seen only
historically, is true. Perhaps mankind has not lived
long enough for a
comprehensive view of any particular case.
Perhaps no one will ever live long enough; and perhaps this earth
shared out
amongst our clashing ambitions by the anxious
arrangements of statesmen will come to an end before we
attain the
felicity of greeting with
unanimousapplause the perfect fruition
of a great State. It is even possible that we are destined for
another sort of bliss
altogether: that sort which consists in
being perpetually duped by false appearances. But whatever
political
illusion the future may hold out to our fear or our
admiration, there will be none, it is safe to say, which in the
magnitude of anti-humanitarian effect will equal that
phantom now
driven out of the world by the
thunder of thousands of guns; none
that in its
retreat will cling with an
equally shameless sincerity
to more
unworthy supports: to the moral
corruption and mental
darkness of
slavery, to the mere brute force of numbers.
This very ignominy of infatuation should make clear to men's
feelings and reason that the
downfall of Russia's might is
unavoidable. Spectral it lived and spectral it disappears without
leaving a memory of a single
generous deed, of a single service
rendered--even involuntarily--to the polity of nations. Other
despotisms there have been, but none whose
origin was so grimly
fantastic in its baseness, and the
beginning of whose end was so
gruesomely
ignoble. What is
amazing is the myth of its
irresistible strength which is dying so hard.
Considered
historically, Russia's influence in Europe seems the
most baseless thing in the world; a sort of convention invented by
diplomatists for some dark purpose of their own, one would suspect,
if the lack of grasp upon the realities of any given situation were
not the main
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characteristic of the
management of international
relations. A glance back at the last hundred years shows the
invariable, one may say the
logical, powerlessness of Russia. As a
military power it has never achieved by itself a single great
thing. It has been indeed able to repel an ill-considered
invasion, but only by having
recourse to the
extreme methods of
desperation. In its attacks upon its
specially selected victim
this giant always struck as if with a withered right hand. All the
campaigns against Turkey prove this, from Potemkin's time to the
last Eastern war in 1878, entered upon with every
advantage of a
well-nursed
prestige and a carefully fostered fanaticism. Even the
half-armed were always too much for the might of Russia, or,
rather, of the Tsardom. It was
victorious only against the
practically disarmed, as, in regard to its ideal of territorial
expansion, a glance at a map will prove
sufficiently. As an ally,
Russia has been always
unprofitable,
taking her share in the
defeats rather than in the victories of her friends, but always
pushing her own claims with the
arrogance of an arbiter of military
success. She has been
unable to help to any purpose a single
principle to hold its own, not even the principle of authority and
legitimism which Nicholas the First had declared so
haughtily to
rest under his special
protection; just as Nicholas the Second has
tried to make the
maintenance of peace on earth his own exclusive
affair. And the first Nicholas was a good Russian; he held the
belief in the sacredness of his realm with such an
intensity of
faith that he could not
survive the first shock of doubt. Rightly
envisaged, the Crimean war was the end of what remained of
absolutism and legitimism in Europe. It threw the way open for the
liberation of Italy. The war in Manchuria makes an end of
absolutism in Russia,
whoever has got to
perish from the shock
behind a
rampart of dead ukases, manifestoes, and rescripts. In
the space of fifty years the self-appointed Apostle of Absolutism
and the self-appointed Apostle of Peace, the Augustus and the
Augustulus of the REGIME that was wont to speak
contemptuously to
European Foreign Offices in the beautiful French phrases of Prince
Gorchakov, have fallen victims, each after his kind, to their
shadowy and
dreadful familiar, to the
phantom, part ghoul, part
Djinn, part Old Man of the Sea, with beak and claws and a double
head, looking
greedily both east and west on the confines of two
continents.
That nobody through all that time penetrated the true nature of the
monster it is impossible to believe. But of the many who must have
seen, all were either too
modest, too
cautious, perhaps too
discreet, to speak; or else were too
insignificant to be heard or
believed. Yet not all.
In the very early sixties, Prince Bismarck, then about to leave his
post of Prussian Minister in St. Petersburg, called--so the story
goes--upon another
distinguished diplomatist. After some talk upon
the general situation, the future Chancellor of the German Empire
remarked that it was his practice to resume the impressions he had
carried out of every country where he had made a long stay, in a
short
sentence, which he caused to be engraved upon some trinket.
"I am leaving this country now, and this is what I bring away from
it," he continued,
taking off his finger a new ring to show to his
colleague the
inscription inside: "La Russie, c'est le neant."
Prince Bismarck had the truth of the matter and was neither too
modest nor too
discreet to speak out. Certainly he was not afraid
of not being believed. Yet he did not shout his knowledge from the
house-tops. He meant to have the
phantom as his accomplice in an
enterprise which has set the clock of peace back for many a year.
He had his way. The German Empire has been an
accomplished fact
for more than a third of a century--a great and
dreadful legacy
left to the world by the ill-omened
phantom of Russia's might.
It is that
phantom which is disappearing now--unexpectedly,
astonishingly, as if by a touch of that wonderful magic for which
the East has always been famous. The
pretence of
belief in its
existence will no longer answer anybody's purposes (now Prince
Bismarck is dead) unless the purposes of the writers of sensational
paragraphs as to this NEANT making an armed
descent upon the plains
of India. That sort of folly would be beneath notice if it did not
distract attention from the real problem created for Europe by a
war in the Far East.
For good or evil in the
working out of her
destiny, Russia is bound
to remain a NEANT for many long years, in a more even than a
Bismarckian sense. The very fear of this spectre being gone, it
behoves us to consider its legacy--the fact (no
phantom that)
accomplished in Central Europe by its help and connivance.
The German Empire may feel at bottom the loss of an old accomplice
always amenable to the
confidential whispers of a
bargain; but in
the first
instance it cannot but
rejoice at the fundamental
weakening of a possible
obstacle to its instincts of territorial
expansion. There is a
removal of that
latent feeling of restraint
which the presence of a powerful neighbour, however implicated with
you in a sense of common guilt, is bound to
inspire. The common
guilt of the two Empires is defined
precisely by their frontier
line
running through the Polish provinces. Without indulging in
excessive feelings of
indignation at that country's
partition, or
going so far as to believe--with a late French politician--in the
"immanente justice des choses," it is clear that a material
situation, based upon an
essentially immoral transaction, contains
the germ of fatal differences in the
temperament of the two
partners in
iniquity--whatever the
iniquity is. Germany has been
the evil counsellor of Russia on all the questions of her Polish
problem. Always urging the
adoption of the most repressive
measures with a
perfectlylogical duplicity, Prince Bismarck's
Empire has taken care to couple the neighbourly offers of military
assistance with
merciless advice. The thought of the Polish
provinces accepting a frank
reconciliation with a humanised Russia
and bringing the weight of homogeneous
loyalty within a few miles
of Berlin, has been always
intenselydistasteful to the arrogant
Germanising tendencies of the other
partner in
iniquity. And,
besides, the way to the Baltic provinces leads over the Niemen and
over the Vistula.
And now, when there is a
possibility of serious internal
disturbances destroying the sort of order autocracy has kept in
Russia, the road over these rivers is seen wearing a more inviting
aspect. At any moment the pretext of armed
intervention may be
found in a
revolutionaryoutbreak provoked by Socialists, perhaps--
but at any rate by the political immaturity of the enlightened
classes and by the political barbarism of the Russian people. The
throes of Russian resurrection will be long and
painful. This is
not the place to
speculate upon the nature of these convulsions,
but there must be some
violent break-up of the lamentable
tradition, a shattering of the social, of the administrative--
certainly of the territorial--unity.