A Letter to Liberals
by
Leo Tolstoy
I should be
very glad to join you and your associates whose work I know
and appreciate in standing up for the rights of the "Literature
Committee," and in opposing the, enemies of popular education.
But in the sphere in which you are working, I see no way to resist
them.
My
only consolation is that I, too, am constantly engaged in struggling
against the same enemies of enlightenment, though in another manner.
Concerning
the special question with which you are preoccupied, I think that,
in place of the "Literature Committee" which has been
prohibited, a number of other "Literature Associations,"
to pursue the same objects, should be formed without consulting
the government, and without asking permission from any censor. Let
government, if it likes, prosecute these "Literature Associations,"
punish the members, banish them, etc. If government does that it
will merely cause people to attach special importance to good books
and to libraries, and it will strengthen the trend toward enlightenment.
It
seems to me that it is now especially important to do what is right
quietly and persistently, not only without asking permission from
government, but consciously avoiding its participation. The strength
of the government lies in the people's ignorance, and government
knows this, and will, therefore, always oppose true enlightenment.
It is time we realized that fact. And it is most undesirable to
let government, while it is diffusing darkness, pretend it is busy
with the enlightenment of the people. It is doing this now, by means
of all sorts of pseudo-educational establishments which it controls:
schools, high schools, universities, academies, and all kinds of
committees and congresses. But good is good, and enlightenment is
enlightenment, only when it is quite good and quite enlightened,
and not when it is toned down to meet the requirements of Delyanof's
or Durnovo's circulars. And I am extremely sorry when I see valuable,
disinterested, and self-sacrificing efforts spent unprofitably.
Sometimes it seems to me quite comical to see good, wise people
spending their strength in a struggle against government, to be
maintained on the basis of laws which that very government itself
makes just what it likes.
The matter
is, it seems to me, this:
There
are people (we ourselves are such) who realize that our government
is very bad, and who struggle against it. From before the days of
Radishchef and the Decembrists there have been two ways of carrying
on the struggle; one way is that of Stenka Razin, Pugatchef, the
Decembrists, the Revolutionary party of the years sixty, the Terrorists
of the thirteenth of March, and others.
The
other way is that which is preached and practiced by you
the method of the "Gradualists," which consists in carrying
on the struggle without violence and within the limits of the law,
conquering constitutional rights bit by bit.
Both
these methods have been employed unceasingly within my memory for
more than half a century, and yet the state of things grows worse
and worse. Even such signs of improvement as do show themselves
have come, not from either of these kinds of activity, but from
causes of which I will speak later on, and in spite of the harm
done by these two kinds of activity. Meanwhile, the power against
which we struggle grows ever greater, stronger, and more insolent.
The last rays of self-government the zemstvos (local
government boards), public trial, your Literature Committee, etc.
are all being done away with.
Now
that both methods have been ineffectually tried for so long a time,
we may, it seems to me, see clearly that neither the one nor the
other will do and why this is so. To me, at least, who have
always disliked our government, but have never adopted either of
the above methods of resisting it, the defects of both methods are
apparent.
The first way
is unsatisfactory because (even could an attempt to alter the existing
regime by violent means succeed) there would be no guarantee that
the new organization would be durable, and that the enemies of that
new order would not, at some convenient opportunity, triumph by
using violence such as has been used against them, as has happened
over and over again in France and wherever else there have been
revolutions. And so the new order of things, established by violence,
would have continually to be supported by violence, i.e. by
wrong-doing. And, consequently, it would inevitably and very quickly
be vitiated like the order it replaced. And in case of failure,
all the violence of the revolutionists only strengthens the order
of things they strive against (as has always been the case, in our
Russian experience, from Pugatchef's rebellion to the attempt of
the thirteenth of March), for it drives the whole crowd of undecided
people, who stand wavering between the two parties, into the camp
of the conservative and retrograde party. So I think that, guided
by both reason and experience, we may boldly say that this means,
besides being immoral, is also irrational and ineffective.
The other method
is, in my opinion, even less effective or rational. It is ineffective
and irrational because government, having in its hands the whole
power (the army, the administration, the Church, the schools, and
police), and framing what are called the laws, on the basis of which
the Liberals wish to resist it this government knows very
well what is really dangerous to it, and will never let people who
submit to it, and act under its guidance, do anything that will
undermine its authority. For instance, take the case before us:
a government such as ours (or any other), which rests on
the ignorance of the people, will never consent to their being really
enlightened. It will sanction all kinds of pseudo-educational organizations,
controlled by itself: schools, high schools, universities, academies,
and all kinds of committees and congresses and publications sanctioned
by the censor as long as those organizations and publications
serve its purpose, i.e. stupefy people, or, at least do not hinder
the stupefaction of people. But as soon as those organizations,
or publications, attempt to cure that on which the power of government
rests, i.e. the blindness of the people, the government will
simply, and without rendering account to any one, or saying why
it acts so and not otherwise, pronounce its "veto" and
will rearrange, or close, the establishments and organizations and
will forbid the publications. And therefore, as both reason and
experience clearly show, such an illusory, gradual conquest of rights
is a self-deception which suits the government admirably, and which
it, therefore, is even ready to encourage.
But not only
is this activity irrational and ineffectual, it is also harmful.
It is harmful because enlightened, good, and honest people by entering
the ranks of the government give it a moral authority which but
for them it would not possess. If the government were made up entirely
of that coarse element the violators, self-seekers, and flatterers
who form its core, it could not continue to exist. The fact
that honest and enlightened people are found who participate in
the affairs of the government gives government whatever it possesses
of moral prestige.
That
is one evil resulting from the activity of Liberals who participate
in the affairs of government, or who come to terms with it. Another
evil of such activity is that, in order to secure opportunities
to carry on their work, these highly enlightened and honest people
have to begin to compromise, and so, little by little, come to consider
that, for a good end, one may swerve somewhat from truth in word
and deed. For instance, that one may, though not believing in the
established Church, go through its ceremonies; may take oaths; and
may, when necessary for the success of some affair, present petitions
couched in language which is untrue and offensive to man's natural
dignity: may enter the army; may take part in a local government
which has been stripped of all its powers; may serve as a master
or a professor, teaching not what one considers necessary oneself,
but what one is told to preach by government; and that one may even
become a Zemsky Nachalnik, submitting to governmental demands and
instructions which violate one's conscience; may edit newspapers
and periodicals, remaining silent about what ought to be mentioned,
and printing what one is ordered to print; and entering into these
compromises the limits of which cannot be foreseen
enlightened and honest people (who alone could form some barrier
to the infringements of human liberty by the government, imperceptibly
retreating ever farther and farther from the demands of conscience)
fall at last into a position of complete dependency on government.
They receive rewards and salaries from it, and, continuing to imagine
they are forwarding liberal ideas, they become the humble servants
and supporters of the very order against which they set out to fight.
It
is true that there are also better, sincere people in the Liberal
camp, whom the government cannot bribe, and who remain unbought
and free from salaries and position. But even these people have
been ensnared in the nets spread by government, beat their wings
in their cages (as you are now doing with your Committee), unable
to advance from the spot they are on. Or else, becoming enraged,
they go over to the revolutionary camp; or they shoot themselves,
or take to drink, or they abandon the whole struggle in despair,
and, oftenest of all, retire into literary activity, in which, yielding
to the demands of the censor, they say only what they are allowed
to say, and by that very silence about what is most important
convey to the public distorted views which just suit the
government. But they continue to imagine that, they are serving
society by the writings which give them the measure of subsistence.
Thus,
both reflection and experience alike show me that both the means
of combating government, heretofore believed in, are not only ineffectual,
but actually tend to strengthen the power and the irresponsibility
of government.
What is to
be done? Evidently not what for seventy years past has proved fruitless,
and has only produced inverse result. What is to be done? Just what
those have done, thanks to whose activity is due that progress toward
light and good which has been achieved since the world began, and
is still being achieved today. That is what must be done. And what
is it?
Merely
the simple, quiet, truthful carrying on of what you consider good
and needful, quite independently of government, and of whether it
likes it or not. In other words: standing up for your rights, not
as a member of the Literature Committee, not as a deputy, not as
a landowner, not as a merchant, not even as a member of Parliament;
but standing up for your rights as a rational and free man, and
defending them, not as the rights of local boards or committees
are defended, with concessions and compromises, but without any
concessions and compromises, in the only way in which moral and
human dignity can be defended.
Successfully
to defend a fortress one has to burn all the houses in the suburbs,
and to leave only what is strong and what we intend not to surrender
on any account. Only from the basis of this firm stronghold can
we conquer all we require. True, the rights of a member of Parliament,
or even of a member of a local board, are greater than the rights
of a plain man; and it seems as if we could do much by using those
rights. But the hitch is that in order to obtain the rights of a
member of Parliament, or of a committeeman, one has to abandon part
of one's rights as a man. And having abandoned part of one's rights
as a man, there is no longer any fixed point of leverage, and one
can no longer either conquer or maintain any real right. In order
to lift others out of a quagmire one must stand on firm ground oneself,
and if, hoping the better to assist others, you go into the quagmire,
you will not pull others out, but will yourself sink in.
It
may be very desirable and useful to get an eight-hour day legalized
by Parliament, or to get a liberal program for school libraries
sanctioned by your Committee; but if, as a means to this end, a
member of Parliament must publicly lift up his hand and lie, lie
when taking an oath, by expressing in words respect for what he
does not respect; or (in our own case) if, in order to pass most
liberal programs, it is necessary to take part in public worship,
to be sworn, to wear a uniform, to write mendacious and flattering
petitions, and to make speeches of a similar character, etc.
then by doing these things and forgoing our dignity as men, we lose
much more than we gain, and by trying to reach one definite aim
(which very often is not reached) we deprive ourselves of the possibility
of reaching other aims which are of supreme importance. Only people
who have something which they will on no account and under no circumstances
yield can resist a government and curb it. To have power to resist
you must stand on firm ground.
And
the government knows this very well, and is concerned, above all
else, to worm out of men that which will not yield, in other words,
the dignity of man. When this wormed out of them, government calmly
proceeds to do what it likes, knowing that it will no longer meet
any real resistance. A man who consents publicly to swear, pronouncing
the degrading and mendacious words of the oath; or submissively
to wait several hours, dressed up in a uniform, at a ministry reception;
or to inscribe himself as a special constable for the coronation;
or to fast and receive communion for respectability's sake; or to
ask of the head censor whether he may or may not, express such and
such thoughts, etc. such a man is no longer feared by government.
Alexander
II said he did not fear the Liberals because he knew they could
all be bought, if not with money, then with honors.
People
who take part in government, or work under its direction, may deceive
themselves or their sympathizers by making a show of struggling;
but those against whom they struggle the government
know quite well, by the strength of the resistance experienced,
that these people are not really pulling, but are only pretending
to. And our government knows this with respect to the Liberals,
and constantly tests the quality of the opposition, and finding
that genuine resistance is practically non-existent, it continues
its course in full assurance that it can do what it likes with such
opponents
The government
of Alexander III knew this very well, and, knowing it, deliberately
destroyed all that the Liberals thought that they had achieved and
were so proud of. It altered and limited trial by jury; it abolished
the "Judges of the Peace"; it canceled the rights of the
universities; it perverted the whole system of instruction in the
high schools; it reestablished the cadet corps, and even the state's
sale of intoxicants; it established the Zemsky Nachalniks; it legalized
flogging; it almost abolished the local government boards (zemstvos);
it gave uncontrolled power to the governors of provinces; it encouraged
the quartering of troops (eksekutsia) on the peasants in
punishment; it increased the practice of "administrative"
banishment and imprisonment, and the capital punishment of political
offenders; it renewed religious persecutions; it brought to a climax
the use of barbarous superstitions; it legalized murder in duels;
under the name of a "state of siege" it established lawlessness
with capital punishment, as a normal condition of things
and in all this it met with no protest except for one honorable
woman who boldly told the government the truth as she saw it.
The
Liberals whispered among themselves that these things displeased
them, but they continued to take part in legal proceedings, and
in the local governments, and in the universities, and in government
service, and in the press. In the press they hinted at what they
were allowed to hint at, and kept silence on matters they had to
be silent about, but they printed whatever they were told to print.
So that every reader (who was not privy to the whisperings of the
editorial rooms), on receiving a liberal paper or magazine, read
the announcement of the most cruel and irrational measure unaccompanied
by comment or sign of disapproval, sycophantic and flattering addresses
to those guilty of enacting these measures, and frequently even
praise of the measures themselves. Thus all the dismal activity
of the government of Alexander III destroying whatever good
had begun to take root in the days of Alexander II, and striving
to turn Russia back to the barbarity of the commencement of this
century all this dismal activity of gallows, rods, persecutions,
and stupefaction of the people has become (even in the liberal papers
and magazines) the basis of an insane laudation of Alexander III
and of his acclamation as a great man and a model of human dignity.
This
same thing is being continued in the new reign. The young man who
succeeded the late Tsar, having no understanding of life, was assured,
by the men in power to whom it was profitable to say so, that the
best way to rule a hundred million people is to do as his father
did, i.e. not to ask advice from any one but just to do what comes
into one's head, or what the first flatterer about him advises.
And, fancying that unlimited autocracy is a sacred life principle
of the Russian people, the young man begins to reign; and, instead
of asking the representatives of the Russian people to help him
with their advice in the task of ruling (about which he, educated
in a cavalry regiment, knows nothing, and can know nothing), he
rudely and insolently shouts at those representatives of the Russian
people who visit him with congratulations, and he calls the desire,
timidly expressed by some of them, to be allowed to inform the authorities
of their needs, "nonsensical fancies."
And what followed?
Was Russian society shocked? Did enlightened and honest people
the Liberals express their indignation and repulsion? Did
they at least refrain from laudation of this government and from
participating in it and encouraging it? Not at all. From that time
a specially intense competition in adulation commenced, both of
the father and of the son who imitated him. And not a protesting
voice was heard, except in one anonymous letter, cautiously expressing
disapproval of the young Tsar's conduct. And, from all sides, fulsome
and flattering addresses were brought to the Tsar, as well as (for
some reason or other) ikons, which nobody wanted and which served
merely as objects of idolatry to benighted people. An insane expenditure
of money, the coronation, amazing in its absurdity, was arranged;
the arrogance of the rulers and their contempt of the people caused
thousands to perish in a fearful calamity, which was regarded as
a slight eclipse of the festivities, which should not terminate
on that account. An exhibition was organized, which no one wanted
except those who organized it, and which cost millions of rubles.
In the Chancery of the Holy Synod, with unparalleled effrontery,
a new and supremely stupid means of mystifying people was devised,
viz., the enshrinement of the incorruptible body of a saint whom
nobody knew anything about. The stringency of the censor was increased.
Religious persecution was made more severe. The "state of siege,"
i.e. the legalization of lawlessness, was continued, and
the state of things is still becoming worse and worse.
And I think
that all this would not have happened if those enlightened, honest
people, who are now occupied in Liberal activity on the basis of
legality, in local governments, in the committees, in censor-ruled
literature, etc., had not devoted their energies to the task, of
circumventing the government, and, without abandoning the forms
it has itself arranged, of finding ways to make it act so as to
harm and injure itself; but, abstaining from taking any part in
government or in a business bound up with government, had merely
claimed their rights as men.
"You wish,
instead of 'Judges of the Peace,' to institute Zemsky Nachalniks
with birch rods; that is your business, but we will not go to law
before your Zemsky Nachalniks, and will not ourselves accept appointment
to such an office: you wish to make trial by jury a mere formality;
that is your business, but we will not serve as judges, or as advocates,
or jurymen: you wish under the name of a 'state of siege,' to establish
despotism; that is your business, but we will not participate in
it, and will plainly call the 'state of siege' despotism, and capital
punishment inflicted without trial, murder: you wish to organize
cadet corps, or classical high schools, in which military exercises
and the Orthodox faith are taught; that is your affair, but we will
not teach in such schools, or send our children to them, but will
educate our children as seems to us right: you decide to reduce
the local government boards (zemstvos) to impotence; we will
not take part in it: you prohibit the publication of literature
that displeases you; you may seize books and punish the printers,
but you cannot prevent our speaking and writing, and we shall continue
to do so: you demand an oath of allegiance to the Tsar; we will
not accede to what is so stupid, false, and degrading: you order
us to serve in the army; we will not do so, because wholesale murder
is as opposed to our conscience as individual murder, and above
all, because the promise to murder whomsoever a commander may tell
us to murder is the meanest act a man can commit: you profess a
religion which is a thousand years behind the times, with an 'Iberian
Mother of God,' relics, and coronations; that is your affair, but
we do not acknowledge idolatry and superstition to be religion but
call them idolatry and superstition, and we try to free people from
them."
And
what can government do against such activity? It can banish or imprison
a man for preparing a bomb, or even for printing a proclamation
to working-men; it can transfer our "Literature Committee"
from one ministry to another, or close a Parliament but what
can a government do, with a man who is not willing publicly to lie
with uplifted hand, or who is not willing to send his children to
an establishment which he considers bad, or who is not willing to
learn to kill people, or is not willing to take part in idolatry,
or is not willing to take part in coronations, deputations, an addresses,
or who says and writes what he thinks and feel? By prosecuting
such a man, government secures for him general sympathy, making
him a martyr, and it undermines the foundations on which it is itself
built, for in so acting, instead of protecting human rights, it
itself infringes them.
And
it is only necessary for all those good, enlightened, and honest
people, whose strength is now wasted in revolutionary, socialistic,
or liberal activity, harmful to themselves and to their cause, to
begin to act thus, and a nucleus of honest, enlightened, and moral
people would form around them, united in the same thoughts and the
same feelings; and to this nucleus the ever-wavering crowd of average
people would at once gravitate, and public opinion the only
power which subdues governments would become evident, demanding
freedom of speech, freedom of conscience, justice, and humanity.
And as soon as public opinion was formulated, not only would it
be impossible to close the "Literature Committee," but
all those inhuman organizations the "state of siege,"
the secret police, the censor, Schlusselburg, the Holy Synod, and
the rest against which the revolutionists and the liberals
are now struggling would disappear of themselves.
So
that two methods of opposing the government have been tried, both
unsuccessfully, and it now remains to try a third and a last method,
one not yet tried, but one which, I think, cannot but be successful.
Briefly, that means this: that all enlightened and honest people
should try to be as good as they can, and not even good in all respects,
but only in one; namely, in observing one of the most elementary
virtues to be honest, and not to lie, but to act and speak
so that your motives should be intelligible to an affectionate seven-year-old
boy; to act so that your boy should not say, "But why, papa,
did you say so-and-so, and now you do and say something quite different?"
This method seems very weak, and yet I am convinced that it is this
method, and this method only, that has moved humanity since the
race began. Only because there were straight men, truthful and courageous,
who made no concessions that infringed their dignity as men, have
all those beneficent revolutions been accomplished of which mankind
now have the advantage, from the abolition of torture and slavery
up to liberty of speech and of conscience. Nor can this be otherwise,
for what conscience (the highest forefeeling man possesses of the
truth accessible to him) demands, is always, and in all respects,
the activity most fruitful and most necessary for humanity at the
given time. Only a man who lives according to his conscience can
have influence on people, and only activity that accords with one's
conscience can be useful.
But
I must explain my meaning. To say that the most effectual means
of achieving the ends toward which revolutionists and liberals are
striving, is by activity in accord with their consciences, does
not mean that people can begin to live conscientiously in order
to achieve those ends. To begin to live conscientiously on purpose
to achieve any external ends is impossible.
To live according
to one's conscience is possible only as a result of firm and clear
religious convictions; the beneficent result of these in our external
life will inevitably follow. Therefore the gist of what I wished
to say to you is this: that it is unprofitable for good, sincere
people to spend their powers of mind and soul in gaining small practical
ends; e.g. in the various struggles of nationalities, or parties,
or in Liberal wire-pulling, while they have not reached a clear
and firm religious perception, i.e. a consciousness of the meaning
and purpose of their life. I think that all the powers of soul and
of mind of good people, who wish to be of service to men, should
be directed to that end. When that is accomplished, all else will
be accomplished too.
Forgive
me for sending you so long a letter, which perhaps you did not at
all need, but I have long wished to express my views on this question.
I even began a long article about it, but I shall hardly have time
to finish it before death comes, and therefore I wished to get at
least part of it said. Forgive me if I am in error about anything.
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