A League of Nations
ANCIENT tradition believed in a golden age of mankind which
lay in the splendid infancy of a primeval past; it looked back to some type or
symbol of original perfection, Saturnian epoch, Satya Yuga, an age of
sincere being and free unity when the sons of heaven were leaders of the human
life and mind and the law of God was written, not in ineffective books, but on
the tablets of man's heart. Then he needed no violence of outer law or
government to restrain him from evil or to cut and force his free being into the
machine- made Procrustean mould of a social ideal; for a natural divine rule in
his members was the spontaneous and sufficient safeguard of his liberty. This
tradition was once so universal that one might almost be tempted to see in it
the race memory of some golden and splendid realisation, not perhaps a
miraculous divine beginning, but some past spiral cusp and apex, some topmost
gloriously mounting arc of the cycles, - if there were not the equal chance of
its being no more than a heightened example of that very common ideally
retrospective tendency in the human mind which glorifies the past out of all
perspective or proportion, blots out its shadows and sees it in some haze or
deceiving light against the dark immediate shadow of the present,
- or else a
projection from his sense of the something divine, pure and perfect within him
from which he has fallen, placed by symbolic legend not in the eternal but in
time, not inwardly in his spiritual being, but outwardly in his obscure
existence on this crude and transient crust of Earth. What concerns us more is
that we find often associated with this memory or this backward-looking
illusion, a vague hope far or near, or even a more precise prophetic or
religious forward- looking tradition of a coming back to us of that golden
perfection, Astraea redux, Saturnia regna, -let us say, a return from
the falling line of the cycle to another similar, perhaps even greater
high-glowing cusp and apex. Thus in the human mind
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which
looks always before and after, its great dream of the ideal past completed
itself by a greater dream of the ideal future.
These things modern man with his
scientific and secularised mentality finds it difficult to believe in unless he
has first theosophised or mysticised himself into a fine freedom from the
positive scientific intelligence. Science which traces so confidently the nobly
complete and astonishing evolution of our race in a fairly swift straight line
from the ape man to the dazzlingly unfixable brilliancy of Mr. Lloyd George and
the dyspeptic greatness of Rockefeller, rejects the old traditions as dreams
and poetic figments. But to recompense us for our loss it has given us instead
a more practicable, persistent and immediate vision of modern progress and the
future hope of a rational and mechanically perfectible society: that is the one
real religion sti111eft, the new Jerusalem of the modem creed of a positivist
sociology. The ideal past has lost its glamour, but a sober glamour of the
future is brought near to us and takes on to the constructive human reason a
closer hue of reality. The Asiatic mind is indeed still incurably prone to the
older type of imagination which took and still takes so many inspiring forms,
second coming of Christ, City of God, the Divine Family, advent of Messiah,
Mahdi or Avatar, - but whatever the variety of the form, the essence is
the same, a religious or spiritual idealisation of a possible future humanity.
The European temperament - and we are all trying to become for the moment, superficially
at least, white, brown, yellow or black Europeans,- demands something more
familiarly terrestrial and tangible, a secular, social, political dream of
evolving humanity, a perfected democracy, socialism, communism, anarchism. But
whichever line we take and whether it be truth or illusion, the thing behind is
the same and would seem to be a necessity of our human mind and will to action.
We cannot do without some kind of futurist idealism. Something we must labour
to build individually and collectively out of ourselves and our life, unless we
would be content with the commonness and stumbling routine of a half-made and
half-animal manhood, - a self-dethronement to which that which is greatest in
us will never consent,- and man cannot build greatly whether in art or life,
unless
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he
can conceive an idea and form of perfection and, conceiving, believe in his
power to achieve it out of however rebellious and unductile a stuff of nature.
Deprive him of this faith in his power for perfection and you slay or maim his
greatest creative or self-creative faculty. In the absence then of any
immediate practicability of that higher and profounder dream of a spiritually
united and perfected humanity, the dream of social and political meliorism may
be accepted as the strongest available incentive to keep humanity going
forward. It is better that it should have the ideal of a saving machinery than
that it should have no ideal at all, no figure of a larger, better and sweeter
life.
This secular dream of a future
golden or half-golden age of a more perfected, rational and peacefully
co-operative society has taken recently a singular step forward in the
effectuating imagination of mankind and even got as far as some attempt at a
first step towards actual effectuation. In ideal and imagination it has assumed
the form of a political and economic society of the nations which will get rid
of the cruel and devastating device of war, establish a reign of international
law and order and solve without clash, strife or collision, by reason, by
co-operation, by arbitration, by mutual accommodation all the more dangerous
problems which still disturb or imperil the comfortable peace, amity and
organised productiveness which should be the reasonable state of mankind. International
peace an ordered legality and arrangement of the world's affairs, a guaranteed
liberty, - or for the unfit a preparation and schooling for liberty,
- an organised
unity -of the life of the race, this is the figure of the golden age which we
are now promised. - At the first sight one has some sense of a lacuna
somewhere, a suspicion of a perfection too external and too well-regulated by
clock-work and a timidly insistent idea that it may perhaps be neither so
readily feasible nor so lyrically enchanting as its prophets pretend. One may
be disposed to ask, what of the spirit and soul of man, the greatness of the
inner perfection which can alone support and give security and some kind of
psychological reality to even the most ideal arrangement of his outer life,
-how far that has gone or is likely to go in the near
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future, or what means or opportunities the
new order proposes to offer for its growth and satisfaction? But this is no doubt
too esoteric a way of looking at things. The practical western mind does not
trouble itself overmuch with these subtleties; it prefers, and rightly enough,
since to get something. done seems to be the chief actual business of man in
life, to hasten to the matter in hand and realise something useful, visible and
tangible, good enough for a practical beginning or step forward. It believes
besides in the omnipotence of law and institution to make the life of man
conformable to his intellectual or spiritual ideals; it is satisfied if it can
write down and find sanctions for a good and convenient system of laws, a
compact or constitution, set up the mechanical means for the enforcement of its
idea, build into effective form a workable institution. Other less palpable
things, if they are at all indispensable, are expected to develop of
themselves, as surely they ought under good mechanical conditions.
Good philosophical as well as practical
justification may be put forward for this attitude. Form, after all, is an
effective suggestion to the soul; machinery, as even churches and religions
have been prone to believe, is all-powerful and can be trusted to create
whatever you may need of the spirit. God himself or contriving Nature had first
to invent the machinery and form of a universe and could only then work out in
its mould some figure of the spirit. Therefore, the sign of great hope, the
good tidings of peace and good will unto men is not that a new and diviner or
simply a more human spirit has been born into humanity, seized upon its leaders
and extended itself among its ego-ridden, passion-driven, interest-governed
millions, but that an institution has been begotten at Paris with the blessings
of Premiers and Presidents, - the constitution of an inter- national society,
supported by the armed force of great nations and empires and therefore sure to
be practicable, prosper and succeed, has been got into shape which will make
war, militarism, oppression, exploitation an ugly dream of the past, induce Capital
and Labour, lion and lamb, to lie down side by side in peace and not, as a
wicked Bolshevism proposes, one well digested inside the other, and in fact
bring about before
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long,
sooner it is hoped rather than later, the grand fraternity of mankind. This is
good news, if true. Still, before we enter the house of thanksgiving, let us
pause a little and cast an eye of scrutiny on this new infant phenomenon.
A just, generous, cordial and valid
League of Nations is the thing which has been created, it seems to replace the
old unjust Balances of Power and stumbling, quarrelsome Concerts. And if it is
to succeed better than the loose, ineffective and easily dissoluble things which
it supplants, it must satisfy, one would think, certain conditions which they
did not even attempt to fulfil. And one would at first sight fix something like
the following as the indispensable conditions. First, this League must draw
into its circle in one way or another all the existing nations of the earth;
and that it must do on both just and agreeable terms so that they may join
willingly and gladly and without any serious misgivings, reservations or
heart-burnings; it must satisfy each and all by a fair and effective and, one
must add in these democratic days, an honourable and equal position in this new
society of the peoples. Since it should command and retain their moral assent
and support, if it is to maintain in being an otherwise insecure material
adhesion, it must, in order to do that constantly, not only at the moment of
formation but in the future, base itself on no self-regarding law or
established table of institutions fixed by any arbitrary will of those who for
the moment are the strongest but on some firm, recognisable and always
evolvable principle of equity and justice, for only where these things are is
there a moral guarantee and security. The constitution of the League must
provide a trustworthy means for the solution of all difficult, delicate and
embarrassing questions which may hereafter endanger the infant and precarious
framework of international society, and for that purpose it must establish a
permanent, a central and a strong authority which all nations can readily
recognise and accept as a natural head and faithful dynamic expression of the
corporate being of mankind. These, one would think, are not at all nebulous,
fanciful or too idealistic demands, but the practical necessities of any system
of yet loose unification such as now is contemplated, conditions it must from
the first and increasingly
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satisfy
if it is to survive the enormous difficulties of an enterprise which, as it
proceeds, will have to work out of being most' of the natural egoistic
instincts and rooted past habits of the international mentality of the race.
This new gigantic bantling which has come
into existence with War for its father and an armed and enforced Peace for its
mother, with threatening and bloodily suppressed revolutions, a truncated
internationalistic idealism and many half-curbed, just snaffled rearing
national egoisms for its witnesses and god-parents, has not, when looked at
from this standpoint, in spite of certain elements of promise, an altogether
reassuring appearance. The circumstances of its inception were adverse and
except by a tremendous effort of self-conquest in the minds of the rulers and
statesmen of the victorious nations, a self- conquest rendered a thousand times
more difficult by the stupendous magnitude and the intoxicating completeness of
their victory, any at all complete result and auspicious new beginning could
not be hoped for. This league now in the last throes of formation has not been
a spontaneous creation of a peaceful, equal and well-combined will towards
unity of all the world's peoples. It comes into being overshadowed by the
legacy of hatreds, reprisals, apprehensions, ambitions of a murderous world war
chequered by revolutions which have opened a new and alarming vista of
world-wide unrest and disturbance. It has grown out of a vague but strong
aspiration, -
more among the rank
and file of the nations, and even so not equally common to all of them, than
among their governing men or classes, - to find some means for the future
avoidance of violent catastrophes in the international life of mankind. It has
been precipitated into actual and immediate being by the determination of an
eminent idealistic statesman with the modified and in some cases unwilling
assent of others who shared only partially or not at all his idealism, one man
of strong will who, aided by a commanding position given to him by
circumstances and a flexible obstinacy in his use of them, has been able to
impose some shadow or some first incomplete form of his ideal
- the future alone can show which it is to be
- on the crude course of events and the realistic
egoism of
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governments
and imperial nations. But in present fact the large and complete ideal with
which he began his 'York, has been so impinged upon by the necessities of
national passions, ambition, self-interest and by pressure of the force of
circumstances, - still in spite of all idealism the chief determining factors
of life, - that it is difficult to put one's hand on any thing in the concrete
arrangement formulated and say without doubt or qualm that here is the very
embodiment of the high principles in whose name the great war was fought and
won. This is not surprising, nor should it be disappointing except to those who
trusted more to their hopes than to experience. All we have to see is whether
those high original principles were indeed necessary to the future security and
evolution of this new association of the peoples and, if so, what chance they
have of
emerging from the forms in which they now seem to have been rather buried than
given a body. And that will depend on the extent to which the conditions
already suggested are realised or evolvable from the League's incipient
constitution.
An effective League of Nations must draw
into itself all the existing nations of mankind; for any considerable omission
or exclusion will bring in almost inevitably an element of future danger, of
possible disagreements and collisions, perhaps of a rival grouping with
jealousies which must lead to another and more colossal catastrophe. In its
ostensible figure this new League does not by any means wear a catholic:
appearance. Professedly, it is nothing but an association of actual friends and
allies. In the front rank stand confident and masterful five great and powerful
empires or nations, - the sole great Powers left standing by the hurricane
in unimpaired strength, and two of them indeed with an enormously increased
power, influence and dominion: behind crowd in dimly and ineffectively a number
of smaller European and American peoples, those who were allied to them or
otherwise on their side in the war, and one feeble and disjointed oriental
leviathan; but all these seem to partake only with a passive assent or a
subordinate co-operation, - and in fact with very much of the first and very
little of the latter, - whether in the determining of the form of the League
or in its control and government. And the
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immediate
professed object of the association is not to knit the world together in the
beginnings of a well-conceived unity, - that could only have been done if all
the peoples had taken a free and equal part in these deliberations, whereas in
fact the whole thing has been hastily constructed in semi-secret conference by
the victors of the war, and chiefly by the will of the five leading Powers. Its
object is to regulate the interests and mutual relations of the members of the
League by rule, agreement, deliberation and arbitration and their relations
with other States -outside the League as much as may be by the same means; it
is this only and in the beginning it is nothing more. But a door is left open
for the nations still outside to enter in a given time, provided they subscribe
unquestioningly to a system which they will have had no hand in framing, though
under it they will have to live. On the other hand a door of egress is also
provided for any nation wishing to recede hereafter from the League, and if
disunion should set in among the greater Powers, this dangerous, though under
the circumstances perhaps unavoidable provision, may easily lead to the
automatic dissolution of even this hesitating first frame of a partial unity.
But the facts and forces of the situation
are perhaps more favourable than ostensible paper provisions. The nations not
yet included are with two great and perilous exceptions small and
inconsiderable and their position outside will be so disadvantageous, they will
be at every turn so much at the mercy of this formidable combination,
- for the five
dominant Powers will easily be able, if they are determined and united, to
enforce their will vigorously against all dissidents, -
that they may
be expected to subscribe more or less readily to its terms or at any rate to
enter in after a few years' experience of exclusion. The Great Powers too are
not likely to have strong reasons for breaking asunder for some years to come,
and time may perhaps, pro- vided no new revolutions sweep across the world,
confirm the habit of united action. We may assume that here we have in fact,
though not yet in name, the beginnings of a council or an imperfect federation
of the world's peoples.
But the constitution of this
Council and the conditions under which the variously circumstanced nations are
admitted into or
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brought
under it, have a still more baffling appearance. They do not at all correspond
with the democratic idealism of the human mind of to-day but rather strike one
as a structure of almost mediaeval irregularity, complexity, incoherent
construction, a well-nigh feudal political building with some formal
concessions on its ground floor to the modern canon of liberty and equality. A
unification of mankind may proceed very much on the same lines as past
unifications of smaller peoples into nations or empires. It might have been
brought about by the military force or the political influence of some powerful
king-state preponderant by land and sea, -
pampotent par terre et mer, as Nostradamus prophetically described the British
Empire, - not necessarily despotic and absolute but easily first among equals;
and that I suppose is what would have happened if Germany had come up top dog
in the struggle instead of a very much mutilated and flattened undermost. Nor
is it at all certain that something of the sort will not eventually come about
if the present attempt or crude sketch of a system should come to grief; but
for the moment this contingency has been prevented or at least postponed. That
possibility eliminated, the unification may still take the form of an oligarchy
or hegemony of great Powers, leaders and masters of the herd, with the weaker
rabble rest hanging on the flanks or posteriors of their mighty bellwethers and
following them and their omnipotent decisions in sometimes a submissive and
approbatory, sometimes a mutinous and discordant chorus; something very much of
this kind is what this new League has certainly been in its formation and is
likely to turn out in its execution. But there was also the vain present hope
or dream, the strong future though far-off possibility of an equal, just and
democratic federation of the peoples in which the dwarf and Goliath nations,
the strong and the weak, the wealthy and the less wealthy, the immediately
successful and the long or temporarily unfortunate, -
who may yet
have better gifts, have done really more for mankind than the arrivistes
among the nations, - will have, as is the rule or the ideal in all democratic
bodies, in law and in initial fact an equal position and there will be only a
natural leadership and influence to differentiate by a freely accorded greater weight and voice. These were the
three possibilities,
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and
they represent respectively the ideal of the past which is said to have been
buried in the grave of imperial Germany, the fact of the present which is a
fact only and to none an ideal, and the ideal of the future, loudly trumpeted
during the war, though there is none now, except the vanquished, the subject
and the revolutionary, so poor and weak as to do it reverence.
The initial constitution of the League is
almost frankly oligarchic in its disposal of the international balance of
power, - not quite an absolute oligarchy, indeed, for there is certainly a
general assembly which is so far democratic that all its members will exult in
the dignifying possession of an equal vote. Honduras and Guatemala may, if the
fancy pleases them, indulge themselves in some feeling of being lifted up to an
equality with imperial England, America, the new arbiter of the world, and
victorious France. But this is an illusion, a trompe l' ad!. For
we find that this general assembly is in no sense the governing body but only a
secondary authority, a court of approval and reference, to which the powerful
executive nations will refer, mostly at their own discretion, this or that
doubtful question for discussion. In practice and fact the new sovereign of the
world under this constitution, - jagadiSvaro
vii? - will be the executive body of League of Nations. But there the five great Powers will
sit in a secure and formidable permanence, while a changeable selection of
representatives picked out from the common herd will diminutively assist their
deliberations, assisting or discussing in the giant obscurity of their shadow.
One can easily see how the superior management of the world's affairs will go
under these conditions and in fact have already had a taste of its quality in
the process of this formation and this building of a basis for what it is still hoped by many will be a long or
even a permanent peace. Evidently in such a governing body the Great Five will
deter- mine the whole policy and action; nothing will readily pass which will
be at all displeasing to these new masters of the earth, or let us say, to this
new composite hegemony, - for its
decisions will at no time be guided by that perilous,
ductile and variable thing, a majority, but must be by unanimity. What in
principle is this system but a novel, an improved, an enlarged and regularised
edition of the Concert of Powers, -
liberalised a little
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in
form because buttressed by a democratic general assembly which may, indeed, as
circumstances develop and conditions change, become something, but may equally
remain a dignified or undignified cypher, -
but still in essence another and firmer Avatar
of that old, loose and dubious body? Even something of that historic device,
the balance of power, though now much changed, shifted, disjointed and
perilously lopsided, still remains subtly concealed in this form of a novel
order. And that element is likely to pronounce itself later on; for where there
is no impersonal governing principle and no clear original structure in the
international body, its motions must be determined by a balance of interests,
and the balance of interests can only be kept reasonably steady by carefully
preserving an established balance of power. That was the justification of the
old armed order; it is likely to be a necessity of this new system for
regulating chaos.
This creation is a realistic practical
construction with a very minimum concession to the new idealism: it has been
erected by statesmen who have been concerned to legalise the actual facts and
organise the actual forces which have emerged from the World War - a few
inconveniently new-born and of a menacing significance which have been barred
and boycotted, blockaded or pressed out of existence: it is hoped also to
secure their system against attack by any resuscitable ghost of the past or
violently subversive genius of the future. From that point of view it has been
constructed with a remarkable skill and fidelity to present realities, though
one may be tempted to think with an insufficient allowance for obscure but
already visible potentialities. The correspondence between fact and form is
accurate to perfection. Five Powers have been the real victors of the war,
three of them central and decisive forces who now actually control the world by
their will, and two others who intervened as less powerful subsidiary
strengths, but can put in some effective claim and material weight into the
future balance of forces. This fact is reproduced in the constitution of the
governing body; it is these Five who by virtue of their wealth and force are to
have in it a permanent voice, the three great ones' to strike the major chords
and determine the general harmony of the concert, the two others to bring in,
as best they can and when they can, minor
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chords and unessential variations. Then there
are the great number of small or weaker nations who have at their command minor
material effectives and, though incapable of being principals in any very great
conflict may be useful as minor auxiliaries, the free peoples, allies included
from the beginning by right, neutrals invited to participate in a settled
organisation of 'peace though they did not throw their weight into the decision
of war, enemies, old or new, who may be admitted when they have satisfied more
or less onerous or crushing and disabling conditions. These will make the
general assembly: some of them will have from time to time an uncertain voice
in the governing body; the rest will be the mass, the commons, the general body
who will possess some limited amount of actual power and some kind of moral
force behind the executive. Labour too has been made by the War a great though
as yet incoherent international power, and the League, wishing evidently to be
wise in time and make terms with this formidable new fact, recognises at its
side Labour in a special separate conference.
But there are also new Asiatic peoples
who cannot now be admitted, because they are infants and unripe; there are
subject and protected nations for whom the war was not fought and who cannot
share in the once hoped-for general freedom, but must trust to the generous and
unselfish liberalism of their rulers and protectors; there are African tribes
who are the yet unmanufactured raw material of humanity. These are to be left
under the old or put under a new control or are to be entrusted to the paternal
hands of this or that governing power who will be in the legal style of the new
dispensation, not masters and conquerors, - for in this just and miraculous peace there are
no annexations, only rectified arrangements of control and territory,
- but trustees,
mandatories. A mandate from the League will be the safe- guard of these less
fortunate peoples. For we are, it seems, about to live in quite a new moralized
world in which the general con- science of mankind will be wide awake and
effective and the League is there to represent it. As its representative it
will take a periodical report of their trust from the trustees, - who also as
the great Powers of the League will be themselves at once mandatories, leaders
and deputies of this same general con-
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science.
All existing forces are represented in just proportions in this very remarkable
constitution. .
The idealist may find much to
object against the perpetuation and hardening of the unideal existent fact on
which the system of the League is founded, but undoubtedly that system has a
.good deal to say for itself, can urge very urgent considerations from the
point of view of practical possibility. One indispensable condition of its
success is a solid central authority, strong and permanent, capable of enforcing
its decisions, and it must be an organ which all nations can accept as the
natural head and faithful dynamic expression of the corporate being of mankind.
As far as is at all practicable at the moment, here is, it may be said, just
such an authority. The international body of mankind is still an amorphous
mass, its constituent peoples unaccustomed to act together, heterogeneous by
virtue of their various degrees of development, organised power, experience,
civilisation: a free general assembly, a parliament of the world, an equal
federation of mankind, is out of the question; even an equal federation of free
and civilised peoples is likely to be an incoherent and futile body incapable
of effective corporate action. What is to enforce and give practicality to the
general needs and desires if not the power, influence, authority and, where
need is, the strong arm of the great nations and empires acting in concert but
with a due regard for the common interests and general voice? Who else are to
determine preponderatingly the decisions they will have to enforce or can give
to them a permanent principle or sustained practical policy? No combination of
little American republics and minor European Powers could dictate a world
policy to the United States, France and the British Empire or could be allowed
to play by the blind rule of a majority with these great interests. But in the
League the various constituents of the corporate body are so ranked and related
as to give precisely a faithful dynamic expression of it in its present
conditions; whatever evolution is necessary can be worked out through a general
control and a periodical revision of treaties and relations. In brief, the
whole international condition of the world is a chaos that has to be brought into
order and shape, and that is a work which cannot be done by an idyllic idealism
or an abs-
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tract
perfection of principles which are not in correspondence with the actualities of
things and, if prematurely applied, are likely to bring in a worse confusion,
but can only be accomplished by a strong and capable organised Force which will
take things as they stand, impose a new system of law and order on this chaos,
some firm however imperfect initial framework, and watch over its development
with a strict eye on the practical possibilities of progress. On that safe and
firm basis a slow but sure and deliberate advance can be made towards a future
better law and ideal order. There is another side to the question, but let us
suppress it for the moment and give full value and weight to the
considerations.
But all the more indispensable does it
then become that the principles of the progress to be made shall be
recognised from the beginning in the law and constitution of the League, or at
least indicated in such a way and so impressed on its system as to ensure that
on those lines or towards the fulfilment of those principles its action should
proceed and not be diverted to other, baser, reactionary or obstructive uses.
The declaration of general principles and their embodiments and safeguards in
the democratic constitutions promulgated in the eighteenth century were no
barren ideologists' formularies, - any more than the affirmation of
constitutional principles in earlier documents like the Magna Charta, - but
laid down the basis on which government and progress must proceed in the
new-born order of the world and were at once a signpost and an effective moral
guarantee for the assured march of Democracy. We look in vain in the
constitution of the League for any such great guiding principles. The
provisions for the diminution of the possibilities of war, the creation of some
new small nation and the safety given to those that already existed can hardly
be called by that name. There is here no hint of any charter of the
international rights and duties of the peoples in a new order making at once
for liberty and union. The principle of self-determination over which the later
stages of the war were fought has been ruthlessly thrown overboard and
swallowed up in the jaws of a large pot-bellied diplomatic transaction, - it
may be only for a time like the prophet in the stomach of the whale, but for
the nonce there is an
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almost
perfect disappearance. Some infinitesimal shadow of it we see in petty
transactions like the arrangements' about Schleswig- Holstein, but for the rest
the map of the world has been altered very much in the old familiar fashion
without any consistent regard to nationality or choice, but rather by the
agreement and fiat of armed victorious nations. A famous pronouncement during
the war had denounced the theory of trusteeship, that cloak which can cover
with so noble a grace the hard reality of domination and exploitation,
- things now too
gross in their nakedness to be presented undraped to the squeamish moral sense
of a modern humanity. But in this after-war system that very theory of
trusteeship is glorified and consecrated, though with the gloss of a mandate subject
to examination - by a body whose action and deliberation will be
controlled by the trustees. Subject nations are still to exist in this world;
for the system of mandates is only to be applied where a previous subjection
has been abrogated, it is to be applied to some of the Asiatic or African
peoples who lay under the uplifted scourge of the now fallen empires; the rest
who had the advantage of milder masters, the remaining subject peoples from
Ireland to Korea, have no need of any such safeguard!
It may be that all this denial of a too ideal principle of liberty was
inevitable; for we must, we are now told, not be in too great a hurry to get
from midnight to midday; the law of the times and seasons must be observed, a
mitigated darkness must first come and then twilight and then dawn and then the
glad confident morning before we can live in the golden noon of a universalised
liberty and justice. But meanwhile what other guiding principle, what embodied
idea of law and right, what equitable and equal balance of obligations is to be
the firm basis of the new order? We find none, only a machinery for the
diminution of the chances of war, not for their removal, by compulsory
arbitration, by the threat or actuality of armed force and economic pressure;
for the revision of treaties; for the secured possession of colonies,
dependencies, markets, frontiers, ports, mandates; for the international
discussion and settlement of the conflicting claims of Capital and Labour.
There is a system of immediately practicable relations, an attempt to affirm
and to secure a new
Page-622
status
quo, a provision for minor
manipulations and alterations; but there is little actual foundation for a new
and nobler world-, order. A preparation for it may have been the intention of
the institutors, but the fulfilment of their intention is left very much at the
mercy of the uncertain chances of the future. The idealism of the founder has
so far triumphed as to get some limited form of a League of Nations admitted
and put into shape, but at every other point the idealist has gone under and
the stamp of the politician and diplomat is over this whole new modern machine,
- of the mere practical man with his short sight and his rough and ready
methods. It is a leaky and ill-balanced ship launched on waters of tempest and
chaos without a chart or compass or sailing instructions.
Well, but in other times devices as
rough and unbecoming have been the foundations of great structures, and if this
League can be kept in being there may be some chance of getting it suffused
with the principles and ideals for whose realisation the vague heart and
conscience of mankind, baffled always by its own lax complicities, is beginning
to thirst and weary. But to the eye of the critic this new pact would seem to
carry in itself the ominous seeds of its own future mutability and perhaps
dissolution. For first of all the League is entering into being with a very
limited and feeble enthusiasm on its behalf even in the nations which are
interested in its maintenance; America does not seem to be in a quite flawless
harmony of agreement with its President in his self-satisfaction over the
shapely beauty of his nursling; the world of Labour and socialism is critical,
dissatisfied, distrustful, uneasy, simmering over into brief and uncertain but
widespread and menacing strikes and formidable demands and murmurings. These
are not favourable signs. The League will need all the support and hearty
acquiescence it can get to overcome the difficulties that it will meet in
constructing the world according to its own idea and fashion, a task which will
not end but only be just beginning when peace is concluded, and it is doubtful
whether it will have what it needs in any but the most grudging measure. Not
enthusiastic support, but a sort of muttering acquiescence for want of any
chance of a better thing at the moment is the general mood of the world's
peoples whose
Page-623
interests
it proposes to manage. A poor starting wind for so momentous a voyage.
But let us suppose the system accepted
and under way, - what are the actual facts which will meet it in the
future? Its system will stand for a long time to come for the nations conquered
in the war as a perpetuation of their downfall diminution and disgrace; it will
be to them a gaoler and inflicter of penalties, a guardian of tasks and
payments with an uplifted scourge. It need not have been so, if a generous and
equal peace had been made or, better, if apart from an such questions, there
had been a peace based not on the will of a conquering might, even though
better-minded than the might it conquered, but on clear and undeniable
principles, such as the utmost possible self-determination, equal opportunity,
equal position for the world's peoples; that would have been indeed a peace
without any other victors or vanquished than vanquished force and wrong and
victorious equity. But the leading nations have chosen to impose a diplomatic
peace in which the League which imposes it figures as an administrator of criminal
justice. The vanquished nations, now for the most part democracies and no
longer the old aggressive militarisms which made the war, were, it is said,
criminals and breakers of peace and the penalty inflicted is far too light in
comparison with their crimes. It may be so in literal terms,
- though a
criminal justice inflicted by one of two parties in a quarrel on his beaten
opponent and not by an impartial judge is apt rightly or wrongly to be suspect
to the mere human reason and at best much of what is caned justice is only
legalised revenge, - but still it may be that nothing but justice or even less
than justice has been done. But that makes no difference to the fact that a
number of new democracies, vigorous and intellectual peoples, born to a new life
which should have been one of hope and good will to the coming order, will be
there inevitably as a source of revolt and disorder, eager to support any
change which will remove their burdens, gratify resentment and heal their
festering wounds. They may be held down, kept weak and maimed, even though one
of them is laborious, skilful, organised Germany, but that will mean a weakness
and an ill-balance in the new order itself, and if they recover strength, it
will not be to
Page-624
acquiesce
in their inferior place and the perpetual triumph and
greatness of their ancient
rivals. Only in a legalised system of equal democracies can there be some true
chance of the cessation of these jealousies, enmities, recurrent struggles.
Otherwise war will break out again or in some other form the old battle
continue. An unequal balance can never be a security for a steady and peaceful
world-system.
Pass, if this were the only peril of the
newly inaugurated sys- tem. But this League seems also to stand for a perpetuation
of a new status quo to be arrived at by the peace which is being made
its foundation. The great Powers, it would seem, have arrived at a compact to
secure their dominions and holdings against any future menace of diminution.
This arrangement is of the nature at once of a balance of power,
- but with all
the dangers of an unequal balance, - and of an attempt to perpetuate for ever
certain at present preponderating influences and established greatnesses. That attempt
is against all the teaching of history and all. the perennial movement of
Nature; the League which stands committed to it is committed to a jealously
guarded insecurity and the preservation of an unstable equilibrium. It is not
certain that the constructing Powers themselves remain consistently satisfied
with the terms of their compact or able to resist that urge of national and of
human destiny which is greater than any diplomatic arrangement or the wills of
governments and statesmen. But even if that unheard-of thing be realised
between them,
a durable international
friendship and alliance, it may serve for a time, but will it serve for a very long time
against the world's urge towards change? Power rots by having security, and
those who are powerful to-day to impose their will on the nations, may not
always keep that force in spite of their bulk and wealth and armed magnitudes.
Then there are old sores perpetuated and new sores opened by this arrangement
of a hastily made peace of devices and compromises. Whether the Balkan question
will be permanently settled is at least dubious; but there will be now the
question of a German Bohemia, a particoloured Poland, perhaps, a Saar region
with its wealth in the possession of a foreign Power, an insoluble question of
Yugoslav and Italian, a new question of Tyrol, an Irish trouble and a
Page-625
Korean
trouble in which the League cannot interfere without deep offence to England
and Japan and which yet clamour more and more for a settlement, a Russian chaos.
There is a Mahomedan world which will one day have a word to say about the new status
quo. There is the whole question of Asia and Africa., which is the most
formidable but of which much need not be said, for its issues are patent to
every eye. The partition of Africa between a few European powers with all its
economical advantages can be no permanent solution. Asia is arising in the
surge of an upward wave and cannot always be kept in a condition of weakness,
tutelage and vassalage. When the time comes, how will a league mainly of
European and American peoples deal with her claims? Will Europe be content to
recede from Asia? Will the mandatories be in any haste to determine their
mandate? Can there be any modified perpetuation of present conditions which will
be at all compatible with an equality between the two continents? These are
questions which no imperfect sketch of a league of nations on the existing
basis can decide according to its phantasy; only the onward moving world-spirit
can give them their answer.
None of these dangers and difficulties
are as yet formidable in their immediate incidence, but there is another
problem of a pressing, immediate insistency and menace which touches with its
close foreshadowing finger the very life of any new international system and
that is the approaching struggle for supremacy between Capital and Labour. This
is a far other matter than the clash of conflicting imperialisms in the broad
spaces or the wrangle of quarrelsome nationalisms snarling at each other's
heels or tearing each other in the narrower ways of the Earth; for those are
questions at most of division of power, territory and economic opportunity on
the present basis of society, but this means a questioning of that basis and a
shaking of the very foundations of the European world-order. This League is a
league of governments, and all these governments are bourgeois monarchies or
republics, instruments of a capitalistic system assailed by the tides of
socialism.. Their policy is to compromise, to concede in detail, but to prolong
their own principle so that they may survive and capitalism be still the
dominant power of a new mixed semi-
Page-626
socialistic
order, very much as the governments which formed the Holy Alliance sought to save
the dominance of the old idea of aristocratic monarchy by a compromise with the
growing spirit of democracy. What they offer is better and more human
conditions for the labourer, even a certain association in the government of
the society, but still a second and not a primary place in the scale. This was
indeed all to which Labour itself formerly aspired, and it is all to which the
rear of its army still looks for- ward, but it is already ceasing to be the
significance of the Labour movement; a new idea has arisen, the dominance, the
rule of labour, and it has already formulated itself and captured a great
portion of the forces of socialism. It has even established for a while in
Russia a new kind of government, a dictatorship of the proletariate, which
aspires to effect a rapid transition to another order of society.
Against this novel idea and its
force the existing governments are compelled by the very principle of their
being to declare war and to struggle against its coming with all the strength
at their disposal and strive to mobilise against it whatever faith in existing
things still remains in the mind of the peoples. The old order has still no
doubt strength enough to crush out of existencet if it wills, the form which
this coming of Demogorgon has already taken and to make a more or less speedy
end of Russian Bolshevism. The Bolshevist system, isolated in a single country,
weakened by its own initial crudities and revolutionary violencest struggling
fiercely against impracticable odds, may well be annihilated; but the thing
which is behind Bolshevism and has given it its un- expected virility and
vitality, cannot be so easily conjured or pressed out of being. That thing is
the transference of the basis of society from wealth to labour, from the power
of money to the simple power of the man and his work, and that cannot be
stopped or prevented, - though it may be for a time put off,
- not because
labour any more than wealth is the true basis of society, but because this is
the logical and inevitable outcome of the whole evolution of European society.
The rule of the warrior and aristocrat, the Kshatriya, founded upon power has
given place to the rule of the Vaishyas, the professional and industrial
classes, founded upon wealth and legalism, and that again must
Page-627
the others. cannot be accomplished without much strife and
upheaval and there is every sign that its course will be attended with the
shattering violence of revolution. It is proposed indeed to the new force that
it shall work itself out calmly, slowly, peacefully by the recognised means of Parliamentarism; but Parliamentarism is passing through a phase of considerable
discredit, and a doubt has arisen in the minds of the workers whether it is at
all a right or possible means for their object and whether by a reliance upon
it they will not be playing into the hands of their opponents: for Parliament
is actually a great machine of the propertied classes and even the
Parliamentary socialist tends easily to become a semi-disguised or a half yield
to the rule of the Shudra, the proletariate, founded upon work and association.
This change like and half bourgeois. The new order of society would seem to
demand the institution of a new system of government. If then a new order of
society is bound to come with its inevitable reversal of existing conditions,
and still more if it comes by a revolutionary struggle, how will a system of a
League of Nations based upon existing conditions, a League not really of
nations but of governments, and of governments committed to the maintenance of
the old order and using their closer association as a means for combating the
new idea which is hostile to their own form of existence, be likely to fare in
this earth-shaking or this tornado? It is more likely to disappear than to
undergo a gentle transformation, and if it disappears, another system of
international comity may replace it, but it will not be a League of Nations.
We will suppose, however, or even
trust, that the League embodying in spite of appearances the best combined
statesman- ship of the world, circumvents all these perils, weathers every
storm and leads forward the destinies of mankind in the paths of an at first
more or less uneasy, but eventually firmer increasing peace and mutual .accommodation.
What is it then that it will have at the beginning or in the end actually
accomplished? It will have made some beginning of the substitution of a state
of law for the older international status which alternated and oscillated
between outbreaks of war and an armed peace. That, no doubt, if at all firmly
done, will be a great step forward in the known
Page-628
history
of human civilisation. For it will mean that what was founded in the unit of
the nation centuries ago, will be now at last founded in the society of the
nations. But let us not leap too easily at what may well be an unsound
parallel. What civilised society has done most effectively from the beginning
is to substitute some kind of legalised relation, legalised offence and defence,
legalised compensation or revenge for injuries in place of the state of
insecure peace and frequent private or tribal warfare in which each man had to
claim what he considered to be justice by the aid of his kin or the strength of
his own hand. At present the persistent survival of crime is the only remnant
of that earlier pre-legal state of natural violence. But for an organised
society to deal with the refractory individual is a comparatively facile task;
here the units are nations with a complex corporate personality, great masses
of men themselves too organised, representing the vital interests, claims,
passions of millions of men divided by corporate, powerful and persistent
exclusivenesses, hatreds, jealousies, antipathies which the founding of this would-be
all- healing League and new society of peoples finds much acerbated, much more
pronounced than in the days before the deluge when a tolerant and easy
cosmopolitanism was more in fashion, and which its disposition seems calculated
to deepen and perpetuate rather than to heal and abolish. And it is on this
incoherent mass of peoples void of all living principle or urgent will of union
that a status of peace and settled law has to be imposed and this in a period
of increasing chaos, upheaval, menace of revolution.
The national society succeeded only
in proportion as it developed an indivisible unity and a single homogeneous
authority which could both legislate, or at least codify and maintain law, and
see to the rigorous execution of its settled rules, decrees, and ordinances.
Here the work has to be done by an institution which represents no embodied
unity, but rather a jamming or stringing together of very strongly separate
units, and which does not legislate, but only passes very partial and opportunist
special decrees ad hoc, and to enforce them has constantly to resort to
intimidation, blockade, economical pressure, menace of a wholesale starvation
of peoples, menace of violent military occupation, - things
which
prolong the after-war state of unrest and recoil in their
Page-629
secondary effects upon the countries whose governments are engaged
in this singular international pastime. It is not difficult to see that a
better system and a better means must be found if the latest strong hope of
humanity is to turn out anything more than one other generous illusion of the
intellectuals and one other chimerical wave of longing in the vague heart of
the peoples.
Even the national society has not been able after so long a
time and so much experience to eliminate in its own body the disease of strife
between its members, class war, bitter hostility of interests and ideas
breaking out at times into bloody clashes, civil wars, sanguinary revolutions
or disastrous, grimly obstinate and ruthless economical struggles which are the
preparers of an eventual physical conflict. And the reason is not far to seek.
Law for all its ermine of pomp and solemn bewigged pretension of dignity was in
its origin nothing but the law of the stronger and the more skilful and
successful who imposed their rule on the acquiescent or subjugated rest of the
people. It was the decrees of the dominant class which were imposed on the
previous mass of existing customs and new-shaped them into the mould of the
prevailing idea and interest; Law was itself a regulated and organised Force
establishing its own rules of administration and maintaining them by an
imminent menace of penalty and coercion. That is the sense of the symbolic
sword of Justice, and as for her more mythical balance, a balance is a
commercial and artificial sign, not a symbol of either natural or ideal equity,
and even so this balance of Justice had for its use only a theoretical or not
always even a theoretical equality of weights and measures. Law was often in
great measure a system of legalised oppression and exploitation and on its
political side has had often enough plainly that stamp, though it has assumed
always the solemn face of a sacrosanct order and government and justice.
The history of mankind has been
very largely a long struggle to get unjust law changed into justice, - not a
mystic justice of an imposed decree and rule "by law established"
claiming to be right because it is established, but the intelligible justice of
equality and equity. Much has been done, but as much or more still remains to
be done, and so long as it is not established, there can be no sure end to
civil strife and unrest and revolution. For the
Page-630
injustice
of law can only be tolerated so long as there is either in those who suffer by
it a torpid blindness or acquiescent submission or else, the desire of equity
once awakened, a ready means to their hand of natural and peaceful
rectification. And a particular unjust law may indeed be got altered with less
of effort and difficulty, but if injustice or, let us say simply, absence of
just equality and equity pervades a state of things, a system, then there must
be grave trouble and there can be no real equilibrium and peace till it is
amended. Thus in modern society strikes and lockouts are its form of civil war,
disastrous enough to both sides, but still they are constantly resorted to and
cannot be replaced by a better way, because there is no confidence in any
possible legal award or "compulsory" arbitration which can be
provided for under the existing conditions. The stronger side relies on the ad-
vantage which it enjoys under the established system, the weaker feels that the
legalised balance of the State exists by a law which still favours the
capitalist interest and the domination of wealth and that at most it can get
from this State only inadequate con- cessions which involve by their inadequacy
more numerous struggles in the future. They cling to the strike as their
natural weapon and one trustworthy resource. For that reason all ingeminations
and exhortations to economical peace and brotherhood are a futile counsel. The
only remedy is a. better, more equal and more equitable system of society. And
this is only a particular instance of a situation common enough in different
forms under the present world-order.
The application is evident to the present
international at- tempt and its hopes of a legalised and peaceful human
society. The League of Nations has been established by victorious Force,
claiming no doubt to be the force of victorious right and justice, but
incapable by the vice of its birth of embodying the real non- combatant justice
of an equal and impartial equity. Its decrees and acts are based on no
ascertainable impersonal principle, but are mainly the decrees, the sic
volo, sic jubeo of three or four mighty nations. Even if they happen to be
just, they have this fatal vice that there is nothing to convince the mind of
the losing parties or even the common mind that there is behind them any surety
of a general and reliable equity, and as a matter of fact
Page-631
many
of them have aroused very generally grave dissatisfaction and hostile
criticism. And the Supreme Council, that veiled hieratic autocrat of the
situation, does not seem itself to appeal to any distinct higher principles in
its action, even when such do actually exist and could be insisted on with
force and clarity. At the time of writing, there has been a case of the
denudation of a suffering and now half-starved country by the army of a small
occupying power - victorious not by its own arms, but by the moral and economic
pressure of the League - and the council has very rightly interfered. But it
has. not done that publicly on grounds that have anything to do with
international justice or humanity or even the rudiments of international
ethics, such as they are, but on this ground that the property of the
vanquished country is the common spoil, or, let us say, means of compensation
of the victors and this one little rapacious ally cannot be allowed to
appropriate it all by main force to the detriment of its greater
fellow-administrators of a self-regarding justice, -
who may even as a result find Hungary thrown as a starving
pauper on their hands instead of serving their will as a solvent debtor! If
this realistic spirit is to be the spirit of the new international system and
that is to persist, its success is likely to be more formidable to humanity
than its failure. For it may mean to the suffering portions of mankind the
legalisation and perpetuation of in- tolerable existing injustices for which
there could have been a hope of more easy remedy and redress in the previous
looser conditions. If this League of Nations is to serve and not merely to
dominate mankind, if it is to raise and free, as it claims and professes, and
not to bind and depress humanity, it must be cast in another mould and animated
by another spirit. This age is not like that in which the reign of law was
established in individual nations; men
are no longer inclined, as then they were, to submit to existing conditions in
the idea that they are an inevitable dispensation of Nature. The idea of
equity, of equality, of common rights has been generalised in the mind of the
race, and human society must move henceforward steadily towards its
satisfaction on peril of constant unrest and a rising gradation of catastrophe.
That means that the whole spirit and
system of the League will have to be remodelled, the initial mistakes of its
composition
Page-632
rectified and the defects inherent in its origin got
rid of, before it can be brought into
real consonance with the nobler hopes or even the pressing needs of the human
race. At present it is, to reverse the old phrase, a pouring of an old and very
musty wine into showy new bottles, - the old discredited spirit of the
diplomacy of concert and balance and the government of the strongest, of the
few dominant kingdoms, States and empires. That must disappear in a more just
and democratic international system. The evil legacy of the war with its
distinctions between "enemy", allied and friendly nations or more
favoured or less favoured peoples, will have to be got out of the system of the
League, for so long as it is there, it will act as a virus which will prevent
all healthy growth and functioning. A League of Nations which is to bring a
real peace and beginning of justice and ordered comity in progress to the world
and a secret council of allied governments imposing as best they can their
irresponsible will on a troubled and dissatisfied Europe, Asia and Africa are
two very different things, and while one lasts, the other cannot be got into
being. The haphazard make of the League will have to be remoulded into a thing
of plain and candid structure and meaning and made to admit that element of
clear principle which it has omitted from its constitution. An equal system of
international rights and obligations, just liberties and wholesome necessary
restrictions can alone be a sound basis of international law and order. And
there can be no other really sound basis of the just and equal liberty of the
peoples than that principle of self-determination which was so loudly trumpeted
during the war, but of which an opportunist statesmanship has made short work
and reduced to a deplorable nullity. A true principle of self-determination is
not at all incompatible with international unity and mutual obligation, the two
are rather indispensable complements, even as individual liberty in its right
sense of a just and sufficient room for healthy self-development and
self-determination is not at all incompatible with unity of spirit and mutual
obligation between man and man. How to develop it out of present conditions,
antipathies, ambitions, grievances, national lusts, jealousies, egoisms is
indeed a problem, but it is a problem which will have to be attended to to-day
or to-morrow on peril of worse
Page-633
things. To say that these developments are
impossible is to say that a league of nations in the real sense as opposed to a
league of some nations for their common benefit, a dominant alliance, is an
impossibility. In that case the present institution called by that imposing
name can only be an enlarged and more mechanised edition of the old Concert or
a latter-day Holy Alliance of the governments and will sooner or later go the
way of its predecessors. If that is so, then the sooner we recognise it, the
better for all concerned; there will be less of false hopes and misdirected
energies with their burden of disappointment, unrest, irritation and perilous
reaction. To go on upon the present lines is to lead straight towards another
and greater catastrophe. To insist on these things is not to discourage unduly
the spirit of hope which humanity needs for its progress; it is necessary in
order that that hope may not nourish itself on illusions and turn towards
misdirecting paths, but may rather see clearly the right conditions of its
fulfilment and fix its energy on their realisation. It is a comfortable but a
dangerous thing to trust with a facile faith that a bad system will
automatically develop into a good thing or that some easy change is bound to
come which will make for- salvation, as for instance that Europe will evolve
true democracy and that the League of Nations, now so imperfectly established,
will be made perfect by its better spirit. The usual result of this temper of
sanguine acceptance or toleration is that the expected better State makes
indeed some ameliorations when it comes, but takes into it too a legacy of the past,
much of its obscure spirit and a goodly inheritance of its evils, while it adds
to the burden new errors of its own making. Certainly, the thing which was
behind this new formation, this league of governments, is bound in some way or
other to come; for I take it that a closer system of international life is
sooner or later inevitable because it is a necessary outcome of modern
conditions, of the now much closer relations and interactions of the life of
the human race, and the only alternative is increasing trouble, disorder and
ultimate chaos. But this inevitable development may take, according to the way
and principle we follow, a better or a worse turn. It may come in the form of a
mechanical and oppressive
Page-634
system
as false and defective as the industrial civilization of Europe which in its
inflated and monstrous course brought about the present wreck, or it may come
in the form and healthy movement of a sounder shaping force which can be made
the basis or at least the starting-point for a still greater and more
beneficial human progress. No system indeed by its own force can bring about
the change that humanity really needs; for that can only come by its growth
into the firmly realised possibilities of its own higher nature, and this growth
depends on an inner and not an outer change. But outer changes may at least
prepare favourable conditions for that more real amelioration,
- or on the
contrary they may lead to such conditions that the sword of Kalki can alone purify
the earth from the burden of an obstinately Asuric humanity. The choice lies
with the race itself; for as it sows, so shall it reap the fruit of its Karma.
And that brings us back to the idea with
which we started and with it we may as well close, however remote it may sound
to the practical mind of a still materialistic generation. The idea which
Europe follows of an outer political and social perfection reposes, as far as
it goes, on a truth, but only on one half of the truth and that the lower half
of its periphery. A greater side of it is hidden behind the other older idea,
still not quite dead in Asia and now strong enough to be born again in Europe,
that as with the individual, so with the community of mankind, salvation cannot
come by the outer Law alone; for the Law is only an intermediate means intended
to impose a rein of stringent obligation and a better standard on the original
disorder of our egoistic nature. Salvation for individual or community comes
not by the Law but by the Spirit1 The
conditions of individual and social perfection are indeed the same, freedom and
unity; the two things are complements and to follow one at the expense of the
other is a vain heresy. But real unity cannot come to the race, until man
surmounting his egoistic nature is one in heart and spirit with man and real
freedom cannot be till he is free from his own lower nature and finds the force
of the truth which has been
1
We in India have also yet to realise that truth -
not by the Shastra, but by the Atman
Page-635
so
vainly taught by the saints and sages that the fullness of his perfected
individuality is one thing with a universality by which he can embrace all
mankind in his heart, mind and .spirit. But at present individuals and nations
are equally remote from accepting any such inner mantra of unity and we
can only hope at most that the best will increasingly turn their minds in that
direction and create again and this time with a newer and more luminous
insistence a higher standard of human aspiration. Till then jarring leagues of
nations and some mechanical dissoluble federation of the race must serve our
turn for practice and for a far-off expectation. But only then can the dream of
a golden age of a true communal living become feasible and be founded on a
spiritual and therefore a real reign of freedom and unity when the race learns
to turn its eyes inward and not any longer these things, but mankind, the
people of God and a soul and body of the Divine, becomes the ideal of our
perfection.
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