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Title: Two revolutionaries
Author: Ricardo Flores MagĂłn
Date: 1910
Language: en
Topics: fiction, war
Source: Retrieved on April 8th, 2009 from http://www.waste.org/~roadrunner/writing/magon/ENArticles/tworev.html
Notes: Translated from Spanish by Mitchell Cowen Verter. From “Regeneration” number 18. December 31, 1910.

Ricardo Flores MagĂłn

Two revolutionaries

The old revolutionary and the modern revolutionary met each other one

afternoon marching in different directions. The sun glowed like an ember

above the distant mountain range; the king of the day was sinking, it

sunk down irrevocably. As if it were conscience of its defeat by the

evening, it reddened with anger, and cast upon the earth and the sky its

most handsome lights.

The two revolutionaries regarded each other face to face: the old one,

ashen, disheveled, his unpolished visage like a rag tossed into a wash

basket, crossed here and there by ugly scars, his bones insinuating the

edges of his body underneath his shabby garb. The modern one, erect,

filled with life, his face luminous with the presentiment of glory. He

was clothed in rags as well, but he carried them with pride, as if they

were the flag of the disinherited, the symbol of a common meditation,

the password of humble people elevated by the zeal for a great idea.

“Where are you going?” asked the old man

“I am going to fight for my ideals,” said the modern one. “And you,

where are you going?” he asked in his turn.

The old man coughed and spat angrily upon the earth. He cast a glance at

the sun, whose anger he also felt in this moment, and said:

“I am not going; I am now coming back home.”

“What happened”

“I am disillusioned,” said the old man “You are not going to a

revolution. I also went to the war and you see how I now return: sad,

old, damaged in body and spirit.”

The modern revolutionary cast a glance that encompassed space, his brow

resplendent; a great hope rose up from the depths of his being and gazed

out through his face.

He asked the old man:

“Did you know what you were fighting for?”

“Yes, a wicked man was dominating the country. We poor people were

suffering from the tyranny of the Government and from the tyranny of

people with money. Our oldest children were locked up in jail; the

families, abandoned, prostituted themselves or panhandled to be able to

live. No one could look the lowest policeman in the face; the least

complaint was considered as an act of rebellion. One day a noble man

said to us poor people:

Fellow citizens, in order to put an end to the present state of things,

we must have a change in the government: the men who are in Power are

thieves, assassins, and oppressors. Let us eliminate those in Power:

elect me President and everything will change.

“This is what the noble man said. After this, he gave us firearms and

sent us off to fight. We triumphed. The wicked oppressors were dead. We

elected the man who gave us the weapons, making him President while we

went to work. After our triumph we continued working exactly like

before, like mules and not like men; our families continued suffering

from need; our oldest sons kept on being taken to jail; the taxes kept

on being collected with precision by the new Government, and rather than

decreasing, they grew larger. We had to abandon the products of our

labor to the hands of our masters. Any time we wanted to declare a

strike, they killed us in the most cowardly fashion. Now you see, I knew

what we were fighting for: the rulers were bad and we were precisely

exchanging them for good ones. And now you see how those who said that

they were going to be good turned out to be just as bad as the ones we

dethroned. Do not go to the war, do not go. You are going to risk your

life merely to exalt a new master.”

So spoke the old revolutionary; the sun sunk down without recourse, as

if a gigantic claw had dragged it behind the mountain. The modern

revolutionary smiled. He retorted:

“Comrade, I am going to war, but not like you and those of your era. I

am going to war not to elevate any man to Power, but to emancipate my

class. With the aid of this rifle, I will force our masters to loosen

their claws and to release what they have robbed from the poor for

thousands of years. You entrusted a man to create your happiness; my

comrades and I are going to create happiness for all by our own efforts.

You entrusted notable lawyers and men of science with the task of making

laws. Naturally, they made them in such away as to benefit themselves.

Instead of being the instrument of liberty, they were the instrument of

tyranny and infamy. Your entire error and the error of those who, like

you, have fought, has been this: to give powers to an individual or to a

group of individuals, surrendering to them the task of making everybody

happy. No, my friend; we, the modern revolutionaries, do not search for

helpers, nor protectors, nor manufacturers of good fortune. We are going

to conquer liberty and well-being for ourselves. We are beginning by

attacking the root of political tyranny, and that root is called “the

right of property.” We are going to seize the land from the hands of our

bosses, to hand it over to the people. Oppression is a tree, the root of

this tree is called “the right of property.” The trunk, the branches,

and the leaves are the policemen, the soldiers, and the officials of all

ranks, large and small. Look here: the old revolutionaries have

surrendered the task of chopping down this tree every time. They chopped

it down, it sprouted, it grew up, and it strengthened; again they

chopped it down, again it sprouted, again it grew up, and again it

strengthened. This keeps on happening because they have not attacked the

root of the wicked tree; all have been too frightened to extract the

core and pitch it into the fire. You see, my old friend: you have given

your blood for no good reason. I am disposed to give mine so that it

will benefit all my brothers in chains. I will burn down the tree from

its root.”

Behind the blue mountain, something still blazed: it was the sun, which

had finally sunk, perhaps wounded by the gigantic claw which beckoned it

to the abyss, while the sky became red as if had been tinted by the

blood of the star.

The old revolutionary sighed and said:

“Like the sun, I also am setting. And I will disappear into the

shadows.”

The modern revolutionary continued to the place where his brothers were

fighting for the new ideals.