After the War
THE great war has for some time been over: it is already
receding into the near distances of the past. Around us is a black mist and
welter of the present, before us the face of a dim and ambiguous future. It is
just possible, however, to take some stock of the immediate results of the war,
although by no stretch of language can the world situation be called clear, for
it is marked rather by chaotic drift and an unexampled confusion. The ideals
which were so loud of mouth during the collision, -
mainly as
advertising agents of its conflicting interests, -
are now discredited and silent:
an uneasy locked struggle of irreconcilable forces entangled in an inextricable
clasp of enmity, but too weak or too exhausted to prevail against each other
and unable to separate, a bewildered opportunism incapable of guiding itself or
finding an issue is the character of the present situation. Humanity has the
figure of a derelict with broken mast and rudder drifting on a sea still
upheaved by the after-swell of the tempest, the statesmen of the Supreme
Council figuring as its impotent captains and shouting directions that have not
the least chance of useful execution and have to be changed from moment to
moment. Nowhere is there a guiding illumination or a just idea that is at all
practicable. A great intellectual and moral bankruptcy, an immense emptiness
and depression has succeeded to the delirium of massacre.
This indeed the most striking immediate after-result of the war,
the atmosphere of a world-wide disappointment and disillusionment and the
failure of great hopes and ideals. What high and large and dazzling things were
promised us during the war, and where are they now? Rejected, tarnished,
dishonoured they lie cast aside dead and stripped and desecrated on the blood-
stained refuse heap that the war has left behind it. Not one remains to us. The
war that was fought to end war has been only the parent of fresh armed conflict
and civil discord and it is
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the
exhaustion that followed it which alone prevents as yet another vast and
sanguinary struggle. The new fair and peaceful world-order that was promised us has gone far away
into the land of the
chimeras. The League of Nations that was to have embodied it hardly even exists
or exists only as a mockery and a byword. It is an ornamental, a quite helpless
and otiose appendage to the Supreme Council, at present only a lank promise
dangled before the vague and futile idealism of those who are still faithful to
its sterile formula, a League on paper and with little chance, even if it
becomes more apparently active, of being anything more than a transparent cover
or a passive support for the domination of the earth by a close oligarchy of
powerful governments or, it may be even, of two allied and imperialistic
nations. The principle of self-determination once so loudly asserted is now
openly denied and summarily put aside by the victorious empires. In its place
we have the map of Europe remade on old diplomatic principles, Africa
appropriated and partitioned as the personal property of two or three great
European Powers and western Asia condemned to be administered under a system of
mandates that are now quite openly justified as instruments of commercial
exploitation and have to be forced on unwilling peoples by the sovereign right
of the machine-gun and the bayonet. The spectacle of subject peoples and
"protected" nations demanding freedom and held down by military force
continues to be a principal feature of the new order. The promised death of
militarism is as far off as ever: its spirit and its actuality survive
everywhere, and only its centre of strength and main operation has shifted
westward - and eastward. All these things were foreseen while yet the war continued
by a few who even while holding to the ideal persisted in seeing clearly: they
are now popular common-places.
This however is only one side of the
situation, the most present, insistent and obvious, but not therefore the most
important and significant. It marks a stage, it is not the definite result of
the great upheaval. The expectation of an immediate and magically complete
transformation and regeneration of the world by the radical operation of the
war was itself an error.
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It
was an error to imagine that the power of the past rooted in the soil of
long-seated human custom and character would disappear in one fierce moment or
abdicate at once to the virgin power of the future. The task to be accomplished
is too great to be so easy: the regeneration of man and his life, his rebirth
into a higher nature is not to be effected by so summary and outward a process.
It was an error to suppose that the war was or could be the painful, the
terrible, but in the end the salutary crisis by which that great change would
be decisively effected, - a change that would mean a complete renovation and
purification of the soul, mind and life of humanity. The war came only as a
first shock and overturn, an opportunity for certain clearances, a death-blow
to the moral though not as yet to the material hold of certain ideas and powers
that were till then confident and throned, sure of the present and hopeful of
their possession of the future. It has loosened the soil, but the up- rooting
of all the old growths was more than it could effectuate. It has cleared a
certain amount of ground, but the fruitful filling of that ground is an
operation for other forces: it has ploughed and upturned much soil, but it is
as yet a far cry to the new sowing and the harvest. It was, finally, and it
still continues a cherished error to imagine that the mere alteration, however
considerable, of political or other machinery is the sufficient panacea for the
shortcomings of civilisation. It is a change of spirit, therefore a spiritual
change, that can alone be the sanction and the foundation of a greater and
better human existence.
The survival
of old principles and conditions is still not the important matter. However
great their appearance of outward and material strength, inwardly they are
sick, weakened and have forfeited the promise of the future: all their
intellectual and moral hold is gone and with that disappearance there is
evident a notable failing of their practical effectuating wisdom and of their
sustaining self-confidence. The instinct of self- continuation, the impetus of
their past motion keeps them going, and they must last so long as they have
some hold in the inert continuity of the past mental and vital habit of the
peoples and are not pushed over by the growing and arising strength
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of the new forces that belong to the future.
All their movements only serve to increase that strength, and whether they seek
to perpetuate themselves by a violent insistence on their own principle or
haggle and compromise with the quite opposite principles that are destined to
replace them, each step they take brings them nearer to their ending. It is
more fruitful to regard rather the new things that are not yet in possession of
the present but already struggling to assert themselves against its ponderous
and effective but ephemeral pressure.
It was very evident during the progress
of the war that there were two great questions that it would not solve but
rather must prepare for an acute stage of crisis, the growing struggle between
Capital and Labour and the Asiatic question, no longer a quarrel now between
rival exploiters but the issue between invading Europe and a resurgent Asia.
The war itself was in its immediate aspect a battle between the German idea and
the middle-class liberalism represented by the western peoples, France,
England, America, and during the settlement of that present issue the other two
questions more momentous for the future had to be held in abeyance. There was a
truce between Capital and Labour, a truce determined only by a violent
concentration of national feeling that proved too strong for the vague
idealistic internationalism of the orthodox socialistic idea, not by any
essential issue; for the futile idyllic promise of a rapprochement and a
reconciliation between the hostile classes was too hollow an unreality to count
as a factor. At the same time the Asiatic question too was in suspension and
even enticing prospects of self-determination and independence or more
qualified but still tempting allurements were proffered by the liberal empires
to peoples who had been till then held as beyond the pale of civilisation. The
Asiatic peoples too weak for an independent action ranged themselves on the
side whose success seemed to offer to them the greater hope or else the least
formidable menace. All this is now of the past: the natural and inevitable
relations have reasserted themselves and these great questions are coming to a
head. The modern contest between Capital and Labour has entered into a new
phase and the two incurably antagonistic principles are evidently moving
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in spite of many hesitations
and indecisions towards the final and decisive battle. In Asia the issue has
already been joined between the old rule of dependency and protectorate with
their new parti-coloured variation the mandate and the clear claim of the
Asiatic peoples to equality and independence. All other things still in the
forefront belong to the prolongation of the surviving or else to the
liquidation of the dead past: these two alone are living questions of the
immediate future.
The forces of Socialism and
Capitalism now look each other in the face all over Europe, - all other
distinctions are fading, the old minor political quarrels within the nation
grow meaningless, - but have not yet joined battle. The old middle- class
regime still holds the material power, keeps by the prestige of possession and
men's habit of preferring present ills to an insecure adventure the mind of the
uncertain mass and summons all its remaining forces to maintain its position.
It is faced by the first actuality of a successful socialistic and
revolutionary regime in Russia, but hitherto, although its repeated efforts to
stifle it in its birth have been in vain, it has succeeded in isolating, in
blockading and half starving it, in erecting against its westward urge an
artificial frontier and in stemming the more rapid propagation of its master
ideas by a constant campaign of discredit. Attempts at any soviet revolution west
of the Russian line have been put an end to for the moment by legal or military
repression. On the other hand, the economic condition of the world becomes
worse and not better every year and it is becoming more and more evident that
Capitalism has not only lost its moral credit but that it is unable to solve
the material problems it has itself raised and brought to a head, while it
blocks the way to any other solution. Every year that passes in this deadlock
sees an enormous increase in the strength of the socialistic idea and the
number and quality and the extremist fervour of its adherents. There is
undoubtedly almost everywhere a temporary stiffening and concentration of the
old regime; this as a phenomenon very much resembles the similar stiffening and
concentration of the old monarchic and aristocratic regime that was the first
result of the war between revolutionary France and Europe; but it has less
reality of
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force and little chance of an equal
duration; for the current of revolution is now only checked and not as then
temporarily fatigued and exhausted and the accumulated rush of the ideas and
forces that make for change is in our day immeasurably greater. The materials
of an immense political, social and economic overturn, perhaps of a series of
formidable explosions strengthened in force by each check and compression,
every- where visibly accumulate.
The outstanding portent of things to come
is the continued existence, success, unbroken progress of the Russian revolution.
This event promises to be as significant in human history as the great overturn
of established ideas and institutions initiated in France in the eighteenth
century, and to posterity it may well be this and not the downfall of Germany
for which the Great War will be ever memorable. Its importance is quite
independent of the merits and demerits or the chances of survival of the
present Bolshevik regime. The Bolshevik dictator- ship is admittedly only an
instrument of transition, a temporary concentration of revolutionary force,
just as the Supreme Council and all that it supports is a temporary
concentration of the opposing conservative forces. The achievements of this
extra- ordinary government have been of a sufficiently astonishing character. Assailed
continually from within and without, ruthlessly blockaded and starved and
deprived of all means of sustenance and action except those it could create for
itself out of itself or else conquer, repeatedly brought to the verge of
downfall, it has survived all difficulties and dangers and rather derived
always new strength from misfortune, overcome its internal and withstood its
external enemies, spread itself in Asia beyond its own borders, organised out
of chaos a strong civil and military instrument, and has had the force in the
midst of scarcity, civil strife and foreign menace to lay the initial basis of
a new type of society. This miracle of human energy is in itself no more. than
that, a repetition under more unfavourable circumstances of the extraordinary
achievement of the Jacobins during the French Revolution. More important is the
power of the idea that is behind these successes and has made them possible. It
is a fact of only outward significance that the
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Bolsheviks
not so long ago threatened with the loss of Moscow are now on the road to
Warsaw. It is of much more significance that the western Powers find themselves
driven at last to negotiate with the first successful communist government of
modern times still denounced by them as a monstrosity to be destroyed and a
danger to civilisation. But the thing of real significance is not these events
that might have gone and might still go otherwise and might turn out to be only
an episode; it is rather this fundamental fact affecting future possibilities
that a great nation marked out as one of the coming leaders of humanity has
taken a bold leap into the hidden gulfs of the future, abolished the past
foundations, made and persisted in a radical experiment of communism, replaced
middle-class parliamentarism by a new form of government and used its first
energy of free life to initiate an entirely novel social order. It is acts of
faith and audacities of this scale that change or hasten the course of human
progress. It does not follow necessarily that what is being attempted now is
the desirable or the definite form of the future society, but is a certain sign
that a phase of civilisation is beginning to pass and the Time-Spirit preparing
a new phase and a new order.
It may well take time for the communistic
idea to make its way westward and it may too undergo considerable modifications
in the passage, but there is already a remarkable evolution in that sense. The
Labour movement is everywhere completing its transformation from a reformist
into a socialistic and therefore necessarily, in spite of present hesitations,
a revolutionary type. The struggle of Labour for a better social status and a
share in the government has grown obsolete: the accepted ideal is now the
abolition of the capitalistic structure of society and the substitution of
labour for wealth as the social basis and the governing power. The differences
within the body of the movement touch no longer the principle but the means and
process of the change and precise form to be given to the coming socialistic
government and society. It is only this division of counsels that still retards
the onward motion and prevents the joining of the decided issue of battle. It
is noticeable that the strength of the socialist and communistic idea increases
as
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one
goes eastward, diminishes in the opposite direction: the movement or progress
is no longer from the' west eastwards but from the east towards the occident.
The more extreme forces are however daily increasing everywhere and are making
them- selves felt even in plutocratic America. In any case, whatever
retardation of pace there may be, the direction of the stream is already clear
and the result hardly doubtful. The existing European system of civilisation at
least in its figure of capitalistic industrialism has reached its own monstrous
limits, broken itself by its own mass and is condemned to perish. The issue of
the future lies between a labour industrialism not very different except in
organisation from its predecessor, some greater spirit and form of socialistic
or communistic society such as is being attempted in Russia or else the
emergence of a new and as yet unforeseen principle.
The upcoming force that opens a certain
latitude for this last possibility is the resurgence of Asia. It is difficult
to believe that Asia once free to think, act and live for herself will be for
long content merely to imitate the past or the present evolution of Europe. The
temperament of her peoples is marked off by too deep-seated a difference, the
build and movement of their minds is of another character. At present, however,
the movement of resurgence in Asia is finding expression more by a preface, an
attempt to vindicate her bare right to live for herself, than by any pregnant effort
of independent creative thought or action. The Asiatic unrest is still the
second prominent feature of the situation. It is manifest in different forms
from Egypt to China. It takes the shape in the Moslem world of a rejection of
protectorates and mandates and a ferment of formation of independent Asiatic
States. It manifests in India in a growing dissatisfaction with half methods
and a constantly accentuated vehemence of the demand for complete and early
self-government. It is creating in the Far East obscurer movements the sense of
which has yet to emerge. This unrest envisages as yet little beyond the
beginnings of a free action and existence. It appeals to the ideas of liberty
that have long been fully self- conscious and the formulas that are systematically
applied in Europe, self-government, Home Rule, democracy, national
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independence.
At the same time there is involved, subconscient as yet in the great Asiatic
masses but already defining itself in more awakened minds, another issue that
may seem at first sight incompatible or at least disparate with this imitative
seizing on principles associated with the modern forms of freedom and progress,
- an ideal
of spiritual and moral independence and the defence against the European invasion
of the subtle principle of Asiatic culture. In India the notion of an Asiatic,
a spiritualised democracy has begun to be voiced, though it is as yet vague and
formless. The Khilafat agitation has a religious and therefore a cultural as
well as a political motive and temper. The regime of the mandate is resisted
because it signifies the political control and economic exploitation of Asia by
Europe, but there is another more latent source of repugnance. The effective
exploitation is impossible without the breaking and recasting of Asiatic life
into the harsh moulds of European capitalism and industrialism and, although
Asia must learn to live no longer in the magnificent but insufficient past but
in the future, she must too demand to create that future in her own image. It
is this twofold claim carrying in it the necessity of a double, an inner and an
outer resistance that is the present meaning of the Asiatic unrest and the
destined meaning of the Asiatic resurgence.
The capitalistic governments of Europe
embarrassed by Asiatic unrest and resistance attempt to meet it with a con-
cession in form and a denial in fact and principle. India is granted not the
beginning of responsible government, but a first "substantial" step
towards it; but it is a step hedged in with a paralysing accumulation of
safeguards for British political and capitalistic interests and a significant
condition that her farther progress must depend on the extent to which she is
prepared to reform herself politically, economically and socially in the image
of the British spirit. A French military force occupies Damascus, expels the
king and government elected by the people, but promises to establish an
indigenous government subservient to the European interest and its mandate. England
offers Mesopotamia an Arab government saddled with an Anglo"lndian
administration and the moral and material
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benefits
of the exploitation of the oil of the Mosul; meanwhile she is fighting the
insurgent population in order to force on it its own greater good against its
own barbarous and ignorant will to independence. A British control is to
guarantee the integrity of Persia. Palestine is to be colonised by a Jewish
immigration from Europe and to be administered by a High Commissioner in the
interests - but against the will
- of all its races. The Turkish
people stripped of temporal empire and the prestige of the Khalifate are to be
free under a strict and close international control and to be compelled by a
Greek army to accept this unprecedented happiness and this unequalled
opportunity of becoming a civilised modern nation. Here much more than against
the organised forces of Labour the old regime has the material power to enforce
its dictates. It remains nonetheless certain that a solution of this kind will
not put an end to the unrest of Asia. The attempt is likely to recoil upon
itself, for these new burdens must impose a greatly added strain on an already
impossible financial condition and hasten the social and economic revolution in
Europe. And even if it were other- wise, the resurgence of a great continent
cannot be so held under. One day it will surely prevail against whatever
difficulties and possess its inevitable future.
These two predestined forces of the
future, socialism and the Asiatic resurgence, tend for the moment to form at
least a moral alliance. The Labour and socialistic parties in the now dominant
nations are strongly opposed to the policy of their governments and extend
their support to the claims of subject or menaced nationalities in Asia as well
as in Europe. In the more advanced Asiatic countries, as in Ireland, the
national movement allies itself closely with a nascent labour movement.
Bolshevik Russia is in alliance with or sovietises and controls the policy of
the existing independent States of central Asia, casts a ferment into Persia
and lends whatever moral support it can to the Turk or the Arab. This tendency
may have in itself little meaning beyond the sympathy created by reaction
against a common pressure. Forces and interests in action are always
opportunist and grasp in emergency at help or convenience from whatever
quarter; but these alliances of pure interest, unless they find some more
permanent
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support,
are fragile and ephemeral combinations. Bolshevist Russia may set up Soviet
governments in Georgia and Azerbaijan, but if these are only governments of
occasion, if Sovietism does not correspond to or touch something more profound
in the instinct, temperament and idea of these peoples, they are not likely to
be durable. British Labour, although it makes no present conditions, expects a
self-governing India to evolve in the sense of its own social and economic
idea, but it is conceivable that a self- governing India may break away from
the now normal line of development and discover her own and unexpected social
and economic order. All that we can say certainly at present is that the
dominant governments of Europe have so managed that they find their scheme of
things in opposition at once to the spirit and menaced by the growth of two
great world forces, both compressed and held back by it and both evident
possessors of the future.
That means that we are as yet far from a
durable order and can therefore look forward to no suspension of the earth's
troubles. The balance of the present, if such a chaotic fluctuation of shifts
and devices can be called a balance, has no promise of duration, is only a
moment of arrest, and we must expect, as soon as the sufficient momentum can
come or circumstance open a door of escape for the release of compressed
forces, more surprising and considerable movements, radical reversals and
immense changes. The subject of supreme interest is not the circumstance that
will set free their paths, for fate when it is ready takes ad- vantage of any
and every circumstance, but the direction they will take and the meaning they
will envelop. The evolution of a socialistic society and the resurgence of Asia
must effect great changes and yet they may not realise the larger human hope.
Socialism may bring in a greater equality and a closer association into human
life, but if it is only a material change, it may miss other needed things and
even aggravate the mechanical burden of humanity and crush more heavily towards
the earth its spirit. The resurgence of Asia, if it means only a redressing or
shifting of the international balance, will be a step in the old circle, not an
element of the renovation, not a condition of the step forward and out of the
groove that is now felt however vaguely to be the one thing needful. The
present international policy of Labour
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carries
in itself indeed at its end, - provided Labour in power is faithful to the mind of
Labour in opposition, - one considerable promise, a juster equation between
the national and the international idea, an international comity of free
nations, a free, equal and democratic league of peoples in place of the present
close oligarchy of powers that only carries the shadow of an un- real League as
its appendage. An international equality and co- operation in place of the past
disorder or barbaric order of domination and exploitation is indeed a first
image that we have formed of the better future. But that is not all: it is only
a frame- work. It may be at lowest a novel machinery of international
convenience, it may be at most a better articulated body for the human race.
The spirit, the power, the idea and will that are meant to inform or use it is
the greater question, the face and direction of destiny that will be decisive.
The two forces that are arising to
possess the future represent two great things, the intellectual idealism of
Europe and the soul of Asia. The mind of Europe laboured by Hellenism and
Christianity and enlarging its horizons by free thought and science has arrived
at an idea of human perfectibility or progress expressed in the terms of an
intellectual, material and vital freedom, equality and unity of close
association, an active fraternity or comradeship in thought and feeling and
labour. The difficulty is to make of the component parts of this idea a
combined and real reality in practice and the effort of European progress has
been a labour to discover and set up a social machinery that shall automatically
turn out this production. The first equation discovered, an individualistic
democracy, a system of political liberty and equality before the law, has
helped only to a levelling as between the higher orders, the competitive
liberty of the strongest and most skilful to arrive, an inhuman social
inequality and economic exploitation, an incessant class' war and a monstrous
and opulently sordid reign of wealth and productive machinery. It is the turn
now of another equation, an equality as absolute as can be fabricated amid the
inequalities of Nature by reason and social science and machinery,
- and most of all an equal association in the labour and the common profits of a
collective life. It is not certain that this formula will succeed very much
better
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than
its predecessor. This equality can only be presently secured by strict
regulation, and that means that liberty at least for a time must go under. And
at any rate the root of the whole difficulty is ignored, that nothing can be
real in life that is not made real in the spirit. It is only if men can be made
free, equal and united in spirit that there can be a secure freedom, equality
and brother- hood in their life. The idea and sentiment are not enough, for
they are incomplete and combated by deep-seated nature and instinct and they
are besides inconstant and fluctuate. There must be an immense advance that
will make freedom, equality and unity our necessary internal and external
atmosphere. This can come only by a spiritual change and the intellect of
Europe is beginning to see that the spiritual change is at least a necessity;
but it is still too intent on rational formula and on mechanical effort to
spare much time for discovery and realisation of the things of the spirit.
Asia has made no such great
endeavour, no such travail of social effort and progress. Order, a secure
ethical and religious framework, a settled economical system, a natural,
becoming fatally a conventional and artificial, hierarchy have been her
ordinary methods, everywhere indeed where she reached a high development of
culture. These things she founded on her religious sense and sweetened and made
tolerable by a strong communal feeling, a living humanity and sympathy and
certain accesses to a human equality and closeness. Her supreme effort was to
discover not an external but a spiritual and inner freedom and that carried
with it a great realisation of spirituality, equality and oneness. This
spiritual travail was not universalised nor any endeavour made to shape the whole
of human life in its image. The result was a disparateness between the highest
inner individual and the outward social life, in India the increasing ascetic
exodus of the best who lived in the spirit out of the secure but too narrow
walls of the ordinary existence and the sterilising idea that the greatest
universal truth of spirit discovered by life could yet not be the spirit of
that life and is only realisable outside it. But now Asia enduring the powerful
pressure of Europe is being forced to face the life problem again under the
necessity of another and a more active solution. Assimilative, she may re-
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produce
or imitate the occidental experiment of industrialism, its first phase of
capitalism, its second phase of socialism; but then her resurgence will bring
no new meaning or possibility into the human endeavour. Or the closer meeting
of these two halves of the mind of humanity may set up a more powerful
connection between the two poles of our being and realise some sufficient
equation of the highest ideals of each, the inner and the outer freedom, the
inner and the outer equality, the inner and the outer unity. That is the
largest hope that can be formed on present data and circumstance for the human
future.
But also, as from the mixing of various
elements an un- foreseen form emerges, so there may be a greater unknown
something concealed and in preparation, not yet formulated in the experimental
laboratory of Time, not yet disclosed in the design of Nature. And that then,
some greater unexpected birth from the stress of the evolution may be the
justifying result of which this unquiet age of gigantic ferment, chaos of ideas
and inventions, clash of enormous forces, creation and catastrophe and
dissolution is actually amid the formidable agony and tension of this great
imperfect body and soul of mankind in creative labour.
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