<h2 class="new-h2">XI</h2>
<p>I had finished this writing when news came of the
destruction of six hundred innocent lives opposite Port
Arthur. It would seem that the useless suffering and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32"></SPAN></span>
death of these unfortunate deluded men who have needlessly
and so dreadfully perished ought to disabuse
those who were the cause of this destruction. I am not
alluding to Makaroff and other officers—all these men
knew what they were doing, and wherefore, and they
voluntarily, for personal advantage, for ambition, did as
they did, disguising themselves in pretended patriotism,
a pretence not condemned merely because it is universal.
I allude rather to those unfortunate men drawn
from all parts of Russia, who, by the help of religious
fraud, and under fear of punishment, have been torn
from an honest, reasonable, useful, laborious family life,
driven to the other end of the world, placed on a cruel,
senseless machine for slaughter, and torn to bits, drowned
along with this stupid machine in a distant sea, without
any need or any possibility of advantage from all their
privations, efforts, and sufferings, or from the death
which overtook them.</p>
<p>In 1830, during the Polish war, the adjutant Vilijinsky
sent to St. Petersburg by Klopitsky, in a conversation
held in French with Dibitch, in answer to the
latter's demand that the Russian troops should enter
Poland, said to him:—</p>
<p>“Monsieur le Mar�chal, I think that in that case it
will be quite impossible for the Polish nation to accept
this manifesto.…”</p>
<p>“Believe me, the Emperor will make no further
concessions.”</p>
<p>“Then I foresee that, unhappily, there will be war,
that much blood will be shed, there will be many unfortunate
victims.”</p>
<p>“Do not think so; at most there will be ten thousand
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33"></SPAN></span>
who will perish on both sides, and that is all,”<SPAN name="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</SPAN> said
Dibitch in his German accent, quite confident that he,
together with another man as cruel and foreign to Russian
and Polish life as he was himself,—Nicholas I,—had the
right to condemn or not to condemn to death ten or a
hundred thousand Russians and Poles.</p>
<p>One hardly believes that this could have been, so
senseless and dreadful is it,—and yet it was; sixty
thousand maintainers of their families lost their lives
owing to the will of those men. And now the same
thing is taking place.</p>
<p>In order not to let the Japanese into Manchuria, and
to expel them from Korea, not ten thousand, but fifty
and more thousands will, according to all probability,
be necessary. I do not know whether Nicholas II and
Kuropatkin say like Dibitch in so many words that
not more than fifty thousand lives will be necessary for
this on the Russian side alone, only and only that; but
they think it—they cannot but think it, because the
work they are doing speaks for itself; that ceaseless
stream of unfortunate, deluded Russian peasants now
being transported by thousands to the Far East—these
are those same not more than fifty thousand
live Russian men whom Nicholas Romanoff and Alexis
Kuropatkin have decided they may get killed, and who
will be killed, in support of those stupidities, robberies,
and every kind of abomination which were accomplished
in China and Korea by immoral ambitious men
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34"></SPAN></span>
now sitting peacefully in their palaces and expecting
new glory and new advantage and profit from the
slaughter of these fifty thousand unfortunate, defrauded
Russian workingmen guilty of nothing and gaining
nothing by their sufferings and death. For other
people's land, to which the Russians have no right,
which has been criminally seized from its legitimate
owners, and which, in reality, is not even necessary
to the Russians—and also for certain dark dealings
by speculators, who in Korea wished to gain money
out of other people's forests—many millions of money
are spent, <i>i.e.</i> a great part of the labor of the whole
of the Russian people, while the future generations of
this people are bound by debts, its best workmen are
withdrawn from labor, and scores of thousands of its
sons are mercilessly doomed to death; and the destruction
of these unfortunate men is already begun.
More than this: the war is being managed by those
who have hatched it so badly, so negligently, all is so
unexpected, so unprepared, that, as one paper admits,
Russia's chief chance of success lies in the fact that
it possesses inexhaustible human material. It is upon
this that those rely who send to death scores of thousands
of Russian men!</p>
<p>It is frankly said that the regrettable reverses of
our fleet must be compensated on the land. In plain
language this means that if the authorities have badly
directed things on sea, and by their negligence have
destroyed not only the nation's millions, but thousands
of lives, we can make it up by condemning to death
on land several more scores of thousands!</p>
<p>When crawling locusts cross rivers, it happens that
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35"></SPAN></span>
the lower layers are drowned until from the bodies of
the drowned is formed a bridge over which the upper
ranks can pass. In the same way are the Russian
people being disposed of. Thus the first lower layer
is already beginning to drown, indicating the way to
other thousands, who will all likewise perish.</p>
<p>And are the originators, directors, and supporters
of this dreadful work beginning to understand their
sin, their crime? Not in the least. They are quite
persuaded that they have fulfilled, and are fulfilling,
their duty, and they are proud of their activity. People
speak of the loss of the brave Makaroff, who, as
all agree, was able to kill men very cleverly; they
deplore the loss of a drowned excellent machine of
slaughter which had cost so many millions of roubles;
they discuss the question of how to find another murderer
as capable as the poor benighted Makaroff; they
invent new, still more efficacious, tools of slaughter; and
all the guilty men engaged in this dreadful work,
from the Tsar to the humblest journalist, all with one
voice call for new insanities, new cruelties, for the
increase of brutality and hatred of one's fellow-men.</p>
<p>“Makaroff is not the only man in Russia, and every
admiral placed in his position will follow in his steps
and will continue the plan and the idea of Makaroff,
who has nobly perished in the strife,” writes the <i>Novoe
Vremya</i>.</p>
<p>“Let us earnestly pray God for those who have laid
down their lives for the sacred Fatherland, without
doubting for one moment that the Fatherland will
give us new sons, equally virtuous, for the further
struggle, and will find in them an inexhaustible store
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36"></SPAN></span>
of strength for a worthy completion of the work,” writes
the St. Petersburg <i>Viedomosti</i>.</p>
<p>“A ripe nation will draw no other conclusion from
the defeat, however unprecedented, than that we
should continue, develop, and conclude the strife;
therefore let us find in ourselves new strength; new
heroes of the spirit will arise,” writes the <i>Russ</i>,—and
so forth.</p>
<p>So murder and every kind of crime go on with
greater fury. People enthusiastically admire the
martial spirit of the volunteers who, having come
unexpectedly upon fifty of their fellow-men, slay all of
them, or take possession of a village and slaughter all
its population, or hang or shoot those accused of being
spies—<i>i.e.</i> of doing the very same thing which is
regarded as indispensable and is constantly done on
our side. News about these crimes is reported in pompous
telegrams to their chief director, the Tsar, who, in
return, sends to his virtuous troops his blessing on the
continuation of such deeds.</p>
<p>Is it not evident that, if there be a salvation from this
position, it is only one: that one which Jesus teaches?—“Seek
ye first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness
(that which is within you), and all the rest—<i>i.e.</i>
all that practical welfare toward which man is
striving—will of itself be realized.”</p>
<p>Such is the law of life: practical welfare is attained
not when man strives toward this practical welfare—such
striving, on the contrary, for the most part
removes man from the attainment of what he seeks;
but only when man, without thinking of the attainment
of practical welfare, strives toward the most perfect
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37"></SPAN></span>
fulfilment of that which before God, before the Source
and Law of his life, he regards as right. Then only,
incidentally, is practical welfare also attained.</p>
<p>So that the true salvation of men is only one thing:
the fulfilment of the will of God by each individual
man within himself—<i>i.e.</i> in that portion of the universe
which alone is subject to his power. In this is
the chief, the only, destiny and duty of every individual
man, and at the same time this is the only
means by which every individual man can influence
others; and, therefore, to this, and to this only, should
all the efforts of every man be directed.</p>
<p>May 2, 1904.</p>
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