CHAPTER
XII
The Ancient Cycle of Prenational Empire- Building –
The Modern Cycle of Nation-Building
WE HAVE seen that the
building of the true national unit was a problem of human aggregation left over
by the ancient world to. the mediaeval. The ancient world started from the
tribe, the city-state, the clan, the small regional state - all of them minor
units living in the midst of other like units which were similar to them in
general type, kin usually in language and most often or very largely in race,
marked off at least from other divisions of humanity by a tendency towards a
common civilisation and protected in that community with each other and in
their diversity from others by favourable geographical circumstances. Thus
Greece, Italy, Gaul, Egypt, China, Medo-Persia, India, Arabia, Israel, all
began with a loose cultural and geographical aggregation which made them
separate and distinct culture-units before they could become nation-units.
Within that loose unity the tribe, clan or city or regional states formed in
the vague mass so many points of distinct, vigorous and compact unity which
felt indeed more and more powerfully the divergence and opposition of their
larger cultural oneness to the outside world but could feel also and often much
more nearly and acutely their own divergences, contrasts and oppositions. Where
this sense of focal distinctness was most acute, there the problem of national
unification was necessarily more difficult and its solution, when made, tended
to be more illusory.
The
solution was in most cases attempted. In Egypt and Judea it was successfully
found even in that ancient cycle of historical evolution; but in the latter
instance certainly, in the former probably, the full result came only by the
hard discipline of subjection to a foreign yoke. Where this discipline was
lack-
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ing, where
the nation-unity was in some sort achieved from in, - usually through the
conquest of all the rest by one strong claa, city, regional unit such as Rome,
Macedon, the mountain clans of Persia, - the new State, instead of waiting to
",Be firmly its achievement and lay the foundations of the national unity
deep and strong, proceeded at once to overshoot its mediate necessity and
embark on a career of conquest. Be- re the psychological roots of the national
unity had been driven deep, before the nation was firmly self-conscious,
irresistibly possessed of its oneness and invincibly attached to it, the
governing State impelled by the military impulsion which had carried so far,
attempted immediately to form by the same means a larger empire-aggregate.
Assyria, Macedon, Rome, Persia, later Arabia followed all the same tendency and
the same cycle. the great invasion of Europe and Western Asia by the Gaelic
race and the subsequent disunion and decline of Gaul were probably due to the
same phenomenon and proceeded from a still more immature and ill-formed
unification than the Macedonian. All became the starting-point of great
empire-movements before they had become the keystone of securely built national
unities.
These
empires, therefore, could not endure. Some lasted longer than others because
they had laid down firmer foundations the central nation-unity, as did Rome in
Italy. In Greece philip, the first unifier, made a rapid but imperfect sketch
of unification, the celerity of which had been made possible by the previous and yet looser Spartan
domination; and had he been followed by successors of a patient talent rather
than by a man of vast
imagination and supreme genius, this first, rough, practical outline might have
been filled in, strengthened and an enduring work achieved. One who first
founds on a large scale and rapidly, needs always as his successor a man with
the talent or the genius for organisation rather than an impetus for expansion.
A Caesar followed by an Augustus meant a work of massive durability; a Philip
followed by an Alexander, an achievement of great importance to the world by
its results, but in itself a mere splendour of short-lived brilliance. Rome, to
whom careful Nature denied any man of commanding genius until she had firmly
unified Italy and laid the basis of her
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empire, was able to build much more firmly;
nevertheless, she founded that empire not as the centre and head of a great
nation, but still as a dominant city using a subject Italy for the springing-
board to leap upon and subjugate the surrounding world. Therefore she had to
face a much more difficult problem of assimilation, that of nation-nebulae and
formed or inchoate cultures different from her own, before she had achieved and
learned to apply to the new problem .the art of complete and absolute
unification on a smaller and easier scale, before she had welded into one
living national organism, no longer Roman but Italian, the elements of
difference and community offered by the Gallic, Latin, Umbrian, Oscan and
Graeco-Apulian factors in ancient Italy. Therefore, although her empire endured
for several centuries, it achieved temporary conservation at the cost of
energy, of vitality and inner vigour; it accomplished neither the nation-unit
nor the durable empire-unity, and like other ancient empires it had to collapse
and make room for a new era of true nation-building.
It is
necessary to emphasise where the error lay. The administrative, political,
economic organisation of mankind in aggregates of smaller or greater size is a
work which belongs at its basis to the same order of phenomena as the creation
of vital organisms in physical Nature. It uses, that is to say, primarily
external and physical methods governed by the principles of physical
life-energy intent on the creation of living forms, although its inner object
is to deliver, to manifest and to bring into secure working a supraphysical, a
psychological principle latent behind the operations of the life and the body.
To build a strong and durable body and vital functioning for a distinct,
powerful, well-centred and well-diffused corporate ego is its whole aim and
method. In this process, as we have seen, first smaller distinct units in a
larger loose unity are formed; these have a strong psychological existence and
a well-developed body and vital functioning, but in the larger mass the
psychological sense and the vital energy are present but unorganised and
without power of definite functioning, and the body is a fluid quantity or a
half-nebulous or at most a half-fluid, half-solidified mass, a plasm rather than
a body. This has in its turn to be formed and
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organised; a firm physical shape has to be made for it,
a well-defined vital functioning and a clear psychological reality, self-
consciousness and mental will-to-be.
Thus a new large unity is formed;
and this again finds itself among a number of similar unities which it looks on
first as hostile and quite different from itself, then enters into a sort of
community in difference with them, till again we find repeated the original
phenomenon of a number of smaller distinct units in a if loose unity. The
contained units are larger and more com- than before, the containing unity is
also larger and more complex than before, but the essential position is the
same and similar problem presents itself for solution. Thus in the beginning
there was the phenomenon of city-states and regional les coexisting as
disunited parts of a loose geographical and cultural unity, Italy or Hellas,
and there was the problem of creating the Hellenic or Italian nation. Afterwards
there came instead the phenomenon of nation-units formed or in formation
coexisting as disunited parts of the loose geographical and cultural unity, first, of Christendom, then, of
Europe and with it the problem of the union of this Christendom or of this
Europe which though more than once conceived by individual states-men or
political thinkers, was never achieved nor even the steps attempted. Before its
difficulties could be solved, the modern movement with its unifying forces has
presented to us new and more complex phenomenon of a number of nation-units and
empire-units embedded in the loose, but growing life-interdependence and
commercial close-connection of mankind, and the attendant problem of the
unification of mankind already overshadows the unfulfilled dream of the
unification of Europe.
In physical
Nature vital organisms cannot live entirely on selves; they live either by
interchange with other vital organisms or partly by that interchange and partly
by devouring others; for these are the processes of assimilation common to separated physical life. In unification of life, on the other hand,
assimilation is possible which goes beyond this alternative of either the
devouring of one by another or a continued separate distinctness which limits
assimilation to a mutual reception of
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the energies discharged by one life upon another. There
can be instead an association of units consciously subordinating themselves to
a general unity which is developed in the process of their coming together.
Some of these, indeed, are killed and used as material for new elements, but
all cannot be so treated, all cannot be devoured by one dominant unit; for in
that case there is no unification, no creation of a larger unity, no continued
greater life, but only a temporary survival of the devourer by the digestion
and utilisation of the energy of the devoured. In the unification of human
aggregates, this then is the problem, how the component units shall be
subordinated to a new unity without their death and disappearance.
The weakness of the old
empire-unities created by conquest was that they tended to destroy the smaller
units they assimilated, as did imperial Rome, and to turn them into food for
the life of the dominant organ. Gaul, Spain, Africa, Egypt were thus killed,
turned into dead matter and their energy drawn into the centre, Rome; thus the
empire became a great dying mass on which the life of Rome fed for several
centuries. In such a method, however, the exhaustion of the life in the subject
parts must end by leaving the dominant voracious centre without any source for
new storage of energy. At first the best intellectual force of the conquered
provinces flowed to Rome and their vital energy poured into it a great supply
of military force and governing ability, but eventually both failed and first
the intellectual energy of Rome and then its military and political ability
died away in the midst of the general death. Nor would Roman civilisation have
lived even for so long but for the new ideas and motives it received from the
East. This interchange, however, had neither the vividness nor the constant
flow which marks the incoming and the return of ever new tides of thought and
motives of life in the modern world and it could not really revivify the low
vitality of the imperial body nor even arrest very long the process of its
decay. When the Roman grasp loosened, the world which it had held so firmly
constricted had been for long a huge, decorous, magnificently organised
death-in-life incapable of new organisation or self-regeneration; vitality
could only be restored through the inrush of the vigorous barbarian world from
the plains of
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Germany, the steppes beyond the Danube and the deserts
of Arabia. Dissolution had to
precede a movement of sounder construction.
In the
mediaeval period of nation-building, we see Nature mending this earlier error. When we speak
indeed of the errors of Nature, we use a figure illegitimately borrowed from
our human psychology and experience; for in Nature there are no errors but only the deliberate measure of her paces traced and re-
traced in a prefigured rhythm, of which each step has a meaning and its place
in the action and reaction of her gradual advance The crushing domination of
Roman uniformity was a device, not to kill out permanently, but to discourage
in their excessive separative vitality
the old smaller units, so that when they revived again they might not present an insuperable obstacle to the ;
growth of a true national unity. What the mere nation-unity may lose by
not passing through this cruel discipline, - we leave aside the danger it
brings of an actual death like the Assyrian or Chaldean as well as the
spiritual and other gains that may accrue by avoiding it, - is shown in the example of India where
the Maurya, Gupta, Andhra, Moghul empires, huge and powerful and well-organised
as they were, never succeeded in passing a ,team-roller over the too strongly
independent life of the subordinate unities from the village community to the
regional or linguistic area. It has needed the pressure of a rule neither
indigenous in origin nor locally centred, the dominance of a foreign nation
entirely alien in culture and morally armoured against the sympathies and
attractions of India's cultural atmosphere to do in a century this work which
two thousand years of a looser imperialism had failed to accomplish. Such a
process implies necessarily a cruel and often dangerous pressure and breaking
up of old institutions; for Nature tired of the obstinate immobility of an
age-long resistance seems to care little how many beautiful and valuable things
are destroyed so long as her main end is accomplished: but we may be sure that
if destruction is done, it is because for that end the destruction was indispensable.
In Europe,
after the Roman pressure was removed, the city- state and regional nation
revived as elements of a new construction; but except in one country and
curiously enough in Italy
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itself the city-state offered no real ,resistance to
the process of national unification. We may ascribe its strong resuscitation in
Italy to two circumstances, first, to the premature Roman oppression of the
ancient free city life of Italy before it had realised its full potentialities
and secondly, to its survival in seed both by the prolonged civil life of Rome
itself and by the persistence in the Italian municipia of a sense of
separate life, oppressed but never quite ground out of existence as was the
separate clan-life of Gaul and Spain or the separate city life of Greece. Thus
psycho- logically the Italian city-state neither died satisfied and fulfilled
nor was broken up beyond recall; it revived in new incarnations. And this
revival was disastrous to the nation-life of Italy, though an incalculable boon
and advantage to the culture and civilisation of the world; for as the city
life of Greece had originally created, so the city life of Italy recovered,
renewed and gave in a new form to our modern times the art, literature, thought
and science of the Graeco- Roman world. Elsewhere, the city- unit revived only
in the shape of the free or half-free municipalities of mediaeval France,
Flanders and Germany; and these were at no time an obstacle to unification, but
rather helped to form a subconscious basis for it and in the meanwhile to
prevent by rich impulses and free movement of thought and art the mediaeval
tendency to intellectual uniformity, stagnation and obscuration.
The old
clan-nation perished, except in countries like Ireland and Northern and Western
Scotland which had not undergone the Roman pressure, and there it was as fatal
to unification as the city-state in Italy; it prevented Ireland from evolving
an organised unity and the Highland Celts from amalgamating with the Anglo-Celtic Scotch nation
until the yoke of England passed over them and did what the. Roman rule would
have done if it had not been stayed in its expansion by the Grampians and the
Irish seas. In the rest of Western Europe, the work done by the. Roman rule was
so sound that even the domination of the Western countries by the tribal
nations of Germany failed to revive the old, strongly marked and obstinately
separative clan-nation. It created hi its stead the regional kingdoms of
Germany and the feudal and provincial divisions of
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France and
Spain; but it was only in Germany, which like Ireland and the Scotch highlands
had not endured the Roman yoke, that this regional life proved a serious
obstacle to unification. In France
it seemed for a time to prevent it, but in reality it resisted only long enough
to make itself of value as an element of richness and variation in the final
French unity. The unexampled perfection of that unity is a sign of the secret
wisdom concealed in the prolonged process we watch through the history of
France which seems to a superficial glance so miserable and distracted, so long
an alternation of anarchy with feudal or monarchic despotism, so different from
the gradual, steady and r' much more orderly development of the national life of England. But in
England the necessary variation and richness of the ultimate organism was
otherwise provided for by the great difference Of the races that formed the new
nation and by the persistence of Wales; Ireland -and Scotland as separate cultural
units with a subordinate self-consciousness of their own in the larger
unity.
The
European cycle of nation-building differs therefore from the ancient cycle
which led from the regional and city-state to the empire, first, in its not
overshooting itself by proceeding towards It larger unification to the neglect
of the necessary intermediate aggregate, secondly, in its slow and ripening
progression through three successive stages by which unity was secured and - yet the constituent elements not killed
nor prematurely nor unduly oppressed by the instruments of unification. The
first stage progressed through a long balancing of centripetal and centrifugal
tendencies in which the feudal system provided a principle of order and of a
loose but still organic unity. The second was a movement of unification and
increasing uniformity in which certain features of the ancient imperial system
of Rome -were repeated, but with' a less crushing force and exhausting
tendency. It was marked first by the creation of a metropolitan centre which
began to draw to it; like Rome, the best life energies of all the other parts.
A second feature was the growth of an absolute sovereign authority whose
function was to impose a legal, administrative, political and linguistic uniformity
and centralisation on the national life. A third sign of this movement
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was the establishment of a governing spiritual head and
body which served to impose a similar uniformity of religious thought and
intellectual education and opinion. This unifying pressure too far pursued
might have ended disastrously like the Roman but for a third stage of revolt
and diffusion which broke or subordinated these instruments, feudalism,
monarchy, Church authority as soon as their work had been done and substituted
a new movement directed towards the diffusion of the national life through a
strong and well-organised political, legal, social and cultural freedom and
equality. Its trend has been to endeavour that as in the ancient city, so in
the modem nation, all classes and all individuals should enjoy the benefits and
participate in the free energy of the released national existence.
The third stage of national life
enjoys the advantages of unity and sufficient uniformity created by the second
and is able to safely utilise anew the possibilities of regional and city life
saved from entire destruction by the first. By these gradations of national
progress, it has been made increasingly possible for our modern times to
envisage, if and where it is willed or needed, the idea of a federated nation
or federal empire based securely upon a fundamental and well-realised
psychological unity; this indeed was already achieved in a simple type in
Germany and in America. Also we can move now safely, if we will, towards a
partial decentralisation through subordinate governments, communes, and
provincial cities which may help to cure the malady of an excessive
metropolitan absorption of the best national energies and facilitate their free
circulation through many centres and plexuses. At the same time, we contemplate
the organised use of a State intelligently representative of the whole
conscious, active, vitalised nation as a means for the perfection of the life
of the individual and the community. This is the point which the development of
the nation-aggregate has reached at the moment when we are again confronted
either, according to future trends, with the wider problem of the imperial
aggregate or the still vaster problems created by the growing cultural unity
and commercial and political interdependence of all mankind.
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