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Title: Letter to Elisée Reclus Author: Mikhail Bakunin Date: February 15, 1875 Language: en Topics: letter, Libertarian Labyrinth Source: Retrieved on 25th April 2021 from https://www.libertarian-labyrinth.org/bakunin-library/bakunin-to-elisee-reclus-february-15-1875/ Notes: Working translation by Shawn P. Wilbur.
February 15, 1875 – Lugano
My very dear friend, I thank you so much for your kind words. I have
never doubted your friendship. That feeling has always been mutual and I
judge yours by my own.
Yes, you are right. For the moment, the revolution has gone back to bed,
and we fall once again into a period of evolutions, one of subterranean,
invisible and often even insensible revolutions. The evolution that
takes place today is very dangerous, if not for humanity, at least for
certain nations. – it is the last incarnation of a used-up class,
enjoying its last game, under the protection of the
military-Mac-Mahono-Bonapartist dictatorship in France, the Bismarkian
in the remainder of Europe.
I agree with you in saying that the hour of revolution has passed, not
because of the frightful disasters we have witnessed or the terrible
defeats of which we have been the more or less guilty victims, but
because, to my great despair, I have observed, and I observe each day
anew, that thought, hope and the revolutionary passion are absolutely
not to be found among the masses, and when those are absent, we will
strive in vain. We will accomplish nothing. – I admire the patience and
the heroic perseverance of the Jurassians and the Belgians—these last
Mohicans of the International—who despite all the difficulties,
adversities and despite all the obstacles, in the mdst of general
indifference, opposing their stubborn front to the absolutely opposite
course of things, continuing to calmly do what they did before the
catastrophes, when the general movement was ascending and the least
effort created a force. – It is a labor that much more praiseworthy, as
they do not collect the fruits of it, but they can be certain that the
labor will not be wasted, – nothing is wasted in the world – and though
the drops of water are invisibles, they nonetheless form the ocean. –
As for me, my friend, I had become too old, too sick, too weary, and,
need I say it, in many ways too disillusioned, to feel the desire and
strength to participate in that work. – I am truly retired from the
struggle and I will pass the rest of my days in a contemplation—not
idle, but on the contrary very active intellectually—that I hope will
not fail produce something useful. –
One of the passions that dominates within me at this time is an immense
curiosity. – Once I was obliged to recognize that evil has triumphed and
that I cannot prevent it, I set myself to studying the evolutions and
developments with a quasi-scientific, entirely objective, passion. –
What actors and what scenery! – At the back and dominating all the
situation in Europe, the Emperor Wilhelm and Bismarck at the head of a
great nation of lackeys. – Against them, the Pope with his Jesuits, all
the Catholic and Roman Church, riches of billions, dominate a great
portion of the world through women, through the ignorance of the masses,
through the incomparable skill of their numberless affiliates, having
their eyes and hands everywhere. – Third actor – French civilization
embodied in Mac-Mahon, Dupanloup and Broglie attaching the chains of a
great fallen people. – Then around all that, Spain, Italy, Austria, and
Russia each painting their faces according to the occasion – and far off
England not being able to decide to become something again, and still
father away the model Republic of the United State of American already
flirting with military dictatorship.
Poor humanity!
It is obvious that it could only escape from this cesspool by means of
an immense social revolution. – But how would it make that revolution?
The international reaction of Europe has never been so formidably armed
against every popular movement. – It has made repression into a new
science that is taught systematically in the military schools to the
lieutenants of all the nations. – And what do we have to attack that
impregnable fortress? – The disorganized masses. But how to organize
them, when they are not even sufficiently interested in their own
salvation, when the do not know what they should want and when they do
not want the only thing that can save them? –
There remains propaganda, such as is done by the Jurassians and
Belgians. – That is doubtless something, but a very small thing, some
drops of water in the ocean; and if there were no other means of
salvation, humanity would have the time to rot ten times before being
saved. –
Another hope remains: universal war. – These immense military States
must well destroy and devour one another sooner or later. – But what
perspective [end of manuscript]