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THE
KINGDOM OF GOD IS WITHIN YOU
CHRISTIANITY NOT AS A MYSTIC
RELIGION
BUT AS A NEW THEORY OF LIFE
by Count Leo Tolstoy
Chapters:
Preface 1
2
3 4
5 6
7 8
9 10
11 12
CHAPTER 12
I was finishing this book, which I had been
working at for two years, when I happened on the 9th of September to be
traveling by rail through the governments of Toula and Riazan, where the
peasants were starving last year and where the famine is even more severe now.
At one of the railway stations my train passed an extra train which was taking a
troop of soldiers under the conduct of the governor of the province, together
with muskets, cartridges, and rods, to flog and murder these same famishing
peasants.
The punishment of flogging by way of carrying the
decrees of the authorities into effect has been more and more frequently adopted
of late in Russia, in spite of the fact that corporal punishment was abolished
by law thirty years ago.
I had heard of this, I had even read in the
newspapers of the fearful floggings which had been inflicted in Tchernigov,
Tambov, Saratov, Astrakhan, and Orel, and of those of which the governor of
Nijni-Novgorod, General Baranov, had boasted. But I had never before happened to
see men in the process of carrying out these punishments.
And here I saw the spectacle of good Russians
full of the Christian spirit traveling with guns and rods to torture and kill
their starving brethren. The reason for their expedition was as follows:
On one of the estates of a rich landowner the
peasants had common rights on the forest, and having always enjoyed these
rights, regarded the forest as their own, or at least as theirs in common with
the owner. The landowner wished to keep the forest entirely to himself and began
to fell the trees. The peasants lodged a complaint. The judges in the first
instance gave an unjust decision (I say unjust on the authority of the lawyer
and governor, who ought to understand the matter), and decided the case in favor
of the landowner. All the later decisions, even that of the senate, though they
could see that the matter had been unjustly decided, confirmed the judgment and
adjudged the forest to the landowner. He began to cut down the trees, but the
peasants, unable to believe that such obvious injustice could be done them by
the higher authorities, did not submit to the decision and drove away the men
sent to cut down the trees, declaring that the forest belonged to them and they
would go to the Tzar before they would let them cut it down.
The matter was referred to Petersburg, and the
order was transmitted to the governor to carry the decision of the court into
effect. The governor asked for a troop of soldiers. And here were the soldiers
with bayonets and cartridges, and moreover, a supply of rods, expressly prepared
for the purpose and heaped up in one of the trucks, going to carry the decision
of the higher authorities into effect.
The decisions of the higher authorities are
carried into effect by means of murder or torture, or threats of one or the
other, according to whether they offer resistance or not.
In the first case if the peasants offer
resistance the practice is in Russia, and it is the same everywhere where a
state organization and private property exist, as follows. The governor delivers
an address in which he demands submission. The excited crowd, generally deluded
by their leaders, don't understand a word of what the representative of
authority is saying in the pompous official language, and their excitement
continues. Then the governor announces that if they do not submit and disperse,
he will be obliged to have recourse to force. If the crowd does not disperse
even on this, the governor gives the order to fire over the heads of the crowd.
If the crowd does not even then disperse, the governor gives the order to fire
straight into the crowd; the soldiers fire and the killed and wounded fall about
the street. Then the crowd usually runs away in all directions, and the troops
at the governor's command take those who are supposed to be the ringleaders and
lead them off under escort. Then they pick up the dying, the wounded, and the
dead, covered with blood, sometimes women and children among them. The dead they
bury and the wounded they carry to the hospital. Those whom they regard as the
ringleaders they take to the town hall and have them tried by a special
court-martial. And if they have had recourse to violence on their side, they are
condemned to be hanged. And then the gallows is erected. And they solemnly
strangle a few defenseless creatures.
This is what has often been done in Russia, and
is and must always be done where the social order is based on force.
But in the second case, when the peasants do
submit, something quite special, peculiar to Russia, takes place. The governor
arrives on the scene of action and delivers an harangue to the people,
reproaching them for their insubordination, and either stations troops in the
houses of the villages, where sometimes for a whole month the soldiers drain the
resources of the peasants, or contenting himself with threats, he mercifully
takes leave of the people, or what is the most frequent course, he announces
that the ringleaders must be punished, and quite arbitrarily without any trial
selects a certain number of men, regarded as ringleaders, and commands them to
be flogged in his presence.
In order to give an idea of how such things are
done I will describe a proceeding of the kind which took place in Orel, and
received the full approval of the highest authorities.
This is what took place in Orel. Just as here in
the Toula province, a landlord wanted to appropriate the property of the
peasants and just in the same way the peasants opposed it. The matter in dispute
was a fall of water, which irrigated the peasants' fields, and which the
landowner wanted to cut off and divert to turn his mill. The peasants rebelled
against this being done. The land owner laid a complaint before the district
commander, who illegally (as was recognized later even by a legal decision)
decided the matter in favor of the landowner, and allowed him to divert the
water course. The landowner sent workmen to dig the conduit by which the water
was to be let off to turn the mill. The peasants were indignant at this unjust
decision, and sent their women to prevent the landowner's men from digging this
conduit. The women went to the dykes, overturned the carts, and drove away the
men. The landowner made a complaint against the women for thus taking the law
into their own hands. The district commander made out an order that from every
house throughout the village one woman was to be taken and put in prison. The
order was not easily executed. For in every household there were several women,
and it was impossible to know which one was to be arrested. Consequently the
police did not carry out the order. The landowner complained to the governor of
the neglect on the part of the police, and the latter, without examining into
the affair, gave the chief official of the police strict orders to carry out the
instructions of the district commander without delay. The police official, in
obedience to his superior, went to the village and with the insolence peculiar
to Russian officials ordered his policemen to take one woman out of each house.
But since there were more than one woman in each house, and there was no knowing
which one was sentenced to imprisonment, disputes and opposition arose. In spite
of these disputes and opposition, however, the officer of police gave orders
that some woman, whichever came first, should be taken from each household and
led away to prison. The peasants began to defend their wives and mothers, would
not let them go, and beat the police and their officer. This was a fresh and
terrible crime: resistance was offered to the authorities. A report of this new
offense was sent to the town. And so this governor-- precisely as the governor
of Toula was doing on that day--with a battalion of soldiers with guns and rods,
hastily brought together by means of telegraphs and telephones and railways,
proceeded by a special train to the scene of action, with a learned doctor whose
duty it was to insure the flogging being of an hygienic character. Herzen's
prophecy of the modern Ghenghis Khan with his telegrams is completely realized
by this governor.
Before the town hall of the district were the
soldiery, a battalion of police with their revolvers slung round them with red
cords, the persons of most importance among the peasants, and the culprits. A
crowd of one thousand or more people were standing round. The governor, on
arriving, stepped out of his carriage, delivered a prepared harangue, and asked
for the culprits and a bench. The latter demand was at first not understood. But
a police constable whom the governor always took about with him, and who
undertook to organize such executions--by no means exceptional in that
province--explained that what was meant was a bench for flogging. A bench was
brought as well as the rods, and then the executioners were summoned (the latter
had been selected beforehand from some horsestealers of the same village, as the
soldiers refused the office). When everything was ready, the governor ordered
the first of the twelve culprits pointed out by the landowner as the most guilty
to come forward. The first to come forward was the head of a family, a man of
forty who had always stood up manfully for the rights of his class, and
therefore was held in the greatest esteem by all the villagers. He was led to
the bench and stripped, and then ordered to lie down.
The peasant attempted to supplicate for mercy,
but seeing it was useless, he crossed himself and lay down. Two police
constables hastened to hold him down. The learned doctor stood by, in readiness
to give his aid and his medical science when they should be needed. The convicts
spit into their hands, brandished the rods, and began to flog. It seemed,
however, that the bench was too narrow, and it was difficult to keep the victim
writhing in torture upon it. Then the governor ordered them to bring another
bench and to put a plank across them. Soldiers, with their hands raised to their
caps, and respectful murmurs of "Yes, your Excellency," hasten
obediently to carry out this order. Meanwhile the tortured man, half naked, pale
and scowling, stood waiting, his eyes fixed on the ground and his teeth
chattering. When another bench had been brought they again made him lie down,
and the convicted thieves again began to flog him.
The victim's back and thighs and legs, and even
his sides, became more and more covered with scars and wheals, and at every blow
there came the sound of the deep groans which he could no longer restrain. In
the crowd standing round were heard the sobs of wives, mothers, children, the
families of the tortured man and of all the others picked out for punishment.
The miserable governor, intoxicated with power,
was counting the strokes on his fingers, and never left off smoking cigarettes,
while several officious persons hastened on every opportunity to offer him a
burning match to light them. When more than fifty strokes had been given, the
peasant ceased to shriek and writhe, and the doctor, who had been educated in a
government institution to serve his sovereign and his country with his
scientific attainments, went up to the victim, felt his pulse, listened to his
heart, and announced to the representative of authority that the man undergoing
punishment had lost consciousness, and that, in accordance with the conclusions
of science, to continue the punishment would endanger the victim's life. But the
miserable governor, now completely intoxicated by the sight of blood, gave
orders that the punishment should go on, and the flogging was continued up to
seventy strokes, the number which the governor had for some reason fixed upon as
necessary. When the seventieth stroke had been reached, the governor said
"Enough! Next one!" And the mutilated victim, his back covered with
blood, was lifted up and carried away unconscious, and another was led up. The
sobs and groans of the crowd grew louder. But the representative of the state
continued the torture.
Thus they flogged each of them up to the twelfth,
and each of them received seventy strokes. They all implored mercy, shrieked and
groaned. The sobs and cries of the crowd of women grew louder and more
heart-rending, and the men's faces grew darker and darker. But they were
surrounded by troops, and the torture did not cease till it had reached the
limit which had been fixed by the caprice of the miserable half-drunken and
insane creature they called the governor.
The officials, and officers, and soldiers not
only assisted in it, but were even partly responsible for the affair, since by
their presence they prevented any interference on the part of the crowd.
When I inquired of one of the governors why they
made use of this kind of torture when people had already submitted and soldiers
were stationed in the village, he replied with the important air of a man who
thoroughly understands all the subtleties of statecraft, that if the peasants
were not thoroughly subdued by flogging, they would begin offering opposition to
the decisions of authorities again. When some of them had been thoroughly
tortured, the authority of the state would be secured forever among them.
And so that was why the Governor of Toula was
going in his turn with his subordinate officials, officers, and soldiers to
carry out a similar measure. By precisely the same means, i. e., by murder and
torture, obedience to the decision of the higher authorities was to be secured.
And this decision was to enable a young landowner, who had an income of one
hundred thousand, to gain three thousand rubles more by stealing a forest from a
whole community of cold and famished peasants, to spend it, in two or three
weeks in the saloons of Moscow, Petersburg, or Paris. That was what those people
whom I met were going to do.
After my thoughts had for two years been turned
in the same direction, fate seemed expressly to have brought me face to face for
the first time in my life with a fact which showed me absolutely unmistakably in
practice what had long been clear to me in theory, that the organization of ur
society rests, not as people interested in maintaining the present order of
things like to imagine, on certain principles of jurisprudence, but on simple
brute force, on the murder and torture of men.
People who own great estates or fortunes, or who
receive great revenues drawn from the class who are in want even of necessities,
the working class, as well as all those who like merchants, doctors, artists,
clerks, learned professors, coachmen, cooks, writers, valets, and barristers,
make their living about these rich people, like to believe that the privileges
they enjoy are not the result of force, but of absolutely free and just
interchange of services, and that their advantages, far from being gained by
such punishments and murders as took place in Orel and several parts of Russia
this year, and are always taking place all over Europe and America, have no kind
of connection with these acts of violence. They like to believe that their
privileges exist apart and are the result of free contract among people; and
that the violent cruelties perpetrated on the people also exist apart and are
the result of some general judicial, political, or economical laws. They try not
to see that they all enjoy their privileges as a result of the same fact which
forces the peasants who have tended the forest, and who are in the direct need
of it for fuel, to give it up to a rich landowner who has taken no part in
caring for its growth and has no need of it whatever--the fact, that is, that if
they don't give it up they will be flogged or killed.
And yet if it is clear that it was only by means
of menaces, blows, or murder, that the mill in Orel was enabled to yield a
larger income, or that the forest which the peasants had planted became the
property of a landowner, it should be equally clear that all the other exclusive
rights enjoyed by the rich, by robbing the poor of their necessities, rest on
the same basis of violence. If the peasants, who need land to maintain their
families, may not cultivate the land about their houses, but one man, a Russian,
English, Austrian, or any other great landowner, possesses land enough to
maintain a thousand families, though he does not cultivate it himself, and if a
merchant profiting by the misery of the cultivators, taking corn from them at a
third of its value, can keep this corn in his granaries with perfect security
while men are starving all around him, and sell it again for three times its
value to the very cultivators he bought it from, it is evident that all this too
comes from the same cause. And if one man may not buy of another a commodity
from the other side of a certain fixed line, called the frontier, without paying
certain duties on it to men who have taken no part whatever in its
production--and if men are driven to sell their last cow to pay taxes which the
government distributes among its functionaries, and spends on maintaining
soldiers to murder these very taxpayers- -it would appear self-evident that all
this does not come about as the result of any abstract laws, but is based on
just what was done in Orel, and which may be done in Toula, and is done
periodically in one form or another throughout the whole world wherever there is
a government, and where there are rich and poor.
Simply because torture and murder are not
employed in every instance of oppression by force, those who enjoy the exclusive
privileges of the ruling classes persuade themselves and others that their
privileges are not based on torture and murder, but on some mysterious general
causes, abstract laws, and so on. Yet one would think it was perfectly clear
that if men, who consider it unjust (and all the working classes do consider it
so nowadays), still pay the principal part of the produce of their labor away to
the capitalist and the landowner, and pay taxes, though they know to what a bad
use these taxes are put, they do so not from recognition of abstract laws of
which they have never heard, but only because they know they will be beaten and
killed if they don't do so.
And if there is no need to imprison, beat, and
kill men every time the landlord collects his rents, every time those who are in
want of bread have to pay a swindling merchant three times its value, every time
the factory hand has to be content with a wage less than half of the profit made
by the employer, and every time a poor man pays his last ruble in taxes, it is
because so many men have been beaten and killed for trying to resist these
demands, that the lesson has now been learnt very thoroughly.
Just as a trained tiger, who does not eat meat
put under his nose, and jumps over a stick at the word of command, does not act
thus because he likes it, but because he remembers the red-hot irons or the fast
with which he was punished every time he did not obey; so men submitting to what
is disadvantageous or even ruinous to them, and considered by them as unjust,
act thus because they remember what they suffered for resisting it.
As for those who profit by the privileges gained
by previous acts of violence, they often forget and like to forget how these
privileges were obtained. But one need only recall the facts of history, not the
history of the exploits of different dynasties of rulers, but real history, the
history of the oppression of the majority by a small number of men, to see that
all the advantages the rich have over the poor are based on nothing but
flogging, imprisonment, and murder.
One need but reflect on the unceasing, persistent
struggle of all to better their material position, which is the guiding motive
of men of the present day, to be convinced that the advantages of the rich over
the poor could never and can never be maintained by anything but force.
There may be cases of oppression, of violence,
and of punishments, though they are rare, the aim of which is not to secure the
privileges of the propertied classes. But one may confidently assert that in any
society where, for every man living in ease, there are ten exhausted by labor,
envious, covetous, and often suffering with their families from direct
privation, all the privileges of the rich, all their luxuries and superfluities,
are obtained and maintained only by tortures, imprisonment, and murder.
The train I met on the 9th of September going
with soldiers, guns, cartridges, and rods, to confirm the rich landowner in the
possession of a small forest which he had taken from the starving peasants,
which they were in the direst need of, and he was in no need of at all, was a
striking proof of how men are capable of doing deeds directly opposed to their
principles and their conscience without perceiving it.
The special train consisted of one first-class
carriage for the governor, the officials, and officers, and several luggage vans
crammed full of soldiers. The latter, smart young fellows in their clean new
uniforms, were standing about in groups or sitting swinging their legs in the
wide open doorways of the luggage vans. Some were smoking, nudging each other,
joking, grinning, and laughing, others were munching sunflower seeds and
spitting out the husks with an air of dignity. Some of them ran along the
platform to drink some water from a tub there, and when they met the officers
they slackened their pace, made their stupid gesture of salutation, raising
their hands to their heads with serious faces as though they were doing
something of the greatest importance. They kept their eyes on them till they had
passed by them, and then set off running still more merrily, stamping their
heels on the platform, laughing and chattering after the manner of healthy,
good-natured young fellows, traveling in lively company.
They were going to assist at the murder of their
fathers or grandfathers just as if they were going on a party of pleasure, or at
any rate on some quite ordinary business.
The same impression was produced by the
well-dressed functionaries and officers who were scattered about the platform
and in the first-class carriage. At a table covered with bottles was sitting the
governor, who was responsible for the whole expedition, dressed in his
half-military uniform and eating something while he chatted tranquilly about the
weather with some acquaintances he had met, as though the business he was upon
was of so simple and ordinary a character that it could not disturb his serenity
and his interest in the change of weather.
At a little distance from the table sat the
general of the police. He was not taking any refreshment, and had an
impenetrable bored expression, as though he were weary of the formalities to be
gone through. On all sides officers were bustling noisily about in their red
uniforms trimmed with gold; one sat at a table finishing his bottle of beer,
another stood at the buffet eating a cake, and brushing the crumbs off his
uniform, threw down his money with a self-confident air; another was sauntering
before the carriages of our train, staring at the faces of the women.
All these men who were going to murder or to
torture the famishing and defenseless creatures who provide them their
sustenance had the air of men who knew very well that they were doing their
duty, and some were even proud, were "glorying" in what they were
doing.
What is the meaning of it?
All these people are within half an hour of
reaching the place where, in order to provide a wealthy young man with three
thousand rubles stolen from a whole community of famishing peasants, they may be
forced to commit the most horrible acts one can conceive, to murder or torture,
as was done in Orel, innocent beings, their brothers. And they see the place and
time approaching with untroubled serenity.
To say that all these government officials,
officers, and soldiers do not know what is before them is impossible, for they
are prepared for it. The governor must have given directions about the rods, the
officials must have sent an order for them, purchased them, and entered the item
in their accounts. The military officers have given and received orders about
cartridges. They all know that they are going to torture, perhaps to kill, their
famishing fellow-creatures, and that they must set to work within an hour.
To say, as is usually said, and as they would
themselves repeat, that they are acting from conviction of the necessity for
supporting the state organization, would be a mistake. For in the first place,
these men have probably never even thought about state organization and the
necessity of it; in the second place, they cannot possibly be convinced that the
act in which they are taking part will tend to support rather than to ruin the
state; and thirdly, in reality the majority, if not all, of these men, far from
ever sacrificing their own pleasure or tranquillity to support the state, never
let slip an opportunity of profiting at the expense of the state in every way
they can increase their own pleasure and ease. So that they are not acting thus
for the sake of the abstract principle of the state.
What is the meaning of it?
Yet I know all these men. If I don't know all of
them personally, I know their characters pretty nearly, their past, and their
way of thinking. They certainly all have mothers, some of them wives and
children. They are certainly for the most part good, kind, even tender-hearted
fellows, who hate every sort of cruelty, not to speak of murder; many of them
would not kill or hurt an animal. Moreover, they are all professed Christians
and regard all violence directed against the defenseless as base and
disgraceful.
Certainly not one of them would be capable in
everyday life, for his own personal profit, of doing a hundredth part of what
the Governor of Orel did. Every one of them would be insulted at the supposition
that he was capable of doing anything of the kind in private life.
And yet they are within half an hour of reaching
the place where they may be reduced to the inevitable necessity of committing
this crime.
What is the meaning of it?
But it is not only these men who are going by
train prepared for murder and torture. How could the men who began the whole
business, the landowner, the commissioner, the judges, and those who gave the
order and are responsible for it, the ministers, the Tzar, who are also good
men, professed Christians, how could they elaborate such a plan and assent to
it, knowing its consequences? The spectators even, who took no part in the
affair, how could they, who are indignant at the sight of any cruelty in private
life, even the overtaxing of a horse, allow such a horrible deed to be
perpetrated? How was it they did not rise in indignation and bar the roads,
shouting, "No; flog and kill starving men because they won't let their last
possession be stolen from them without resistance, that we won't allow!"
But far from anyone doing this, the majority, even of those who were the cause
of the affair, such as the commissioner, the landowner, the judge, and those who
took part in it and arranged it, as the governor, the ministers, and the Tzar,
are perfectly tranquil and do not even feel a prick of conscience. And
apparently all the men who are going to carry out this crime are equally
undisturbed.
The spectators, who one would suppose could have
no personal interest in the affair, looked rather with sympathy than with
disapproval at all these people preparing to carry out this infamous action. In
the same compartment with me was a wood merchant, who had risen from a peasant.
He openly expressed aloud his sympathy with such punishments. "They can't
disobey the authorities," he said; "that's what the authorities are
for. Let them have a lesson; send their fleas flying! They'll give over making
commotions, I warrant you. That's what they want."
What is the meaning of it?
It is not possible to say that all these people
who have provoked or aided or allowed this deed are such worthless creatures
that, knowing all the infamy of what they are doing, they do it against their
principles, some for pay and for profit, others through fear of punishment. All
of them in certain circumstances know how to stand up for their principles. Not
one of these officials would steal a purse, read another man's letter, or put up
with an affront without demanding satisfaction. Not one of these officers would
consent to cheat at cards, would refuse to pay a debt of honor, would betray a
comrade, run away on the field of battle, or desert the flag. Not one of these
soldiers would spit out the holy sacrament or eat meat on Good Friday. All these
men are ready to face any kind of privation, suffering, or danger rather than
consent to do what they regard as wrong. They have therefore the strength to
resist doing what is against their principles.
It is even less possible to assert that all these
men are such brutes that it is natural and not distasteful to them to do such
deeds. One need only talk to these people a little to see that all of them, the
landowner even, and the judge, and the minister and the Tzar and the government,
the officers and the soldiers, not only disapprove of such things in the depth
of their soul, but suffer from the consciousness of their participation in them
when they recollect what they imply. But they try not to think about it.
One need only talk to any of these who are taking
part in the affair from the landowner to the lowest policeman or soldier to see
that in the depth of their soul they all know it is a wicked thing, that it
would be better to have nothing to do with it, and are suffering from the
knowledge.
A lady of liberal views, who was traveling in the
same train with us, seeing the governor and the officers in the first-class
saloon and learning the object of the expedition, began, intentionally raising
her voice so that they should hear, to abuse the existing order of things and to
cry shame on men who would take part in such proceedings. Everyone felt awkward,
none knew where to look, but no one contradicted her. They tried to look as
though such remarks were not worth answering. But one could see by their faces
and their averted eyes that they were ashamed. I noticed the same thing in the
soldiers. They too knew that what they were sent to do was a shameful thing, but
they did not want to think about what was before them.
When the wood merchant, as I suspect insincerely
only to show that he was a man of education, began to speak of the necessity of
such measures, the soldiers who heard him all turned away from him, scowling and
pretending not to hear.
All the men who, like the landowner, the
commissioner, the minister, and the Tzar, were responsible for the perpetration
of this act, as well as those who were now going to execute it, and even those
who were mere spectators of it, knew that it was a wickedness, and were ashamed
of taking any share in it, and even of being present at it.
Then why did they do it, or allow it to be done?
Ask them the question. And the landowner who
started the affair, and the judge who pronounced a clearly unjust even though
formally legal decision, and those who commanded the execution of the decision,
and those who, like the policemen, soldiers, and peasants, will execute the deed
with their own hands, flogging and killing their brothers, all who have devised,
abetted, decreed, executed, or allowed such crimes, will make substantially the
same reply.
The authorities, those who have started, devised,
and decreed the matter, will say that such acts are necessary for the
maintenance of the existing order; the maintenance of the existing order is
necessary for the welfare of the country and of humanity, for the possibility of
social existence and human progress.
Men of the poorer class, peasants and soldiers,
who will have to execute the deed of violence with their own hands, say that
they do so because it is the command of their superior authority, and the
superior authority knows what he is about. That those are in authority who ought
to be in authority, and that they know what they are doing appears to them a
truth of which there can be no doubt. If they could admit the possibility of
mistake or error, it would only be in functionaries of a lower grade; the
highest authority on which all the rest depends seems to them immaculate beyond
suspicion.
Though expressing the motives of their conduct
differently, both those in command and their subordinates are agreed in saying
that they act thus because the existing order is the order which must and ought
to exist at the present time, and that therefore to support it is the sacred
duty of every man.
On this acceptance of the necessity and therefore
immutability of the existing order, all who take part in acts of violence on the
part of government base the argument always advanced in their justification.
"Since the existing order is immutable," they say, "the refusal
of a single individual to perform the duties laid upon him will effect no change
in things, and will only mean that some other man will be put in his place who
may do the work worse, that is to say, more cruelly, to the still greater injury
of the victims of the act of violence."
This conviction that the existing order is the
necessary and therefore immutable order, which it is a sacred duty for every man
to support, enables good men, of high principles in private life, to take part
with conscience more or less untroubled in crimes such as that perpetrated in
Orel, and that which the men in the Toula train were going to perpetrate.
But what is this conviction based on? It is easy
to understand that the landowner prefers to believe that the existing order is
inevitable and immutable, because this existing order secures him an income from
his hundreds and thousands of acres, by means of which he can lead his habitual
indolent and luxurious life.
It is easy to understand that the judge readily
believes in the necessity of an order of things through which he receives a wage
fifty times as great as the most industrious laborer can earn, and the same
applies to all the higher officials. It is only under the existing RÉGIME that
as governor, prosecutor, senator, members of the various councils, they can
receive their several thousands of rubles a year, without which they and their
families would at once sink into ruin, since if it were not for the position
they occupy they would never by their own abilities, industry, or acquirements
get a thousandth part of their salaries. The minister, the Tzar, and all the
higher authorities are in the same position. The only distinction is that the
higher and the more exceptional their position, the more necessary it is for
them to believe that the existing order is the only possible order of things.
For without it they would not only be unable to gain an equal position, but
would be found to fall lower than all other people. A man who has of his own
free will entered the police force at a wage of ten rubles, which he could
easily earn in any other position, is hardly dependent on the preservation of
the existing RÉGIME, and so he may not believe in its immutability. But a king
or an emperor, who receives millions for his post, and knows that there are
thousands of people round him who would like to dethrone him and take his place,
who knows that he will never receive such a revenue or so much honor in any
other position, who knows, in most cases through his more or less despotic rule,
that if he were dethroned he would have to answer for all his abuse of power--he
cannot but believe in the necessity and even sacredness of the existing order.
The higher and the more profitable a man's position, the more unstable it
becomes, and the more terrible and dangerous a fall from it for him, the more
firmly the man believes in the existing order, and therefore with the more ease
of conscience can such a man perpetrate cruel and wicked acts, as though they
were not in his own interest, but for the maintenance of that order.
This is the case with all men in authority, who
occupy positions more profitable than they could occupy except for the present RÉGIME,
from the lowest police officer to the Tzar. All of them are more or less
convinced that the existing order is immutable, because--the chief
consideration--it is to their advantage. But the peasants, the soldiers, who are
at the bottom of the social scale, who have no kind of advantage from the
existing order, who are in the very lowest position of subjection and
humiliation, what forces them to believe that the existing order in which they
are in their humble and disadvantageous position is the order which ought to
exist, and which they ought to support even at the cost of evil actions contrary
to their conscience?
What forces these men to the false reasoning that
the existing order is unchanging, and that therefore they ought to support it,
when it is so obvious, on the contrary, that it is only unchanging because they
themselves support it?
What forces these peasants, taken only yesterday
from the plow and dressed in ugly and unseemly costumes with blue collars and
gilt buttons, to go with guns and sabers and murder their famishing fathers and
brothers? They gain no kind of advantage and can be in no fear of losing the
position they occupy, because it is worse than that from which they have been
taken.
The persons in authority of the higher
orders--landowners, merchants, judges, senators, governors, ministers, tzars,
and officers--take part in such doings because the existing order is to their
advantage. In other respects they are often good and kind-hearted men, and they
are more able to take part in such doings because their share in them is limited
to suggestions, decisions, and orders. These persons in authority never do
themselves what they suggest, decide, or command to be done. For the most part
they do not even see how all the atrocious deeds they have suggested and
authorized are carried out. But the unfortunate men of the lower orders, who
gain no kind of advantage from the existing RÉGIME, but, on the contrary, are
treated with the utmost contempt, support it even by dragging people with their
own hands from their families, handcuffing them, throwing them in prison,
guarding them, shooting them.
Why do they do it? What forces them to believe
that the existing order is unchanging and they must support it?
All violence rests, we know, on those who do the
beating, the handcuffing, the imprisoning, and the killing with their own hands.
If there were no soldiers or armed policemen, ready to kill or outrage anyone as
they are ordered, not one of those people who sign sentences of death,
imprisonment, or galley- slavery for life would make up his mind to hang,
imprison, or torture a thousandth part of those whom, quietly sitting in his
study, he now orders to be tortured in all kinds of ways, simply because he does
not see it nor do it himself, but only gets it done at a distance by these
servile tools.
All the acts of injustice and cruelty which are
committed in the ordinary course of daily life have only become habitual because
there are these men always ready to carry out such acts of injustice and
cruelty. If it were not for them, far from anyone using violence against the
immense masses who are now ill-treated, those who now command their punishment
would not venture to sentence them, would not even dare to dream of the
sentences they decree with such easy confidence at present. And if it were not
for these men, ready to kill or torture anyone at their commander's will, no one
would dare to claim, as all the idle landowners claim with such assurance, that
a piece of land, surrounded by peasants, who are in wretchedness from want of
land, is the property of a man who does not cultivate it, or that stores of corn
taken by swindling from the peasants ought to remain untouched in the midst of a
population dying of hunger because the merchants must make their profit. If it
were not for these servile instruments at the disposal of the authorities, it
could never have entered the head of the landowner to rob the peasants of the
forest they had tended, nor of the officials to think they are entitled to their
salaries, taken from the famishing people, the price of their oppression; least
of all could anyone dream of killing or exiling men for exposing falsehood and
telling the truth. All this can only be done because the authorities are
confidently assured that they have always these servile tools at hand, ready to
carry all their demands into effect by means of torture and murder.
All the deeds of violence of tyrants from
Napoleon to the lowest commander of a company who fires upon a crowd, can only
be explained by the intoxicating effect of their absolute power over these
slaves. All force, therefore, rests on these men, who carry out the deeds of
violence with their own hands, the men who serve in the police or the army,
especially the army, for the police only venture to do their work because the
army is at their back.
What, then, has brought these masses of honest
men, on whom the whole thing depends, who gain nothing by it, and who have to do
these atrocious deeds with their own hands, what has brought them to accept the
amazing delusion that the existing order, unprofitable, ruinous, and fatal as it
is for them, is the order which ought to exist?
Who has led them into this amazing delusion?
They can never have persuaded themselves that
they ought to do what is against their conscience, and also the source of misery
and ruin for themselves, and all their class, who make up nine- tenths of the
population.
"How can you kill people, when it is written
in God's commandment: 'Thou shalt not kill'?" I have often inquired of
different soldiers. And I always drove them to embarrassment and confusion by
reminding them of what they did not want to think about. They knew they were
bound by the law of God, "Thou shalt not kill," and knew too that they
were bound by their duty as soldiers, but had never reflected on the
contradiction between these duties. The drift of the timid answers I received to
this question was always approximately this: that killing in war and executing
criminals by command of the government are not included in the general
prohibition of murder. But when I said this distinction was not made in the law
of God, and reminded them of the Christian duty of fraternity, forgiveness of
injuries, and love, which could not be reconciled with murder, the peasants
usually agreed, but in their turn began to ask me questions. "How does it
happen," they inquired, "that the government [which according to their
ideas cannot do wrong] sends the army to war and orders criminals to be
executed." When I answered that the government does wrong in giving such
orders, the peasants fell into still greater confusion, and either broke off the
conversation or else got angry with me.
"They must have found a law for it. The
archbishops know as much about it as we do, I should hope," a Russian
soldier once observed to me. And in saying this the soldier obviously set his
mind at rest, in the full conviction that his spiritual guides had found a law
which authorized his ancestors, and the tzars and their descendants, and
millions of men, to serve as he was doing himself, and that the question I had
put him was a kind of hoax or conundrum on my part.
Everyone in our Christian society knows, either
by tradition or by revelation or by the voice of conscience, that murder is one
of the most fearful crimes a man can commit, as the Gospel tells us, and that
the sin of murder cannot be limited to certain persons, that is, murder cannot
be a sin for some and not a sin for others. Everyone knows that if murder is a
sin, it is always a sin, whoever are the victims murdered, just like the sin of
adultery, theft, or any other. At the same time from their childhood up men see
that murder is not only permitted, but even sanctioned by the blessing of those
whom they are accustomed to regard as their divinely appointed spiritual guides,
and see their secular leaders with calm assurance organizing murder, proud to
wear murderous arms, and demanding of others in the name of the laws of the
country, and even of God, that they should take part in murder. Men see that
there is some inconsistency here, but not being able to analyze it,
involuntarily assume that this apparent inconsistency is only the result of
their ignorance. The very grossness and obviousness of the inconsistency
confirms them in this conviction.
They cannot imagine that the leaders of
civilization, the educated classes, could so confidently preach two such opposed
principles as the law of Christ and murder. A simple uncorrupted youth cannot
imagine that those who stand so high in his opinion, whom he regards as holy or
learned men, could for any object whatever mislead him so shamefully. But this
is just what has always been and always is done to him. It is done (1) by
instilling, by example and direct instruction, from childhood up, into the
working people, who have not time to study moral and religious questions for
themselves, the idea that torture and murder are compatible with Christianity,
and that for certain objects of state, torture and murder are not only
admissible, but ought to be employed; and (2) by instilling into certain of the
people, who have either voluntarily enlisted or been taken by compulsion into
the army, the idea that the perpetration of murder and torture with their own
hands is a sacred duty, and even a glorious exploit, worthy of praise and
reward.
The general delusion is diffused among all people
by means of the catechisms or books, which nowadays replace them, in use for the
compulsory education of children. In them it is stated that violence, that is,
imprisonment and execution, as well as murder in civil or foreign war in the
defense and maintenance of the existing state organization (whatever that may
be, absolute or limited monarchy, convention, consulate, empire of this or that
Napoleon or Boulanger, constitutional monarchy, commune or republic) is
absolutely lawful and not opposed to morality and Christianity.
This is stated in all catechisms or books used in
schools. And men are so thoroughly persuaded of it that they grow up, live and
die in that conviction without once entertaining a doubt about it.
This is one form of deception, the general
deception instilled into everyone, but there is another special deception
practiced upon the soldiers or police who are picked out by one means or another
to do the torturing and murdering necessary to defend and maintain the existing
RÉGIME.
In all military instructions there appears in one
form or another what is expressed in the Russian military code in the following
words:
ARTICLE 87. To carry out exactly and without
comment the orders of a superior officer means: to carry out an order received
from a superior officer exactly without considering whether it is good or not,
and whether it is possible to carry it out. The superior officer is responsible
for the consequences of the order he gives.
ARTICLE 88. The subordinate ought never to refuse
to carry out the orders of a superior officer except when he sees clearly that
in carrying out his superior officer's command, he breaks [the law of God, one
involuntarily expects; not at all] HIS OATH OF FIDELITY AND ALLEGIANCE TO THE
TZAR.
It is here said that the man who is a soldier can
and ought to carry out all the orders of his superior without exception. And as
these orders for the most part involve murder, it follows that he ought to break
all the laws of God and man. The one law he may not break is that of fidelity
and allegiance to the man who happens at a given moment to be in power.
Precisely the same thing is said in other words
in all codes of military instruction. And it could not be otherwise, since the
whole power of the army and the state is based in reality on this delusive
emancipation of men from their duty to God and their conscience, and the
substitution of duty to their superior officer for all other duties.
This, then, is the foundation of the belief of
the lower classes that the existing RÉGIME so fatal for them is the RÉGIME
which ought to exist, and which they ought therefore to support even by torture
and murder.
This belief is founded on a conscious deception
practiced on them by the higher classes.
And it cannot be otherwise. To compel the lower
classes, which are more numerous, to oppress and ill treat themselves, even at
the cost of actions opposed to their conscience, it was necessary to deceive
them. And it has been done accordingly.
Not many days ago I saw once more this shameless
deception being openly practiced, and once more I marveled that it could be
practiced so easily and impudently.
At the beginning of November, as I was passing
through Toula, I saw once again at the gates of the Zemsky Courthouse the crowd
of peasants I had so often seen before, and heard the drunken shouts of the men
mingled with the pitiful lamentations of their wives and mothers. It was the
recruiting session.
I can never pass by the spectacle. It attracts me
by a kind of fascination of repulsion. I again went into the crowd, took my
stand among the peasants, looked about and asked questions. And once again I was
amazed that this hideous crime can be perpetrated so easily in broad daylight
and in the midst of a large town.
As the custom is every year, in all the villages
and hamlets of the one hundred millions of Russians, on the 1st of November, the
village elders had assembled the young men inscribed on the lists, often their
own sons among them, and had brought them to the town.
On the road the recruits have been drinking
without intermission, unchecked by the elders, who feel that going on such an
insane errand, abandoning their wives and mothers and renouncing all they hold
sacred in order to become a senseless instrument of destruction, would be too
agonizing if they were not stupefied with spirits.
And so they have come, drinking, swearing,
singing, fighting and scuffling with one another. They have spent the night in
taverns. In the morning they have slept off their drunkenness and have gathered
together at the Zemsky Court-house.
Some of them, in new sheepskin pelisses, with
knitted scarves round their necks, their eyes swollen from drinking, are
shouting wildly to one another to show their courage; others, crowded near the
door, are quietly and mournfully waiting their turn, between their weeping wives
and mothers (I had chanced upon the day of the actual enrolling, that is, the
examination of those whose names are on the list); others meantime were crowding
into the hall of the recruiting office.
Inside the office the work was going on rapidly.
The door is opened and the guard calls Piotr Sidorov. Piotr Sidorov starts,
crosses himself, and goes into a little room with a glass door, where the
conscripts undress. A comrade of Piotr Sidorov's, who has just been passed for
service, and come naked out of the revision office, is dressing hurriedly, his
teeth chattering. Sidorov has already heard the news, and can see from his face
too that he has been taken. He wants to ask him questions, but they hurry him
and tell him to make haste and undress. He throws off his pelisse, slips his
boots off his feet, takes off his waistcoat and draws his shirt over his head,
and naked, trembling all over, and exhaling an odor of tobacco, spirits, and
sweat, goes into the revision office, not knowing what to do with his brawny
bare arms.
Directly facing him in the revision office hangs
in a great gold frame a portrait of the Tzar in full uniform with decorations,
and in the corner a little portrait of Christ in a shirt and a crown of thorns.
In the middle of the room is a table covered with green cloth, on which there
are papers lying and a three-cornered ornament surmounted by an eagle- the
zertzal. Round the table are sitting the revising officers, looking collected
and indifferent. One is smoking a cigarette; another is looking through some
papers. Directly Sidorov comes in, a guard goes up to him, places him under the
measuring frame, raising him under his chin, and straightening his legs.
The man with the cigarette--he is the
doctor--comes up, and without looking at the recruit's face, but somewhere
beyond it, feels his body over with an air of disgust, measures him, tests him,
tells the guard to open his mouth, tells him to breathe, to speak. Someone notes
something down. At last without having once looked him in the face the doctor
says, "Right. Next one!" and with a weary air sits down again at the
table. The soldiers again hustle and hurry the lad. He somehow gets into his
trousers, wraps his feet in rags, puts on his boots, looks for his scarf and
cap, and bundles his pelisse under his arm. Then they lead him into the main
hall, shutting him off apart from the rest by a bench, behind which all the
conscripts who have been passed for service are waiting. Another village lad
like himself, but from a distant province, now a soldier armed with a gun with a
sharp- pointed bayonet at the end, keeps watch over him, ready to run him
through the body if he should think of trying to escape.
Meantime the crowd of fathers, mothers, and
wives, hustled by the police, are pressing round the doors to hear whose lad has
been taken, whose is let off. One of the rejected comes out and announces that
Piotr is taken, and at once a shrill cry is heard from Piotr's young wife, for
whom this word "taken" means separation for four or five years, the
life of a soldier's wife as a servant, often a prostitute.
But here comes a man along the street with
flowing hair and in a peculiar dress, who gets out of his droskhy and goes into
the Zemsky Court-house. The police clear a way for him through the crowd. It is
the "reverend father" come to administer the oath. And this
"father," who has been persuaded that he is specially and exclusively
devoted to the service of Christ, and who, for the most part, does not himself
see the deception in which he lives, goes into the hall where the conscripts are
waiting. He throws round him a kind of curtain of brocade, pulls his long hair
out over it, opens the very Gospel in which swearing is forbidden, takes the
cross, the very cross on which Christ was crucified because he would not do what
this false servant of his is telling men to do, and puts them on the lectern.
And all these unhappy, defenseless, and deluded lads repeat after him the lie,
which he utters with the assurance of familiarity.
He reads and they repeat after him:
"I promise and swear by Almighty God upon
his holy Gospel," etc., "to defend," etc., and that is, to murder
anyone I am told to, and to do everything I am told by men I know nothing of,
and who care nothing for me except as an instrument for perpetrating the crimes
by which they are kept in their position of power, and my brothers in their
condition of misery. All the conscripts repeat these ferocious words without
thinking. And then the so-called "father" goes away with a sense of
having correctly and conscientiously done his duty. And all these poor deluded
lads believe that these nonsensical and incomprehensible words which they have
just uttered set them free for the whole time of their service from their duties
as men, and lay upon them fresh and more binding duties as soldiers.
And this crime is perpetrated publicly and no one
cries out to the deceiving and the deceived: "Think what you are doing;
this is the basest, falsest lie, by which not bodies only, but souls too, are
destroyed."
No one does this. On the contrary, when all have
been enrolled, and they are to be let out again, the military officer goes with
a confident and majestic air into the hall where the drunken, cheated lads are
shut up, and cries in a bold, military voice: "Your health, my lads! I
congratulate you on 'serving the Tzar!'" And they, poor fellows (someone
has given them a hint beforehand), mutter awkwardly, their voices thick with
drink, something to the effect that they are glad.
Meantime the crowd of fathers, mothers, and wives
is standing at the doors waiting. The women keep their tearful eyes fixed on the
doors. They open at last, and out come the conscripts, unsteady, but trying to
put a good face on it. Here are Piotr and Vania and Makar trying not to look
their dear ones in the face. Nothing is heard but the wailing of the wives and
mothers. Some of the lads embrace them and weep with them, others make a show of
courage, and others try to comfort them.
The wives and mothers, knowing that they will be
left for three, four, or five years without their breadwinners, weep and
rehearse their woes aloud. The fathers say little. They only utter a clucking
sound with their tongues and sigh mournfully, knowing that they will see no more
of the steady lads they have reared and trained to help them, that they will
come back not the same quiet hard-working laborers, but for the most part
conceited and demoralized, unfitted for their simple life.
And then all the crowd get into their sledges
again and move away down the street to the taverns and pot-houses, and louder
than ever sounds the medley of singing and sobbing, drunken shouts, and the
wailing of the wives and mothers, the sounds of the accordeon and oaths. They
all turn into the taverns, whose revenues go to the government, and the drinking
bout begins, which stifles their sense of the wrong which is being done them.
For two or three weeks they go on living at home,
and most of that time they are "jaunting," that is, drinking.
On a fixed day they collect them, drive them
together like a flock of sheep, and begin to train them in the military
exercises and drill. Their teachers are fellows like themselves, only deceived
and brutalized two or three years sooner. The means of instruction are:
deception, stupefaction, blows, and vodka. And before a year has passed these
good, intelligent, healthy-minded lads will be as brutal beings as their
instructors.
"Come, now, suppose your father were
arrested and tried to make his escape?" I asked a young soldier.
"I should run him through with my
bayonet," he answered with the foolish intonation peculiar to soldiers;
"and if he made off, I ought to shoot him," he added, obviously proud
of knowing what he must do if his father were escaping.
And when a good-hearted lad has been brought to a
state lower than that of a brute, he is just what is wanted by those who use him
as an instrument of violence. He is ready; the man has been destroyed and a new
instrument of violence has been created. And all this is done every year, every
autumn, everywhere, through all Russia in broad daylight in the midst of large
towns, where all may see it, and the deception is so clever, so skillful, that
though all men know the infamy of it in their hearts, and see all its horrible
results, they cannot throw it off and be free.
When one's eyes are opened to this awful
deception practiced upon us, one marvels that the teachers of the Christian
religion and of morals, the instructors of youth, or even the good-hearted and
intelligent parents who are to be found in every society, can teach any kind of
morality in a society in which it is openly admitted (it is so admitted, under
all governments and all churches) that murder and torture form an indispensable
element in the life of all, and that there must always be special men trained to
kill their fellows, and that any one of us may have to become such a trained
assassin.
How can children, youths, and people generally be
taught any kind of morality--not to speak of teaching in the spirit of
Christianity--side by side with the doctrine that murder is necessary for the
public weal, and therefore legitimate, and that there are men, of whom each of
us may have to be one, whose duty is to murder and torture and commit all sorts
of crimes at the will of those who are in possession of authority. If this is
so, and one can and ought to murder and torture, there is not, and cannot be,
any kind of moral law, but only the law that might is right. And this is just
how it is. In reality that is the doctrine--justified to some by the theory of
the struggle for existence--which reigns in our society.
And, indeed, what sort of ethical doctrine could
admit the legitimacy of murder for any object whatever? It is as impossible as a
theory of mathematics admitting that two is equal to three.
There may be a semblance of mathematics admitting
that two is equal to three, but there can be no real science of mathematics. And
there can only be a semblance of ethics in which murder in the shape of war and
the execution of criminals is allowed, but no true ethics. The recognition of
the life of every man as sacred is the first and only basis of all ethics.
The doctrine of an eye for an eye and a tooth for
a tooth has been abrogated by Christianity, because it is the justification of
immorality, and a mere semblance of equity, and has no real meaning. Life is a
value which has no weight nor size, and cannot be compared to any other, and so
there is no sense in destroying a life for a life. Besides, every social law
aims at the amelioration of man's life. What way, then, can the annihilation of
the life of some men ameliorate men's life? Annihilation of life cannot be a
means of the amelioration of life; it is a suicidal act.
To destroy another life for the sake of justice
is as though a man, to repair the misfortune of losing one arm, should cut off
the other arm for the sake of equity.
But putting aside the sin of deluding men into
regarding the most awful crime as a duty, putting aside the revolting sin of
using the name and authority of Christ to sanction what he most condemned, not
to speak of the curse on those who cause these "little ones" to
offend--how can people who cherish their own way of life, their progress, even
from the point of view of their personal security, allow the formation in their
midst of an overwhelming force as senseless, cruel, and destructive as every
government is organized on the basis of an army? Even the most cruel band of
brigands is not so much to be dreaded as such a government.
The power of every brigand chief is at least so
far limited that the men of his band preserve at least some human liberty, and
can refuse to commit acts opposed to their conscience. But, owing to the
perfection to which the discipline of the army has been brought, there is no
limit to check men who form part of a regularly organized government. There are
no crimes so revolting that they would not readily be committed by men who form
part of a government or army, at the will of anyone (such as Boulanger,
Napoleon, or Pougachef) who may chance to be at their head.
Often when one sees conscription levies, military
drills and maneuvers, police officers with loaded revolvers, and sentinels at
their posts with bayonets on their rifles; when one hears for whole days at a
time (as I hear it in Hamovniky where I live) the whistle of balls and the dull
thud as they fall in the sand; when one sees in the midst of a town where any
effort at violence in self-defense is forbidden, where the sale of powder and of
chemicals, where furious driving and practicing as a doctor without a diploma,
and so on, are not allowed; thousands of disciplined troops, trained to murder,
and subject to one man's will; one asks oneself how can people who prize their
security quietly allow it, and put up with it? Apart from the immorality and
evil effects of it, nothing can possibly be more unsafe. What are people
thinking about? I don't mean now Christians, ministers of religion,
philanthropists, and moralists, but simply people who value their life, their
security, and their comfort. This organization, we know, will work just as well
in one man's hands as another's. To-day, let us assume, power is in the hands of
a ruler who can be endured, but to-morrow it may be seized by a Biron, an
Elizabeth, a Catherine, a Pougachef, a Napoleon I., or a Napoleon III.
And the man in authority, endurable to-day, may
become a brute to- morrow, or may be succeeded by a mad or imbecile heir, like
the King of Bavaria or our Paul I.
And not only the highest authorities, but all
little satraps scattered over everywhere, like so many General Baranovs,
governors, police officers even, and commanders of companies, can perpetrate the
most awful crimes before there is time for them to be removed from office. And
this is what is constantly happening.
One involuntarily asks how can men let it go on,
not from higher considerations only, but from regard to their own safety?
The answer to this question is that it is not all
people who do tolerate it (some--the greater proportion--deluded and submissive,
have no choice and have to tolerate anything). It is tolerated by those who only
under such an organization can occupy a position of profit. They tolerate it,
because for them the risks of suffering from a foolish or cruel man being at the
head of the government or the army are always less than the disadvantages to
which they would be exposed by the destruction of the organization itself.
A judge, a commander of police, a governor, or an
officer will keep his position just the same under Boulanger or the republic,
under Pougachef or Catherine. He will lose his profitable position for certain,
if the existing order of things which secured it to him is destroyed. And so all
these people feel no uneasiness as to who is at the head of the organization,
they will adapt themselves to anyone; they only dread the downfall of the
organization itself, and that is the reason--though often an unconscious
one--that they support it.
One often wonders why independent people, who are
not forced to do so in any way, the so-called ÉLITE of society, should go into
the army in Russia, England, Germany, Austria, and even France, and seek
opportunities of becoming murderers. Why do even high- principled parents send
their boys to military schools? Why do mothers buy their children toy helmets,
guns, and swords as playthings? (The peasant's children never play at soldiers,
by the way). Why do good men and even women, who have certainly no interest in
war, go into raptures over the various exploits of Skobeloff and others, and vie
with one another in glorifying them? Why do men, who are not obliged to do so,
and get no fee for it, devote, like the marshals of nobility in Russia, whole
months of toil to a business physically disagreeable and morally painful-- the
enrolling of conscripts? Why do all kings and emperors wear the military
uniform? Why do they all hold military reviews, why do they organize maneuvers,
distribute rewards to the military, and raise monuments to generals and
successful commanders? Why do rich men of independent position consider it an
honor to perform a valet's duties in attendance on crowned personages,
flattering them and cringing to them and pretending to believe in their peculiar
superiority? Why do men who have ceased to believe in the superstitions of the
mediaeval Church, and who could not possibly believe in them seriously and
consistently, pretend to believe in and give their support to the demoralizing
and blasphemous institution of the church? Why is it that not only governments
but private persons of the higher classes, try so jealously to maintain the
ignorance of the people? Why do they fall with such fury on any effort at
breaking down religious superstitions or really enlightening the people? Why do
historians, novelists, and poets, who have no hope of gaining anything by their
flatteries, make heroes of kings, emperors, and conquerors of past times? Why do
men, who call themselves learned, dedicate whole lifetimes to making theories to
prove that violence employed by authority against the people is not violence at
all, but a special right? One often wonders why a fashionable lady or an artist,
who, one would think, would take no interest in political or military questions,
should always condemn strikes of working people, and defend war; and should
always be found without hesitation opposed to the one, favorable to the other.
But one no longer wonders when one realizes that
in the higher classes there is an unerring instinct of what tends to maintain
and of what tends to destroy the organization by virtue of which they enjoy
their privileges. The fashionable lady had certainly not reasoned out that if
there were no capitalists and no army to defend them, her husband would have no
fortune, and she could not have her entertainments and her ball-dresses. And the
artist certainly does not argue that he needs the capitalists and the troops to
defend them, so that they may buy his pictures. But instinct, replacing reason
in this instance, guides them unerringly. And it is precisely this instinct
which leads all men, with few exceptions, to support all the religious,
political, and economic institutions which are to their advantage.
But is it possible that the higher classes
support the existing order of things simply because it is to their advantage?
Cannot they see that this order of things is essentially irrational, that it is
no longer consistent with the stage of moral development attained by people, and
with public opinion, and that it is fraught with perils? The governing classes,
or at least the good, honest, and intelligent people of them, cannot but suffer
from these fundamental inconsistencies, and see the dangers with which they are
threatened. And is it possible that all the millions of the lower classes can
feel easy in conscience when they commit such obviously evil deeds as torture
and murder from fear of punishment? Indeed, it could not be so, neither the
former nor the latter could fail to see the irrationality of their conduct, if
the complexity of government organization did not obscure the unnatural
senselessness of their actions.
So many instigate, assist, or sanction the
commission of every one of these actions that no one who has a hand in them
feels himself morally responsible for it.
It is the custom among assassins to oblige all
the witnesses of a murder to strike the murdered victim, that the responsibility
may be divided among as large a number of people as possible. The same principle
in different forms is applied under the government organization in the
perpetration of the crimes, without which no government organization could
exist. Rulers always try to implicate as many citizens as possible in all the
crimes committed in their support.
Of late this tendency has been expressed in a
very obvious manner by the obligation of all citizens to take part in legal
processes as jurors, in the army as soldiers, in the local government, or
legislative assembly, as electors or members.
Just as in a wicker basket all the ends are so
hidden away that it is hard to find them, in the state organization the
responsibility for the crimes committed is so hidden away that men will commit
the most atrocious acts without seeing their responsibility for them.
In ancient times tyrants got credit for the
crimes they committed, but in our day the most atrocious infamies, inconceivable
under the Neros, are perpetrated and no one gets blamed for them.
One set of people have suggested, another set
have proposed, a third have reported, a fourth have decided, a fifth have
confirmed, a sixth have given the order, and a seventh set of men have carried
it out. They hang, they flog to death women, old men, and innocent people, as
was done recently among us in Russia at the Yuzovsky factory, and is always
being done everywhere in Europe and America in the struggle with the anarchists
and all other rebels against the existing order; they shoot and hang men by
hundreds and thousands, or massacre millions in war, or break men's hearts in
solitary confinement, and ruin their souls in the corruption of a soldier's
life, and no one is responsible.
At the bottom of the social scale soldiers, armed
with guns, pistols, and sabers, injure and murder people, and compel men through
these means to enter the army, and are absolutely convinced that the
responsibility for the actions rests solely on the officers who command them.
At the top of the scale--the Tzars, presidents,
ministers, and parliaments decree these tortures and murders and military
conscription, and are fully convinced that since they are either placed in
authority by the grace of God or by the society they govern, which demands such
decrees from them, they cannot be held responsible. Between these two extremes
are the intermediary personages who superintend the murders and other acts of
violence, and are fully convinced that the responsibility is taken off their
shoulders partly by their superiors who have given the order, partly by the fact
that such orders are expected from them by all who are at the bottom of the
scale.
The authority who gives the orders and the
authority who executes them at the two extreme ends of the state organization,
meet together like the two ends of a ring; they support and rest on one another
and inclose all that lies within the ring.
Without the conviction that there is a person or
persons who will take the whole responsibility of his acts, not one soldier
would ever lift a hand to commit a murder or other deed of violence.
Without the conviction that it is expected by the
whole people not a single king, emperor, president, or parliament would order
murders or acts of violence.
Without the conviction that there are persons of
a higher grade who will take the responsibility, and people of a lower grade who
require such acts for their welfare, not one of the intermediate class would
superintend such deeds.
The state is so organized that wherever a man is
placed in the social scale, his irresponsibility is the same. The higher his
grade the more he is under the influence of demands from below, and the less he
is controlled by orders from above, and VICE VERSA.
All men, then, bound together by state
organization, throw the responsibility of their acts on one another, the peasant
soldier on the nobleman or merchant who is his officer, and the officer on the
nobleman who has been appointed governor, the governor on the nobleman or son of
an official who is minister, the minister on the member of the royal family who
occupies the post of Tzar, and the Tzar again on all these officials, noblemen,
merchants, and peasants. But that is not all. Besides the fact that men get rid
of the sense of responsibility for their actions in this way, they lose their
moral sense of responsibility also, by the fact that in forming themselves into
a state organization they persuade themselves and each other so continually, and
so indefatigably, that they are not all equal, but "as the stars
apart," that they come to believe it genuinely themselves. Thus some are
persuaded that they are not simple people like everyone else, but special people
who are to be specially honored. It is instilled into another set of men by
every possible means that they are inferior to others, and therefore must submit
without a murmur to every order given them by their superiors.
On this inequality, above all, on the elevation
of some and the degradation of others, rests the capacity men have of being
blind to the insanity of the existing order of life, and all the cruelty and
criminality of the deception practiced by one set of men on another.
Those in whom the idea has been instilled that
they are invested with a special supernatural grandeur and consequence, are so
intoxicated with a sense of their own imaginary dignity that they cease to feel
their responsibility for what they do.
While those, on the other hand, in whom the idea
is fostered that they are inferior animals, bound to obey their superiors in
everything, fall, through this perpetual humiliation, into a strange condition
of stupefied servility, and in this stupefied state do not see the significance
of their actions and lose all consciousness of responsibility for what they do.
The intermediate class, who obey the orders of
their superiors on the one hand and regard themselves as superior beings on the
other, are intoxicated by power and stupefied by servility at the same time and
so lose the sense of their responsibility.
One need only glance during a review at the
commander-in-chief, intoxicated with self-importance, followed by his retinue,
all on magnificent and gayly appareled horses, in splendid uniforms and wearing
decorations, and see how they ride to the harmonious and solemn strains of music
before the ranks of soldiers, all presenting arms and petrified with servility.
One need only glance at this spectacle to understand that at such moments, when
they are in a state of the most complete intoxication, commander- in-chief,
soldiers, and intermediate officers alike, would be capable of committing crimes
of which they would never dream under other conditions.
The intoxication produced by such stimulants as
parades, reviews, religious solemnities, and coronations, is, however, an acute
and temporary condition; but there are other forms of chronic, permanent
intoxication, to which those are liable who have any kind of authority, from
that of the Tzar to that of the lowest police officer at the street corner, and
also those who are in subjection to authority and in a state of stupefied
servility. The latter, like all slaves, always find a justification for their
own servility, in ascribing the greatest possible dignity and importance to
those they serve.
It is principally through this false idea of
inequality, and the intoxication of power and of servility resulting from it,
that men associated in a state organization are enabled to commit acts opposed
to their conscience without the least scruple or remorse. Under the influence of
this intoxication, men imagine themselves no longer simply men as they are, but
some special beings-- noblemen, merchants, governors, judges, officers, tzars,
ministers, or soldiers--no longer bound by ordinary human duties, but by other
duties far more weighty--the peculiar duties of a nobleman, merchant, governor,
judge, officer, tzar, minister, or soldier.
Thus the landowner, who claimed the forest, acted
as he did only because he fancied himself not a simple man, having the same
rights to life as the peasants living beside him and everyone else, but a great
landowner, a member of the nobility, and under the influence of the intoxication
of power he felt his dignity offended by the peasants' claims. It was only
through this feeling that, without considering the consequences that might
follow, he sent in a claim to be reinstated in his pretended rights.
In the same way the judges, who wrongfully
adjudged the forest to the proprietor, did so simply because they fancied
themselves not simply men like everyone else, and so bound to be guided in
everything only by what they consider right, but, under the intoxicating
influence of power, imagined themselves the representatives of the justice which
cannot err; while under the intoxicating influence of servility they imagined
themselves bound to carry out to the letter the instructions inscribed in a
certain book, the so-called law. In the same way all who take part in such an
affair, from the highest representative of authority who signs his assent to the
report, from the superintendent presiding at the recruiting sessions, and the
priest who deludes the recruits, to the lowest soldier who is ready now to fire
on his own brothers, imagine, in the intoxication of power or of servility, that
they are some conventional characters. They do not face the question that is
presented to them, whether or not they ought to take part in what their
conscience judges an evil act, but fancy themselves various conventional
personages--one as the Tzar, God's anointed, an exceptional being, called to
watch over the happiness of one hundred millions of men; another as the
representative of nobility; another as a priest, who has received special grace
by his ordination; another as a soldier, bound by his military oath to carry out
all he is commanded without reflection.
Only under the intoxication of the power or the
servility of their imagined positions could all these people act as they do.
Were not they all firmly convinced that their
respective vocations of tzar, minister, governor, judge, nobleman, landowner,
superintendent, officer, and soldier are something real and important, not one
of them would even think without horror and aversion of taking part in what they
do now.
The conventional positions, established hundreds
of years, recognized for centuries and by everyone, distinguished by special
names and dresses, and, moreover, confirmed by every kind of solemnity, have so
penetrated into men's minds through their senses, that, forgetting the ordinary
conditions of life common to all, they look at themselves and everyone only from
this conventional point of view, and are guided in their estimation of their own
actions and those of others by this conventional standard.
Thus we see a man of perfect sanity and ripe age,
simply because he is decked out with some fringe, or embroidered keys on his
coat tails, or a colored ribbon only fit for some gayly dressed girl, and is
told that he is a general, a chamberlain, a knight of the order of St. Andrew,
or some similar nonsense, suddenly become self-important, proud, and even happy,
or, on the contrary, grow melancholy and unhappy to the point of falling ill,
because he has failed to obtain the expected decoration or title. Or what is
still more striking, a young man, perfectly sane in every other matter,
independent and beyond the fear of want, simply because he has been appointed
judicial prosecutor or district commander, separates a poor widow from her
little children, and shuts her up in prison, leaving her children uncared for,
all because the unhappy woman carried on a secret trade in spirits, and so
deprived the revenue of twenty-five rubles, and he does not feel the least pang
of remorse. Or what is still more amazing; a man, otherwise sensible and
good-hearted, simply because he is given a badge or a uniform to wear, and told
that he is a guard or customs officer, is ready to fire on people, and neither
he nor those around him regard him as to blame for it, but, on the contrary,
would regard him as to blame if he did not fire. To say nothing of judges and
juries who condemn men to death, and soldiers who kill men by thousands without
the slightest scruple merely because it has been instilled into them that they
are not simply men, but jurors, judges, generals, and soldiers.
This strange and abnormal condition of men under
state organization is usually expressed in the following words: "As a man,
I pity him; but as guard, judge, general, governor, tzar, or soldier, it is my
duty to kill or torture him." Just as though there were some positions
conferred and recognized, which would exonerate us from the obligations laid on
each of us by the fact of our common humanity.
So, for example, in the case before us, men are
going to murder and torture the famishing, and they admit that in the dispute
between the peasants and the landowner the peasants are right (all those in
command said as much to me). They know that the peasants are wretched, poor, and
hungry, and the landowner is rich and inspires no sympathy. Yet they are all
going to kill the peasants to secure three thousand rubles for the landowner,
only because at that moment they fancy themselves not men but governor,
official, general of police, officer, and soldier, respectively, and consider
themselves bound to obey, not the eternal demands of the conscience of man, but
the casual, temporary demands of their positions as officers or soldiers.
Strange as it may seem, the sole explanation of
this astonishing phenomenon is that they are in the condition of the hypnotized,
who, they say, feel and act like the creatures they are commanded by the
hypnotizer to represent. When, for instance, it is suggested to the hypnotized
subject that he is lame, he begins to walk lame, that he is blind, and he cannot
see, that he is a wild beast, and he begins to bite. This is the state, not only
of those who were going on this expedition, but of all men who fulfill their
state and social duties in preference to and in detriment of their human duties.
The essence of this state is that under the
influence of one suggestion they lose the power of criticising their actions,
and therefore do, without thinking, everything consistent with the suggestion to
which they are led by example, precept, or insinuation.
The difference between those hypnotized by
scientific men and those under the influence of the state hypnotism, is that an
imaginary position is suggested to the former suddenly by one person in a very
brief space of time, and so the hypnotized state appears to us in a striking and
surprising form, while the imaginary position suggested by state influence is
induced slowly, little by little, imperceptibly from childhood, sometimes during
years, or even generations, and not in one person alone but in a whole society.
"But," it will be said," at all
times, in all societies, the majority of persons--all the children, all the
women absorbed in the bearing and rearing of the young, all the great mass of
the laboring population, who are under the necessity of incessant and fatiguing
physical labor, all those of weak character by nature, all those who are
abnormally enfeebled intellectually by the effects of nicotine, alcohol, opium,
or other intoxicants--are always in a condition of incapacity for independent
thought, and are either in subjection to those who are on a higher intellectual
level, or else under the influence of family or social traditions, of what is
called public opinion, and there is nothing unnatural or incongruous in their
subjection."
And truly there is nothing unnatural in it, and
the tendency of men of small intellectual power to follow the lead of those on a
higher level of intelligence is a constant law, and it is owing to it that men
can live in societies and on the same principles at all. The minority
consciously adopt certain rational principles through their correspondence with
reason, while the majority act on the same principles unconsciously because it
is required by public opinion.
Such subjection to public opinion on the part of
the unintellectual does not assume an unnatural character till the public
opinion is split into two.
But there are times when a higher truth, revealed
at first to a few persons, gradually gains ground till it has taken hold of such
a number of persons that the old public opinion, founded on a lower order of
truths, begins to totter and the new is ready to take its place, but has not yet
been firmly established. It is like the spring, this time of transition, when
the old order of ideas has not quite broken up and the new has not quite gained
a footing. Men begin to criticise their actions in the light of the new truth,
but in the meantime in practice, through inertia and tradition, they continue to
follow the principles which once represented the highest point of rational
consciousness, but are now in flagrant contradiction with it.
Then men are in an abnormal, wavering condition,
feeling the necessity of following the new ideal, and yet not bold enough to
break with the old-established traditions.
Such is the attitude in regard to the truth of
Christianity not only of the men in the Toula train, but of the majority of men
of our times, alike of the higher and the lower orders. Those of the ruling
classes, having no longer any reasonable justification for the profitable
positions they occupy, are forced, in order to keep them, to stifle their higher
rational faculty of loving, and to persuade themselves that their positions are
indispensable. And those of the lower classes, exhausted by toil and brutalized
of set purpose, are kept in a permanent deception, practiced deliberately and
continuously by the higher classes upon them.
Only in this way can one explain the amazing
contradictions with which our life is full, and of which a striking example was
presented to me by the expedition I met on the 9th of September; good, peaceful
men, known to me personally, going with untroubled tranquillity to perpetrate
the most beastly, senseless, and vile of crimes. Had not they some means of
stifling their conscience, not one of them would be capable of committing a
hundredth part of such a villainy.
It is not that they have not a conscience which
forbids them from acting thus, just as, even three or four hundred years ago,
when people burnt men at the stake and put them to the rack they had a
conscience which prohibited it; the conscience is there, but it has been put to
sleep--in those in command by what the psychologists call auto-suggestion; in
the soldiers, by the direct conscious hypnotizing exerted by the higher classes.
Though asleep, the conscience is there, and in
spite of the hypnotism it is already speaking in them, and it may awake.
All these men are in a position like that of a
man under hypnotism, commanded to do something opposed to everything he regards
as good and rational, such as to kill his mother or his child. The hypnotized
subject feels himself bound to carry out the suggestion--he thinks he cannot
stop--but the nearer he gets to the time and the place of the action, the more
the benumbed conscience begins to stir, to resist, and to try to awake. And no
one can say beforehand whether he will carry out the suggestion or not; which
will gain the upper hand, the rational conscience or the irrational suggestion.
It all depends on their relative strength.
That is just the case with the men in the Toula
train and in general with everyone carrying out acts of state violence in our
day.
There was a time when men who set out with the
object of murder and violence, to make an example, did not return till they had
carried out their object, and then, untroubled by doubts or scruples, having
calmly flogged men to death, they returned home and caressed their children,
laughed, amused themselves, and enjoyed the peaceful pleasures of family life.
In those days it never struck the landowners and wealthy men who profited by
these crimes, that the privileges they enjoyed had any direct connection with
these atrocities. But now it is no longer so. Men know now, or are not far from
knowing, what they are doing and for what object they do it. They can shut their
eyes and force their conscience to be still, but so long as their eyes are
opened and their conscience undulled, they must all--those who carry out and
those who profit by these crimes alike--see the import of them. Sometimes they
realize it only after the crime has been perpetrated, sometimes they realize it
just before its perpetration. Thus those who commanded the recent acts of
violence in Nijni-Novgorod, Saratov, Orel, and the Yuzovsky factory realized
their significance only after their perpetration, and now those who commanded
and those who carried out these crimes are ashamed before public opinion and
their conscience. I have talked to soldiers who had taken part in these crimes,
and they always studiously turned the conversation off the subject, and when
they spoke of it it was with horror and bewilderment. There are cases, too, when
men come to themselves just before the perpetration of the crime. Thus I know
the case of a sergeant- major who had been beaten by two peasants during the
repression of disorder and had made a complaint. The next day, after seeing the
atrocities perpetrated on the other peasants, he entreated the commander of his
company to tear up his complaint and let off the two peasants. I know cases when
soldiers, commanded to fire, have refused to obey, and I know many cases of
officers who have refused to command expeditions for torture and murder. So that
men sometimes come to their senses long before perpetrating the suggested crime,
sometimes at the very moment before perpetrating it, sometimes only afterward.
The men traveling in the Toula train were going
with the object of killing and injuring their fellow-creatures, but none could
tell whether they would carry out their object or not. However obscure his
responsibility for the affair is to each, and however strong the idea instilled
into all of them that they are not men, but governors, officials, officers, and
soldiers, and as such beings can violate every human duty, the nearer they
approach the place of the execution, the stronger their doubts as to its being
right, and this doubt will reach its highest point when the very moment for
carrying it out has come.
The governor, in spite of all the stupefying
effect of his surroundings, cannot help hesitating when the moment comes to give
final decisive command. He knows that the action of the Governor of Orel has
called down upon him the disapproval of the best people, and he himself,
influenced by the public opinion of the circles in which he moves, has more than
once expressed his disapprobation of him. He knows that the prosecutor, who
ought to have come, flatly refused to have anything to do with it, because he
regarded it as disgraceful. He knows, too, that there may be changes any day in
the government, and that what was a ground for advancement yesterday may be the
cause of disgrace to-morrow. And he knows that there is a press, if not in
Russia, at least abroad, which may report the affair and cover him with ignominy
forever. He is already conscious of a change in public opinion which condemns
what was formerly a duty. Moreover, he cannot feel fully assured that his
soldiers will at the last moment obey him. He is wavering, and none can say
beforehand what he will do.
All the officers and functionaries who accompany
him experience in greater or less degree the same emotions. In the depths of
their hearts they all know that what they are doing is shameful, that to take
part in it is a discredit and blemish in the eyes of some people whose opinion
they value. They know that after murdering and torturing the defenseless, each
of them will be ashamed to face his betrothed or the woman he is courting. And
besides, they too, like the governor, are doubtful whether the soldiers'
obedience to orders can be reckoned on. What a contrast with the confident air
they all put on as they sauntered about the station and platform! Inwardly they
were not only in a state of suffering but even of suspense. Indeed they only
assumed this bold and composed manner to conceal the wavering within. And this
feeling increased as they drew near the scene of action.
And imperceptible as it was, and strange as it
seems to say so, all that mass of lads, the soldiers, who seemed so submissive,
were in precisely the same condition. These are not the soldiers of former days,
who gave up the natural life of industry and devoted their whole existence to
debauchery, plunder, and murder, like the Roman legionaries or the warriors of
the Thirty Years' War, or even the soldiers of more recent times who served for
twenty-five years in the army. They have mostly been only lately taken from
their families, and are full of the recollections of the good, rational, natural
life they have left behind them.
All these lads, peasants for the most part, know
what is the business they have come about; they know that the landowners always
oppress their brothers the peasants, and that therefore it is most likely the
same thing here. Moreover, a majority of them can now read, and the books they
read are not all such as exalt a military life; there are some which point out
its immorality. Among them are often free-thinking comrades--who have enlisted
voluntarily--or young officers of liberal ideas, and already the first germ of
doubt has been sown in regard to the unconditional legitimacy and glory of their
occupation.
It is true that they have all passed through that
terrible, skillful education, elaborated through centuries, which kills all
initiative in a man, and that they are so trained to mechanical obedience that
at the word of command: "Fire!--All the line!-- Fire!" and so on,
their guns will rise of themselves and the habitual movements will be performed.
But "Fire!" now does not mean shooting into the sand for amusement, it
means firing on their broken-down, exploited fathers and brothers whom they see
there in the crowd, with women and children shouting and waving their arms. Here
they are--one with his scanty beard and patched coat and plaited shoes of reed,
just like the father left at home in Kazan or Riazan province; one with gray
beard and bent back, leaning on a staff like the old grandfather; one, a young
fellow in boots and a red shirt, just as he was himself a year ago--he, the
soldier who must fire upon him. There, too, a woman in reed shoes and PANYOVA,
just like the mother left at home.
Is it possible they must fire on them? And no one
knows what each soldier will do at the last minute. The least word, the
slightest allusion would be enough to stop them.
At the last moment they will all find themselves
in the position of a hypnotized man to whom it has been suggested to chop a log,
who coming up to what has been indicated to him as a log, with the ax already
lifted to strike, sees that it is not a log but his sleeping brother. He may
perform the act that has been suggested to him, and he may come to his senses at
the moment of performing it. In the same way all these men may come to
themselves in time or they may go on to the end.
If they do not come to themselves, the most
fearful crime will be committed, as in Orel, and then the hypnotic suggestion
under which they act will be strengthened in all other men. If they do come to
themselves, not only this terrible crime will not be perpetrated, but many also
who hear of the turn the affair has taken will be emancipated from the hypnotic
influence in which they were held, or at least will be nearer being emancipated
from it.
Even if a few only come to themselves, and boldly
explain to the others all the wickedness of such a crime, the influence of these
few may rouse the others to shake off the controlling suggestion, and the
atrocity will not be perpetrated.
More than that, if a few men, even of those who
are not taking part in the affair but are only present at the preparations for
it, or have heard of such things being done in the past, do not remain
indifferent but boldly and plainly express their detestation of such crimes to
those who have to execute them, and point out to them all the senselessness,
cruelty, and wickedness of such acts, that alone will be productive of good.
That was what took place in the instance before
us. It was enough for a few men, some personally concerned in the affair and
others simply outsiders, to express their disapproval of floggings that had
taken place elsewhere, and their contempt and loathing for those who had taken
part in inflicting them, for a few persons in the Toula case to express their
repugnance to having any share in it; for a lady traveling by the train, and a
few other bystanders at the station, to express to those who formed the
expedition their disgust at what they were doing; for one of the commanders of a
company, who was asked for troops for the restoration of order, to reply that
soldiers ought not to be butchers--and thanks to these and a few other seemingly
insignificant influences brought to bear on these hypnotized men, the affair
took a completely different turn, and the troops, when they reached the place,
did not inflict any punishment, but contented themselves with cutting down the
forest and giving it to the landowner.
Had not a few persons had a clear consciousness
that what they were doing was wrong, and consequently influenced one another in
that direction, what was done at Orel would have taken place at Toula. Had this
consciousness been still stronger, and had the influence exerted been therefore
greater than it was, it might well have been that the governor with his troops
would not even have ventured to cut down the forest and give it to the
landowner.
Had that consciousness been stronger still, it
might well have been that the governor would not have ventured to go to the
scene of action at all; even that the minister would not have ventured to form
this decision or the Tzar to ratify it.
All depends, therefore, on the strength of the
consciousness of Christian truth on the part of each individual man.
And, therefore, one would have thought that the
efforts of all men of the present day who profess to wish to work for the
welfare of humanity would have been directed to strengthening this consciousness
of Christian truth in themselves and others.
But, strange to say, it is precisely those people
who profess most anxiety for the amelioration of human life, and are regarded as
the leaders of public opinion, who assert that there is no need to do that, and
that there are other more effective means for the amelioration of men's
condition. They affirm that the amelioration of human life is effected not by
the efforts of individual men, to recognize and propagate the truth, but by the
gradual modification of the general conditions of life, and that therefore the
efforts of individuals should be directed to the gradual modification of
external conditions for the better. For every advocacy of a truth inconsistent
with the existing order by an individual is, they maintain, not only useless but
injurious, since in provokes coercive measures on the part of the authorities,
restricting these individuals from continuing any action useful to society.
According to this doctrine all modifications in human life are brought about by
precisely the same laws as in the life of the animals.
So that, according to this doctrine, all the
founders of religions, such as Moses and the prophets, Confucius, Lao-Tse,
Buddha, Christ, and others, preached their doctrines and their followers
accepted them, not because they loved the truth, but because the political,
social, and above all economic conditions of the peoples among whom these
religions arose were favorable for their origination and development.
And therefore the chief efforts of the man who
wishes to serve society and improve the condition of humanity ought, according
to this doctrine, to be directed not to the elucidation and propagation of
truth, but to the improvement of the external political, social, and above all
economic conditions. And the modification of these conditions is partly effected
by serving the government and introducing liberal and progressive principles
into it, partly in promoting the development of industry and the propagation of
socialistic ideas, and most of all by the diffusion of science. According to
this theory it is of no consequence whether you profess the truth revealed to
you, and therefore realize it in your life, or at least refrain from committing
actions opposed to the truth, such as serving the government and strengthening
its authority when you regard it as injurious, profiting by the capitalistic
system when you regard it as wrong, showing veneration for various ceremonies
which you believe to be degrading superstitions, giving support to the law when
you believe it to be founded on error, serving as a soldier, taking oaths, and
lying, and lowering yourself generally. It is useless to refrain from all that;
what is of use is not altering the existing forms of life, but submitting to
them against your own convictions, introducing liberalism into the existing
institutions, promoting commerce, the propaganda of socialism, and the triumphs
of what is called science, and the diffusion of education. According to this
theory one can remain a landowner, merchant, manufacturer, judge, official in
government pay, officer or soldier, and still be not only a humane man, but even
a socialist and revolutionist.
Hypocrisy, which had formerly only a religious
basis in the doctrine of original sin, the redemption, and the Church, has in
our day gained a new scientific basis and has consequently caught in its nets
all those who had reached too high a stage of development to be able to find
support in religious hypocrisy. So that while in former days a man who professed
the religion of the Church could take part in all the crimes of the state, and
profit by them, and still regard himself as free from any taint of sin, so long
as he fulfilled the external observances of his creed, nowadays all who do not
believe in the Christianity of the Church, find similar well-founded irrefutable
reasons in science for regarding themselves as blameless and even highly moral
in spite of their participation in the misdeeds of government and the advantages
they gain from them.
A rich landowner--not only in Russia, but in
France, England, Germany, or America--lives on the rents exacted; from the
people living on his land, and robs these generally poverty-stricken people of
all he can get from them. This man's right of property in the land rests on the
fact that at every effort on the part of the oppressed people, without his
consent, to make use of the land he considers his, troops are called out to
subject them to punishment and murder. One would have thought that it was
obvious that a man living in this way was an evil, egoistic creature and could
not possibly consider himself a Christian or a liberal. One would have supposed
it evident that the first thing such a man must do, if he wishes to approximate
to Christianity or liberalism, would be to cease to plunder and ruin men by
means of acts of state violence in support of his claim to the land. And so it
would be if it were not for the logic of hypocrisy, which reasons that from a
religious point of view possession or non- possession of land is of no
consequence for salvation, and from the scientific point of view, giving up the
ownership of land is a useless individual renunciation, and that the welfare of
mankind is not promoted in that way, but by a gradual modification of external
forms. And so we see this man, without the least trouble of mind or doubt that
people will believe in his sincerity, organizing an agricultural exhibition, or
a temperance society, or sending some soup and stockings by his wife or children
to three old women, and boldly in his family, in drawing rooms, in committees,
and in the press, advocating the Gospel or humanitarian doctrine of love for
one's neighbor in general and the agricultural laboring population in particular
whom he is continually exploiting and oppressing. And other people who are in
the same position as he believe him, commend him, and solemnly discuss with him
measures for ameliorating the condition of the working-class, on whose
exploitation their whole life rests, devising all kinds of possible methods for
this, except the one without which all improvement of their condition is
impossible, i. e., refraining from taking from them the land necessary for their
subsistence. (A striking example of this hypocrisy was the solicitude displayed
by the Russian landowners last year, their efforts to combat the famine which
they had caused, and by which they profited, selling not only bread at the
highest price, but even potato haulm at five rubles the dessiatine (about 2 and
four- fifths acres) for fuel to the freezing peasants.)
Or take a merchant whose whole trade--like all
trade indeed--is founded on a series of trickery, by means of which, profiting
by the ignorance or need of others, he buys goods below their value and sells
them again above their value. One would have fancied it obvious that a man whose
whole occupation was based on what in his own language is called swindling, if
it is done under other conditions, ought to be ashamed of his position, and
could not any way, while he continues a merchant, profess himself a Christian or
a liberal.
But the sophistry of hypocrisy reasons that the
merchant can pass for a virtuous man without giving up his pernicious course of
action; a religious man need only have faith and a liberal man need only promote
the modification of external conditions--the progress of industry. And so we see
the merchant (who often goes further and commits acts of direct dishonesty,
selling adulterated goods, using false weights and measures, and trading in
products injurious to health, such as alcohol and opium) boldly regarding
himself and being regarded by others, so long as he does not directly deceive
his colleagues in business, as a pattern of probity and virtue. And if he spends
a thousandth part of his stolen wealth on some public institution, a hospital or
museum or school, then he is even regarded as the benefactor of the people on
the exploitation and corruption of whom his whole prosperity has been founded:
if he sacrifices, too, a portion of his ill- gotten gains on a Church and the
poor, then he is an exemplary Christian.
A manufacturer is a man whose whole income
consists of value squeezed out of the workmen, and whose whole occupation is
based on forced, unnatural labor, exhausting whole generations of men. It would
seem obvious that if this man professes any Christian or liberal principles, he
must first of all give up ruining human lives for his own profit. But by the
existing theory he is promoting industry, and he ought not to abandon his
pursuit. It would even be injuring society for him to do so. And so we see this
man, the harsh slave-driver of thousands of men, building almshouses with little
gardens two yards square for the workmen broken down in toiling for him, and a
bank, and a poorhouse, and a hospital--fully persuaded that he has amply
expiated in this way for all the human lives morally and physically ruined by
him--and calmly going on with his business, taking pride in it.
Any civil, religious, or military official in
government employ, who serves the state from vanity, or, as is most often the
case, simply for the sake of the pay wrung from the harassed and toilworn
working classes (all taxes, however raised, always fall on labor), if he, as is
very seldom the case, does not directly rob the government in the usual way,
considers himself, and is considered by his fellows, as a most useful and
virtuous member of society.
A judge or a public prosecutor knows that through
his sentence or his prosecution hundreds or thousands of poor wretches are at
once torn from their families and thrown into prison, where they may go out of
their minds, kill themselves with pieces of broken glass, or starve themselves;
he knows that they have wives and mothers and children, disgraced and made
miserable by separation from them, vainly begging for pardon for them or some
alleviation of their sentence, and this judge or this prosecutor is so hardened
in his hypocrisy that he and his fellows and his wife and his household are all
fully convinced that he may be a most exemplary man. According to the
metaphysics of hypocrisy it is held that he is doing a work of public utility.
And this man who has ruined hundreds, thousands of men, who curse him and are
driven to desperation by his action, goes to mass, a smile of shining
benevolence on his smooth face, in perfect faith in good and in God, listens to
the Gospel, caresses his children, preaches moral principles to them, and is
moved by imaginary sufferings.
All these men and those who depend on them, their
wives, tutors, children, cooks, actors, jockeys, and so on, are living on the
blood which by one means or another, through one set of blood- suckers or
another, is drawn out of the working class, and every day their pleasures cost
hundreds or thousands of days of labor. They see the sufferings and privations
of these laborers and their children, their aged, their wives, and their sick,
they know the punishments inflicted on those who resist this organized plunder,
and far from decreasing, far from concealing their luxury, they insolently
display it before these oppressed laborers who hate them, as though
intentionally provoking them with the pomp of their parks and palaces, their
theaters, hunts, and races. At the same time they continue to persuade
themselves and others that they are all much concerned about the welfare of
these working classes, whom they have always trampled under their feet, and on
Sundays, richly dressed, they drive in sumptuous carriages to the houses of God
built in very mockery of Christianity, and there listen to men, trained to this
work of deception, who in white neckties or in brocaded vestments, according to
their denomination, preach the love for their neighbor which they all gainsay in
their lives. And these people have so entered into their part that they
seriously believe that they really are what they pretend to be.
The universal hypocrisy has so entered into the
flesh and blood of all classes of our modern society, it has reached such a
pitch that nothing in that way can rouse indignation. Hypocrisy in the Greek
means "acting," and acting--playing a part--is always possible. The
representatives of Christ give their blessing to the ranks of murderers holding
their guns loaded against their brothers; "for prayer" priests,
ministers of various Christian sects are always present, as indispensably as the
hangman, at executions, and sanction by their presence the compatibility of
murder with Christianity (a clergyman assisted at the attempt at murder by
electricity in America)--but such facts cause no one any surprise.
There was recently held at Petersburg an
international exhibition of instruments of torture, handcuffs, models of
solitary cells, that is to say instruments of torture worse than knouts or rods,
and sensitive ladies and gentlemen went and amused themselves by looking at
them.
No one is surprised that together with its
recognition of liberty, equality, and fraternity, liberal science should prove
the necessity of war, punishment, customs, the censure, the regulation of
prostitution, the exclusion of cheap foreign laborers, the hindrance of
emigration, the justifiableness of colonization, based on poisoning and
destroying whole races of men called savages, and so on.
People talk of the time when all men shall
profess what is called Christianity (that is, various professions of faith
hostile to one another), when all shall be well-fed and clothed, when all shall
be united from one end of the world to the other by telegraphs and telephones,
and be able to communicate by balloons, when all the working classes are
permeated by socialistic doctrines, when the Trades Unions possess so many
millions of members and so many millions of rubles, when everyone is educated
and all can read newspapers and learn all the sciences.
But what good or useful thing can come of all
these improvements, if men do not speak and act in accordance with what they
believe to be the truth?
The condition of men is the result of their
disunion. Their disunion results from their not following the truth which is
one, but falsehoods which are many. The sole means of uniting men is their union
in the truth. And therefore the more sincerely men strive toward the truth, the
nearer they get to unity.
But how can men be united in the truth or even
approximate to it, if they do not even express the truth they know, but hold
that there is no need to do so, and pretend to regard as truth what they believe
to be false?
And therefore no improvement is possible so long
as men are hypocritical and hide the truth from themselves, so long as they do
not recognize that their union and therefore their welfare is only possible in
the truth, and do not put the recognition and profession of the truth revealed
to them higher than everything else.
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