not the case; and public opinion is not, to
begin with, permanent, unchangeable, stationary; but, on the contrary,
constantly changing, moving with the advance of humanity; and public
opinion not only cannot be produced at will ​by a Government, but is that
which produces Governments and gives them power, or deprives them of it.
It may seem that public opinion is at present stationary, and the same
to-day as it was ten years ago; that in relation to certain questions it
merely fluctuates, but returns again—as when it replaces a monarchy with
a republic, and then the republic with a monarchy; but it has only that
appearance when we examine merely the external manifestation of public
opinion which is produced artificially by the Government.
But we need only take public opinion in its relation to the life of
mankind to see that, as with the day or the year, it is never stagnant,
but always proceeds along the way by which all humanity advances, as,
notwithstanding delays and hesitations, the spring advances by the same
path as the sun.
So that, although, judging from external appearances, the position of
European nations to-day is almost as it was fifty years ago, the
relationship of the nations to these appearances is quite different from
what it was then.
Though the same rulers, troops, taxes, luxury and poverty, Catholicism,
orthodoxy, Lutheranism, exist now as then; in former times these existed
because demanded by public opinion, whereas now they exist only because
the Governments artificially maintain what was once a vital public
opinion.
If we as seldom remark this movement of public opinion as we notice the
movement of water in a river when descending ourselves with the current,
this is because the imperceptible changes in public opinion influence
ourselves as well.
Constant and persistent movement is in the nature of public opinion. If
it appears to us to be stationary it is because there are always some
who have utilized a certain phase of public opinion for their own
profit, and who, in consequence, use every effort to give it an
appearance of permanence, and to conceal the manifestations of real
opinion, which is already alive, though not yet perfectly expressed, in
the consciousness of men. And such people, who adhere to the outworn
opinion and conceal the new one, are at the present time those who
compose Governments and ruling classes, and who preach patriotism as an
indispensable condition of human life.
The means which these people can control are immense; but as public
opinion is constantly pouring in upon them their efforts ​must in the end
be in vain: the old falls into decrepitude, the new grows.
The longer the manifestations of nascent public opinion is restrained,
the more it accumulates, the more energetically will it burst forth.
Governments and ruling classes try with all their strength to conserve
that old public opinion of patriotism upon which their power rests, and
to smother the expression of the new, which would destroy it.
But to preserve the old and to check the new is possible only up to a
certain point; just as, only to a certain extent, is it possible to
check running water with a dam.
However much Governments may try to arouse in the people a public
opinion, of the past unnatural to them, as to the merit and virtue of
patriotism, those of our day believe in patriotism no longer, but
espouse more and more the solidarity and brotherhood of nations.
Patriotism does not promise any future that is not terrible, but the
brotherhood of nations represents an ideal which is becoming ever more
intelligible and more desirable to humanity. Hence the progress of
mankind from the old outworn opinion to the new must inevitably take
place. This progression is as inevitable as the falling in the spring of
the last dry leaves and the appearance of the new from swollen buds.
And the longer this transition is delayed, the more inevitable it
becomes, and the more evident its necessity.
And indeed, one has only to remember what we profess, both as Christians
and merely as men of our day, those fundamental moralities by which we
are directed in our social, family, and personal existence, and the
position in which we place ourselves in the name of patriotism, in order
to see what a degree of contradiction we have placed between our
conscience and what, thanks to an energetic Government influence in this
direction, we regard as our public opinion.
One has only thoughtfully to examine the most ordinary demands of
patriotism, which are expected of us as the most simple and natural
affair, in order to understand to what extent these requirements are at
variance with that real public opinion which we already share. We all
regard ourselves as free, educated humane men, or even as Christians,
and yet we are all in such a ​position that were Wilhelm to-morrow to
become offended by Alexander, or Mr. N. or M. to write a lively article
on the Eastern Question, or Prince So-and-So to plunder some Bulgarians
or Servians, or some Queen or Empress to be put out by something or
other, all we educated humane Christians must go and kill people of whom
we have no knowledge, and towards whom we are as amicably disposed as to
the rest of the world.
And if such an event has not come to pass, it is owing, we are assured,
to the love of peace which controls Alexander, or because Nicolas
Alexandrovitch has married the grand-daughter of Victoria.
But if another happened to be in the room of Alexander, or if the
disposition of Alexander himself were to alter, or if Nicolas
Alexandrovitch had married Amalia instead of Alice, we should rush at
each other like wild beasts, and rip up each other's bellies.
Such is the supposed public opinion of our time, and such arguments are
coolly repeated in every Liberal and advanced organ of the Press.
If we, Christians for a thousand years, have not already cut each
other's throats, it is merely because Alexander III. does not permit us
to.
But this is awful!
No feats of heroism are needed to achieve the greatest and most
important changes in the existence of humanity; neither the armament of
millions of soldiers nor the construction of new roads and machines, nor
the arrangement of exhibitions, nor the organization of workmen's
unions, nor revolutions, nor barricades, nor explosions, not the
perfection of aerial navigation; but a change in public opinion.
And to accomplish this change no exertions of the mind are needed, nor
the refutation of anything in existence, nor the invention of any
extraordinary novelty; it is only needful that we should not succumb to
the erroneous, already defunct, public opinion of the past, which
Governments have induced artificially; it is only needful that each
individual should say what he really feels or thinks, or at least, that
he should not say what he does not think.
And if only a small body of the people were to do so at once, of ​their
own accord, outworn public opinion would fall off us of itself, and a
new living real opinion would assert itself. And when public opinion
should thus have changed without the slightest effort, the internal
condition of men's lives which so torments them would change likewise of
its own accord.
One is ashamed to say how little is needed for all men to be delivered
from those calamities which now oppress them: it is only needful not to
lie.
Let people only be superior to the falsehood which is instilled into
them; let them decline to say what they neither feel nor think, and at
once such a revolution of all the organization of our life will take
place as could not be attained by all the efforts of revolutionists
during centuries even were complete power within their hands.
Could people only believe that strength is not in force but in truth,
could they only not shrink from it either in word or deed, not say what
they do not think, not do what they regard as foolish and as wrong!
"But what is of so grave importance in shouting Long live France! or,
Hurrah for some emperor, king, or conqueror?" Or, "Why is the writing of
an article in defense of the Franco-Russian alliance, or of the war of
tariffs, or in condemnation of Germans, Russians, or Englishmen, of such
moment?" Or, "What is of such moment in attendance at some patriotic
festivity, or in drinking the health and making a speech in favor of
people whom one does not love, and with whom one has no business?" Or,
"What is of such importance in admitting the use and excellence of
treaties and alliances, or in keeping silence when one's own nation is
belauded in one's hearing, and other nations abused and maligned; or
when Catholicism, Orthodoxy, and Lutheranism are bepraised; or some hero
of war as Napoleon, Peter, Boulanger, or Skobeleff, is admired?"
All these things seem so unimportant. Yet in these ways which seem
unimportant to us, in our reframing from them, in our proving, as far as
we can, the unreasonableness that is apparent to us, in this is our
chief, our irresistible might, of which that unconquerable force is
composed which constitutes real genuine public opinion, that opinion
which, while itself advancing, moves all humanity.
The Governments know this, and tremble before this force, and strive in
every way they can to counteract or become possessed of it.
​They know that strength is not in force, but in the action of the mind,
and in its clear expression, and, therefore, they are more afraid of the
expression of independent thought than of armies; hence they institute
cenorships, bribe the Press, and monopolize the control of religion and
of the schools. But the spiritual force which moves the world eludes
them; it is neither in books nor in papers; it cannot be trapped, and is
always free; it is in the depths of consciousness of mankind. The most
powerful force of freedom which cannot be imprisoned is that which
asserts itself in the soul of man when he is alone, and in the sole
presence of himself reflects on the facts of the universe, and then
naturally communicates his thoughts to wife, brother, friend, with all
those with whom he comes in contract, and from whom he would regard it
as sinful to conceal the truth.
No milliards of rubles, no millions of troops, no organization, wars,
nor revolutions will produce what the simple expression of a free man
may, on what he regards as just, independently of what exists or was
instilled into him.
One free man will say with truth what he thinks and feels among
thousands of men who by their acts and words attest exactly the
opposite. It would seem that he who sincerely expressed his thought must
remain alone, whereas it generally happens that everyone else, or the
majority at least have been thinking and feeling the same things but
without expressing them.
And that which yesterday was the novel opinion of one man, to-day
becomes the general opinion of the majority.
And as soon as this opinion is established, immediately by imperceptible
degrees, but beyond power of frustration, the conduct of mankind begins
to alter.
Whereas, at present, every man, even if free, asks himself "What can I
do alone against all this ocean of evil and deceit which overwhelms us?
Why should I express my opinion? Why indeed possess one? It is better
not to reflect on these misty and involved questions. Perhaps these
contradictions are an inevitable condition of our existence. And why
should I struggle alone with all the evil in the world? Is it not better
to go with the stream which carries me along? If anything can be done,
it must be done not alone but in company with others."
And leaving the most powerful of weapons—thought and its
​expression—which move the world, each man employs the weapon of social
activity, not noticing that every social activity is based on the very
foundations against which he is bound to fight, and that upon entering
the social activity which exists in our world every man is obliged, if
only in part, to deviate from the truth and to make concessions which
destroy the force of the powerful weapon which should assist him in the
struggle. It is as though a man, who was given a blade so marvelously
keen that it would sever anything, should use its edge for driving in
nails.
We all complain of the senseless order of life, which is at variance
with our being, and yet we refuse to use the unique and powerful weapon
within our hands—the consciousness of truth and its expression; but on
the contrary, under the pretext of struggling with evil, we destroy the
weapon, and sacrifice it to the exigencies of an imaginary conflict.
One man does not assert the truth which he knows, because he feels
himself bound to the people with whom he is engaged; another, because
the truth might deprive him of the profitable position by which he
maintains his family; a third, because he desires to attain reputation
and authority, and then use them in the service of mankind; a fourth,
because he does not wish to destroy old sacred traditions; a fifth,
because he has no desire to offend people; a sixth, because the
expression of the truth would arouse persecution, and disturb the
excellent social activity to which he has devoted himself.
One serves as emperor, king, minister. Government official, or soldier,
and assures himself and others that the deviation from truth
indispensable to his condition is redeemed by the good he does. Another,
in the office of a spiritual pastor, does not in the depth of his soul
believe all he teaches, but permits the deviation from truth in view of
the good he does. A third instructs men by means of literature, and
notwithstanding the silence he must observe with regard to the whole
truth, in order not to stir up the Government and society against
himself, has no doubt as to the good he does. A fourth struggles
resolutely with the existing order as revolutionist or anarchist, and is
quite assured that the aims he pursues are so beneficial that the
neglect of the truth, or even of the falsehood, by silence,
indispensable to the success of his activity, does not destroy the
utility of his work.
In order that the conditions of a life contrary to the ​consciousness of
humanity should change and be replaced by one which is in accord with
it, the outworn public opinion must be superseded by a new and living
one.
And in order that the old outworn opinion should yield its place to the
new living one, all who are conscious of the new requirements of
existence should openly express them. And yet all those who are
conscious of these new requirements, one in the name of one thing, and
one in the name of another, not only pass them over in silence, but both
by word and deed attest their exact opposites.
Only the truth and its expression can establish that new public opinion
which will reform the ancient obsolete and pernicious order of life; and
yet we not only do not express the truth we know, but often even
distinctly give expression to what we ourselves regard as false.
If only free men would not rely on that which has no power, and is
always fettered—upon external aids; but would trust in that which is
always powerful and free—the truth and its expression!
If only men were boldly and clearly to express the truth already
manifest to them of the brotherhood of all nations, and the crime of
exclusive devotion to one's own people, that defunct, false public
opinion would slough off of itself like a dried skin—and upon it depends
the power of Governments, and all the evil produced by them—and the new
public opinion would stand forth, which is even now but awaiting that
dropping off of the old to put forth manifestly and powerfully its
demand, and establish new forms of existence in conformity with the
consciousness of mankind.
It is sufficient that people should understand that what is enunciated
to them as public opinion, and maintained by such complex, energetic,
and artificial means, is not public opinion but only the lifeless
outcome of what was once public opinion; and what is more important, it
is sufficient that they should have faith in themselves, that they
should believe that what they are conscious of in the depths of their
souls what in everyone is pressing for expression, and is only not
expressed because it contradicts the public opinion supposed to exist,
is the power which transforms the world, and to express which is the
mission of mankind: it is sufficient to ​believe that truth is not what
men talk of, but what is told by his own conscience, that is, by God—and
at once the whole artificially maintained public opinion will disappear,
and a new one be established in its place.
If people would only speak what they think, and not what they do not
think, all the superstitions emanating from patriotism would at once
drop away with the cruel feelings and violence founded upon it. The
hatred and animosity between nations and peoples, fanned by their
Governments, would cease, the extolling of military heroism, that is of
murder, would be at an end, and, what is of most importance, respect for
authorities, abandonment to them of the fruits of one's labor, and
subordination to them would cease, since there is no other reason for
them but patriotism.
And if merely this were to take place, that vast mass of feeble people
who are controlled by externals would sway at once to the side of the
new public opinion, which should reign henceforth in place of the old.
Let the Government keep the schools, Church, Press, its milliards of
money and millions of armed men transformed into machines: all this
apparently terrible organization of brute force is as nothing compared
to the conciousness of truth, which surges in the soul of one man who
knows the power of truth, which is communicated from him to a second and
a third, as one candle lights an innumerable quantity of others.
The light needs only to be kindled and, like wax in the face of fire,
this organization, which seems so powerful, will melt, and be consumed.
Only let men understand the vast power which is given them in the word
which expresses truth; only let them refuse to sell their birthright for
a mess of pottage; only let people use their power, and their rulers
will not dare, as now, to threaten at their discretion to cast men into
a trough of universal slaughter, nor dare before the eyes of a peaceful
populace to hold reviews and manœuvres of disciplined murderers; nor
would the Governments dare for their own profit and the advantage of
their assistants to arrange and derange custom-house agreements, nor to
collect from the people those millions of rubles which they distribute
among their assistants, and by the help of which their murders are
planned.
And such a transformation is not only possible, but it is as ​impossible
that it should not be accomplished as that a lifeless, decaying tree
should not fall, and a younger takes its place.
"Peace I leave with you; my peace I give unto you: not as the world
giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it
be afraid," said Christ. And this peace is indeed among us, and depends
on us for its attainment.
If only the hearts of individuals would not be troubled by the
seductions with which they are hourly seduced, nor afraid of those
imaginary terrors by which they are intimidated; if people only knew
wherein their chiefest, conquering power consists—a peace which men have
always desired, not the peace attainable by diplomatic negotiations,
imperial or kingly progresses, dinners, speeches, fortresses, cannon,
dynamite, and mélinite, by the exhaustion of the people under taxes, and
the abduction from labor of the flower of the population; but the peace
attainable by a voluntary profession of the truth by every man, would
long ago have been established.
From The Daily Chronicle.
By permission of the Editor.
[1] Thus I am aware of the following protest which was made by Russian
students and sent to Paris, but not accepted by any of the papers:—
"A Open Letter to French Students.
"A short time back a small body of Moscow law students, headed by its
inspector, was bold enough to speak in the person of the university
concerning the Toulon festivities.
"We, the representatives of the united students of various provinces,
protest most emphatically against the pretensions of this body, and in
substance against the interchange of greetings which has taken place
between it and the French students. We likewise regard France with warm
affection and deep respect, but we do so because we see in her a great
nation which has always been in the past the introducter and announcer
of the high ideals of freedom, equality, and brotherhood for all the
world; and first also in the bold attempts to incorporate these high
ideals into life. The better part of Russian youth has always been
prepared to acclaim France as the foremost fighter for a loftier future
for mankind. But we do not regard such festivities as those of Constadt
and Toulon as appropriate occasions for such greetings.
"On the contrary, these receptions represent a sad, but, we hope, a
temporary condition—the treason of France to its great historical role
of the past. The country which at one time invited all the world to
break the chains of despotism, and offered its fraternal aid to any
nation which might revolt in order to obtain its freedom, now burns
incense before the Russian Government, which systematically impedes the
normal organic growth of a people's life, and relentlessly crushes
without consideration every aspiration of Russian society towards light,
freedom and independence. The Toulon manifestations are one act of a
drama in the antagonism between France and Germany created by Bismarck
and Napoleon III.
This antagonism keeps all Europe under arms, and gives the deciding vote
in European affairs to Russian despotism, which has ever been the
support of all that is arbitrary and absolute against freedom, and of
tyrants against the tyrannized.
"A sense of pain for our country, of regret at the blindness of so great
a portion of French society, these are the feelings called forth in us
by these festivities.
"We are persuaded that the younger generation in France is not allured
by national Chauvinism, and that, ready to struggle for that better
social condition towards which humanity is advancing, it will know how
to interpret present events, and what attitude to adopt towards them. We
hope that our determined protest will find an echo in the hearts of the
French youth.
"(Signed), The United Council of Twenty-four Federate Societies of
Moscow Students."