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STUDY V
BABYLON BEFORE THE GREAT COURT
HER CONFUSION--NATIONAL
The Civil Powers in Trouble, Seeing the Judgment is Going Against
Them--In Fear and Distress They Seek Alliance One with Another,
and Look in Vain to the Church for Her Old-Time Power--They Increase
Their Armies and Navies--Present War Preparations--The
Fighting Forces on Land and Sea--Improved Implements of War, New
Discoveries, Inventions, Explosives, Etc.--Wake Up the Mighty Men;
Let the Weak Say, I am Strong; Beat Plowshares into Swords and
Pruning Hooks into Spears, Etc.--The United States of America
Unique in her Position, Yet Threatened With Even Greater Evils than
the Old World--The Cry of Peace! Peace! When There is no Peace.
"FOR these be the days of vengeance, that all things which are
written may be fulfilled...Upon the earth distress of nations,
with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring; men's hearts failing
them for fear, and for looking after those things which are
coming on the earth: for the powers of heaven shall be shaken.
And then shall they see the Son of man coming in a cloud with
power and great glory."
"Yet once more I shake not the earth only, but also heaven.
And this word, yet once more signifieth the removing of those
things that are shaken, as of things that are made, that those
things which cannot be shaken may remain...For our God is a
consuming fire." Luke 21:22,25-27; Heb. 12:26-29
That the civil powers of Christendom perceive that the
judgment is going against them, and that the stability of
their power is by no means assured, is very manifest. Disraeli,
when Prime Minister of England, addressed the British
Parliament, July 2, 1874 (just in the beginning of this
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harvest period or judgment (day), saying, "The great crisis
of the world is nearer than some suppose. Why is Christendom
so menaced? I fear civilization is about to collapse."
Again he said, "Turn whatever way we like, there is an uncomfortable
feeling abroad, a distress of nations, men's
hearts failing them for fear...No man can fail to mark
these things. No man who ever looks at a newspaper can fail
to see the stormy aspect of the political sky that at present
envelops us...Some gigantic outburst must surely fall.
Every cabinet in Europe is agitated. Every king and ruler
has his hand on his sword hilt;...we are upon times of unusual
ghastliness. We are approaching the end!"
If such was the outlook as seen in the very beginning of
the judgment, how much more ominous are the signs of the
times today!
From an article in the London Spectator, entitled "The Disquiet
of Europe," we quote the following:
"To what should we attribute the prevailing unrest in
Europe? We should say that though due in part to the condition
of Italy, it is mainly to be ascribed to the wave of pessimism
now passing over Europe, caused partly by
economic trouble and partly by the sudden appearance of
anarchy as a force in the world. The latter phenomenon has
had far greater influence on the Continent than in England.
Statesmen abroad are always anticipating danger
from below--a danger which bomb-throwing brings home
to them. They regard the anarchists as, in fact, only the advancing
guard of a host which is advancing on civilization,
and which, if it cannot be either conciliated or defied, will
pulverize all existing order. They prophesy to themselves ill
of the internal future, the existing quiet resting, as they
think, too exclusively on bayonets. Judging the internal situation
with so little hope, they are naturally inclined to be
gloomy as to the external one, to think that it cannot last
and to regard any movement...as proof that the end is
approaching rapidly. In fact, they feel, in politics the disposition
toward pessimism which is so marked in literature
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and society. This pessimism is for the moment greatly deepened
by the wave of economic depression."
The following from another issue of the same journal is
also to the point:
"THE TRUE CONTINENTAL DANGER--M. Jules Roche has
given us all a timely warning. His speech of Tuesday, which
was received in the French Chamber with profound attention
once more reminded Europe of the thinness of the crust
which still covers up its volcanic fires. His thesis was that
France, after all her sacrifices--sacrifices which would have
crushed any Power less wealthy--was still unprepared for
war; that she must do more, and above all, spend more, before
she could be considered either safe or ready. Throughout
he treated Germany as a terrible and imminent enemy
against whose invasion France must always be prepared,
and who at this moment was far stronger than France. Under
his last Military Bill the Emperor William II (said M.
Roche) had succeeded not only in drawing his whole people
within the grip of the conscription, but he had raised the
army actually ready for marching and fighting to five hundred
and fifty thousand men, fully officered, fully
equipped, scientifically stationed--in short, ready whenever
his lips should utter the fatal decision which his grandfather
embodied in the two words 'Krieg-Mobil.' France,
on the contrary, though the net of her conscription was
equally wide, had only four hundred thousand men ready,
and to save money, was steadily reducing even that proportion.
In the beginning of the war, therefore, which now usually
decides its end, France, with enemies on at least two
frontiers, would be a hundred and fifty thousand men
short, and might, before her full resources were at her Generals'
disposal, sustain terrible or even fatal calamities. The
deputies, though far from devoted to M. Jules Roche, listened
almost awe-struck, and Mr. Felix Faure has decided
that, for the first time in six years, he will exert a forgotten
prerogative granted to the President of the Republic, and
preside at the meeting of the Supreme Military Council, to
be held on March 20th. He evidently intends, as a trained
man of business, to 'take stock' of the military situation, to
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ascertain clearly what France possesses in the way of guns,
horses and men ready to move at once on an alarm, and if
he finds the stock insufficient, for the great market, to insist
on purchasing some more. Rich as the firm is, he may find
its capital insufficient for that enterprise, these collections
of fresh stock being costly beyond measure; but, at all
events, he intends to know the precise truth.
"M. Faure is a sensible man; but what a revealing light
does his action, following on M. Roche's words, throw on
the situation in Europe! Peace is supposed to be guaranteed
by the fear of war; and yet the moment war is openly mentioned,
the preparations for it are seen to be, now as much
as at any time since 1870, the first preoccupation of statesmen.
We know how little resistance the German Emperor
encountered last year in securing the changes which so
alarmed M. Jules Roche. The people hardly liked them in
spite of the immense bribe of a reduced term of service, and
they did not like paying for their cost; but they recognized
the necessity; they submitted; and Germany is now ready
for war at twenty-four hours' notice. France will submit
also, however despairingly, and we shall see preparations
made and moneys voted, which, but for an overpowering
sense of danger, would be rejected with disgust. The
French, even more than the Germans, are tired of paying,
but for all that they will pay, for they think that on any day
an army stronger than their own may be marching upon
Paris or on Lyons. The philosophers declare that the 'tensions'
between France and Germany has grown perceptibly
lighter, the diplomatists assert that all is peace; the newspapers
record with gratitude the Kaiser's civilities; France
even takes part in a ceremonial intended to honor Germany
and her navy; but all the same the nation and its chiefs are
acting as if war were immediately at hand. They could not
be more sensitive, or more alarmed, or more ready to spend
their wealth, if they expected war as a certainty within a
month. Nothing, be it remembered, has occurred to accentuate
the jealousy of the two nations. There has been no 'incident'
on the frontier. The Emperor has threatened no one.
There is no party even in Paris raging for war. Indeed, Paris
seems to have turned its eyes away from Germany, and to
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be emitting glances, fiery at once with hate and greed, in
the direction of Great Britain. And, finally, there has been
no sign or hint of sign in Russia that the new Czar wishes
war, or apprehends war, or is specially preparing for war;
and yet the least allusion to war shows Germany prepared
to the last point, and France alarmed, furious, and disturbed
lest she should not be prepared also. It is not any
'news' which is in question; it is the permanent situation
which happens, almost accidentally, to be discussed; and it
is at once admitted on all hands that this situation compels
Germany and France to be ready for a war of invasion at
twenty-four hours' notice. 'Double your tobacco tax, Germans,'
cries Prince Hohenlohe this week, 'for we must have
the men.' 'Perish economy,' shrieks M. Roche, 'for we are a
hundred and fifty thousand men short.' And observe that
in neither country do these exhortations produce any panic
or 'crash' or notable disturbance of trade. The danger is too
chronic, too clearly understood, too thoroughly accepted as
one of the conditions of life, for anything of that kind; it is
always there; and only forgotten because men grow weary of
hearing one unchanging topic of discourse. That is the most
melancholy fact in the whole business. There is no scare in
Germany or France about war any more than there is scare
in Torre del Greco about Vesuvius, nothing but a dull acknowledgment
that the volcano is there, has been there,
will be there unchanged until the eruption comes.
"We do not suppose that anything will happen immediately
in consequence of M. Jules Roche's speech, except
more taxes, and possibly the development of a wrinkle or
two on the President's forehead, for he will not like all the
results of his stock-taking, and he has been trained to insist
that the needs of his business shall be provided for, but it is
well that Europe should be reminded occasionally that for
rulers and politicians, and even nations, there can be at
present no safe sleep; that the ships are steering amidst icebergs,
and watch must be kept without a moment's cessation.
One hour's neglect, a crash, and an ironclad may
founder. It seems a hard situation for the civilized section of
mankind, to be eternally asked for more forced labor, a
larger slice of wages, a greater readiness to lie out in the
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open with shattered bones; but where is the remedy to be
found? The peoples are wild to find one, the statesmen
would help them if they could, and the kings for the first
time in history look on war with sick distaste, as if it had no
'happy chances' to compensate for its incalculable risks;
but they are all powerless to improve a position which for
them all bring nothing but more toil, more discomfort,
more responsibility. The single alleviation for the peoples is
that they are not much worse off than their brethren in
America, where without a conscription, without fear of
war, without a frontier in fact, the Treasury is overspent as
if it were European, the people are as much robbed by currency
fluctuations as if they were at war, and all men are as
carestricken as if they might be summoned at any moment
to defend their homes. There has been nothing like the European
situation in history, at least since private war
ceased, and but that we know the way of mankind, we
should marvel that it ever escaped attention; that the peoples
should ever be interested in trivilialities, or that a
speech like that of M. Jules Roche should ever be required
to make men unclose their eyes. 'We have two millions of
soldiers,' says M. Jules Roche, 'but only four hundred thousand
of them are idling in barracks, and that is not enough
by one hundred and fifty thousand men,' and nobody
thinks that anything but startingly sensible; and the representatives
of the people look gravely attentive, and the
Head of the States snatches up a forgotten weapon to compel
the heads of the army to tell him what Frenchmen call
the 'true truth.' We do not belong to the Peace Society,
being unable to believe in Utopias; but even we are driven
to think sometimes that the world is desperately foolish,
and that anything would be better--even the surrender of
Elsass-Lothringen by Germany or of Alsace-Lorraine by
France--than this never-ending and resultless mortgaging
of the future in obedience to a fear which those who act on
it all proclaim with one voice to be chimerical. It is not chimerical,
and they only say so to be civil; but could it not be
ended before ruin comes?"
The following is an extract from an address by Jas. Beck,
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Esq., of the Philadelphia Bar, published in The Christian
Statesman. The subject of the address was "The Distress of
Nations"--viewing the past century in retrospect.
"Our own century, commencing with the thunder of Napoleon's
cannon on the plains of Marengo, and drawing to
its close with similar reverberations from both the Orient
and Occident, has not known a single year of peace. Since
1800 England has had fifty-four wars, France forty-two,
Russia twenty-three, Austria fourteen, Prussia nine--one
hundred and forty-two wars by five nations, with at least
four of whom the gospel of Christ is a state religion.
"At the dawn of the Christian era, the standing army of
the Roman Empire, according to Gibbon, numbered about
four hundred thousand men, and was scattered over a vast
extent of territory, from the Euphrates to the Thames.
Today the standing armies of Europe exceed four millions,
while the reserves, who have served two or more years in the
barracks, and are trained soldiers, exceed sixteen millions, a
number whose dimensions the mind can neither appreciate
nor imagine. With one-tenth of the able-bodied men on the
Continent in arms in time of peace, and one-fifth of its
women doing the laborious, and at times loathsome, work
of man in the shop and field, one can sadly say with Burke,
'The age of chivalry has gone...The glory of Europe has
departed.' In the last twenty years these armies have been
nearly doubled, and the national debt of the European nations,
mainly incurred for war purposes, and wrung from
the sweat of the people, has reached the inconceivable total
of twenty-three thousand millions of dollars. If one is to
measure the interests of man by his expenditures, then assuredly
the supreme passion of civilized Europe in this evening
of the nineteenth century is war, for one-third of all the revenues
that are drained from labor and capital is devoted to
paying merely the interest on the cost of past wars, one-third
for preparations for future wars, and the remaining
third to all other objects whatsoever.
"The spear, the lance, the sword, the battle-axe have
been put aside by modern man as playthings of his childhood.
We have in their stead the army rifle, which can be
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fired ten times without reloading and can kill at three miles,
and whose long, nickel-plated bullet can destroy three men
in its course before its work of destruction is stayed. Driven
as it is by smokeless powder, it will add to past horrors by
blasting a soldier as with an invisible bolt of lightning. Its
effectiveness has practically destroyed the use in battle of
the cavalry. The day of 'splendid charges' like that of Balaklava
is past, and Pickett's men, if they had to repeat
today their wondrous charge, would be annihilated before
they could cross the Emmitsburg road. The destructive effects
of the modern rifle almost surpass belief. Experiments
have shown that it will reduce muscles to a pulp, and grind
the bone to powder. A limb struck by it is mangled beyond
repair, and a shot in the head or chest is inevitably fatal.
The machine gun of today can fire eighteen hundred and
sixty shots a minute, or thirty a second, a stream so continuous
that it seems like a continuous line of lead, and whose
horrible noise is like a Satanic song. A weapon of Titans is
the modern twelve-inch cannon, which can throw a projectile
eight miles and penetrate eighteen inches of steel, even
when the latter is Harveyized, a process by which the hard
surface of the steel is carbonized so that the finest drill cannot
affect it. Of the present navies with their so-called 'commerce
destroyers,' nothing need be said. Single ships cost
four millions dollars to build, and, armed with steel plates
eighteen inches thick, can travel through water with their
engines of eleven thousand horsepower at a rate of twenty-four
miles an hour. One such vessel could have scattered the
combined Spanish, French and English fleets, numbering
over one hundred ships, at Trafalgar, like a flock of pigeons,
or put the Spanish Armada to flight like a hawk in a dovecote;
and yet in the unceasing warfare of arms and armament
these leviathans of the deep have been instantaneously
destroyed, as with a blast of lightning, by a
single dynamite torpedo.
"If these preparations for war, which cover our waters
and darken our lands, mean anything, they indicate that
civilized man is on the verge of a vast cataclysm, of which
he is apparently as unconscious as were the people of Pompeii
on the last, fatal day of their city's life, when they witnessed
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with indifference the ominous smoke curl from the
crater's mouth. Our age has sown, as none other, the
dragon's teeth of standing armies, and the human grain is
ripe unto the harvest of blood. It needs but an incendiary
like Napoleon to set the world on fire.
"To deny that such is the evident tendency of these
unprecedented preparations is to believe that we can sow
thistles and reap figs, or expect perennial sunshine where
we have sown the whirlwind. The war between China and
Japan, fought only in part with modern weapons, and with
men who but imperfectly understood their use, in no way
illustrates the possibilities of the future conflict. The greatest
of all war correspondents, Archibald Forbes, has recently
said, 'It is virtually impossible for any one to have
accurately pictured to himself the scene in its fullness which
the next great battle will present to a bewildered and shuddering
world; we know the elements that will constitute its
horrors, but we know them only as it were academically.
Men have yet to be thrilled by the weirdness of wholesale
death, inflicted by missiles poured from weapons, the
whereabouts of which cannot be ascertained because of the
absence of powder smoke.' He concludes, 'Death incalculable
may rain down as from the very heavens themselves.'
When we recall that in one of the battles around Metz the
use of the mitrailleuse struck down 6,000 Germans in ten
minutes, and that at Plevna, in 1877, Skobelleff lost in a
short rush of a few hundred yards 3,000 men, and remember
that the mitrailleuse and needle gun have since quintupled
in their capacity for destruction, the prospect is one
at which the mind stands aghast and the heart sickens. Suffice
it to say that the great strategists of Europe believe that
the future mortality of battles will be so great that it will be
impossible to care for the wounded or bury the dead, and
many of them will carry as a necessary part of military
equipment a moving crematorium to burn those who have
fallen in battle.
"You may suggest that this dreadful visitation will pass
over peaceful America, as the angel that slew the first-born
of Egypt spared the bloodsplashed portals of the Israelites.
God grant that it prove so! Whence, however, is our assurance?
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So wonderfully have steam and electricity united
men in a community of thought, interest and purpose, that
it is possible, that if a great continental war should come, in
which England would almost necessarily become involved,
before it would be ended, the civilized world might be
lapped in universal flame. Apart from this, upon the
world's horizon is now discernible a cloud, at present no
bigger than a man's hand, but which may some day overcast
the heavens. In the Orient are two nations, China and
Japan, whose combined population reaches the amazing
total of five hundred millions. Hitherto these swarming
ant-hills have been ignorant of the art of war, for it is
strangely true that the only two countries, which since the
birth of Christ have experienced in their isolation comparative
'peace on earth,' are these once hermit nations
upon whom the light of Christianity had never shone. But
thirty years ago a mere handful of Englishmen and Frenchmen
forced their way, at the point of the bayonet, to Peking.
All this is changed. Western civilization has brought
to the Orient Bibles and bullets, mitres and mitrailleuses,
godliness and Gatling guns, crosses and Krupp cannon, St.
Peter and saltpetre: and the Orient may some day say with
Shylock: 'The villainy you teach me I will execute, and it
will go hard, but I will better the instruction.' Already they
have learned the lesson so well as to play with deadly effect
the awful diapason of the cannonade. Let once the passion
for war, which distinguishes the Occident, awaken the opulent
Orient from its sleep of centuries, and who shall say
that another Genghis Khan, with a barbaric horde of millions
at his back, may not fall upon Europe with the crushing
weight of an avalanche?
"It may be argued, however, that these preparations
mean nothing and are guarantees of peace, rather than provocative
of war, and that the very effectiveness of modern
weapons makes war improbable. While apparently there is
force in this suggestion, yet practically it is contradicted by
the facts, for the nations that have the least armies have the
most peace, and those who have the largest forces tremble
on the verge of the abyss. Switzerland, Holland, Belgium,
Norway, Sweden and the United States live in substantial
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amity with the world, while France, Russia, Germany,
Austria and Italy, armed to the teeth and staggering under
their equipments, are forever scowling at each other across
their frontiers. In them is found the vast magazine of martial
spirit and international hatred whose explosion requires
but the spark of some trivial incident. Thus when the
Empress Augusta recently visited Paris for pleasure her
presence alarmed the world, caused prices to fall upon the
bourses and exchanges and hurried an earnest and nervous
consultation of all European cabinets. A single insult offered
to her by the most irresponsible Parisian would have
caused her son, the young German Emperor, to draw his
sword. It was thus in the power of the idlest street gamin to
have shaken the equilibrium of the world. What a frightful
commentary upon civilization that the prosperity, and
even lives, of millions of our fellow-beings may depend
upon the pacific sentiments of a single man!
"No fact can be more clear than that humanity is at the parting of
the ways. The maximum of preparation has been reached.
In Europe men can arm no further. Italy has already fallen
under the burden of bankruptcy thereby occasioned, and
may be at any day plunged into the vortex of revolution.
Many thoughtful publicists believe that the European nations
must therefore either fight or disarm. Well did the
Master predict: 'Upon the earth distress of nations with
perplexity...Men's hearts failing them for fear, and for
looking after those things which are coming on the earth.'"
The following from The New York Tribune of May 5, 1895,
showed how some of the reigning sovereigns of Europe regarded
the situation:
"KINGS WHO WANT TO RETIRE TO PRIVATE LIFE. Abdication
seems to be in the air. At no time since the eventful
years of 1848-49, when the whole of Europe may be said to
have been in open insurrection against the mediaevally
autocratic tendencies of its rulers, have there been so many
reigning sovereigns who are declared to be on the point of
abandoning their thrones. In 1848 the monarchs were
mostly princes born in the previous century and reared
within the influence of its traditions, utterly incapable,
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therefore, of comprehending such new-fangled notions as
popular government and national constitutions. Sooner
than to lend their names to any such subversive ideas,
which they regarded as synonymous with sanguinary revolution
of the character that brought Louis xvi. and Marie
Antoinette to the scaffold, they preferred to abdicate; and
it was during those two eventful years that the thrones of
Austria, Sardinia, Bavaria, France and Holland were vacated
by their occupants. If today, half a century later, their
successors desire in their turn to abdicate, it is that they, too
have become firmly convinced that popular legislation is
incompatible with good government--that is, as viewed
from the throne--and that it is impossible to reconcile any
longer two such diametrically opposed institutions as
Crown and Parliament. In this perhaps, they are not far
wrong; for there is no doubt that the development of popular
government in the direction of democracy must naturally
tend to diminish the power and prestige of the throne.
Every new prerogative and right secured by the people or
by their constitutional representatives is so much taken
away from the monarch; and as time goes by it is becoming
more and more apparent that, from a popular point of
view, kings and emperors are superfluous, an anachronism,
mere costly figureheads whose very weakness and lack of
power render them an object of ridicule rather than of reverence,
or that they constitute serious obstacles to political,
commercial and even intellectual development.
Indeed, there seems to be no place left for them in the coming
century unless it be that of mere social arbiters, whose
power is restricted to the decreeing of the laws of fashion
and of conventionality, and whose authority is exercised
not by virtue of any written law, but merely by means of
tact.
"Of the sovereigns reported to be on the eve of abdication
we have in the first place King George of the Hellenes,
who declares himself sick and tired of his uncomfortable
throne, and does not hesitate to declare that, the very atmosphere
of Greece having ceased to be congenial to him,
he is anxious to surrender as soon as possible his scepter to
his son Constantine. He is no longer in touch with his subjects,
has no friends at Athens save visitors from abroad,
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and is constantly forced by the somewhat disreputable policy
of the Cabinets that succeed one another with such rapidity
in his dominion to place himself in an awkward and
embarrassing position with regard to those foreign courts to
which he is bound by ties of close relationship.
"King Oscar is also talking of resigning his crown to his
eldest son. In his case there is not one but there are two Parliaments
with which to contend; and as that at Stockholm
is always in direct opposition to that at Christiania, he cannot
content the one without offending the other, the result
being that Norway and Sweden are now according to his
own assertions, on the point of civil war. He is convinced
that the conflict between the two countries is bound to culminate
in an armed struggle, rather than countenance
which he has determined to abdicate. He declares that he
has done his best, like King George of Greece, to live up to
the terms of the Constitution by virtue of which he holds his
scepter, but that it is absolutely impossible to do so any
longer, and that it is a question with him either of violating
his coronation oath or of stepping down and making way
for his son.
"Then, too, there is King Christian of Denmark, who, at
the age of eighty, finds himself, as the result of the recent
general election, face to face with a National Legislature in
which the ultra-Radicals and Socialists, hostile to the
throne, possess an overwhelming majority, out-numbering
the moderate Liberals and the infinitesimal Conservative
party combined by three to one. He had been led to believe
that the bitter conflict which has been raging between
Crown and Parliament in Denmark for nearly twenty years
had come to an end last summer, and that, after he had
made many concessions with the object of settling all
differences, everything would henceforth be plain sailing.
Instead of this he now finds arrayed against him an overpowering
majority in Parliament, which has already announced
its intention of enforcing what it regards as
popular rights and of exacting compliance on the part of
the Crown with its conception of the terms of the Constitution.
Broken by age and infirmity, shaken by the illness
of his strong-minded wife, who has been his chief moral
support throughout his reign, and deprived, too, of the
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powerful backing of his son-in-law, the late Emperor Alexander
of Russia, he feels himself no longer capable of coping
with the situation, and announces that he is about to
make way for his son.
"To these three kings must be added the name of King
Humbert of Italy, who is forced to submit to a Prime Minister
personally abhorrent both to himself and to the
Queen, and to lend his name to a policy of which he disapproves
at heart, but which accords with the views of the
Legislature. It is no secret that the whole of his private fortune
is already invested abroad, in anticipation of his abandonment
of the Italian throne, and that he finds more
intolerable than ever a situation which compels him to surround
himself with people uncongenial to him and to his
consort, and to remain in a position toward the Church
which is not only diametrically opposed to the sincere religious
feelings of the Queen and of himself, but likewise
places the reigning house of Italy in a very awkward and
embarrassing position with regard to all the other courts of
the Old World. King Humbert is a very sensitive man and
keenly alive to the many slights to which he has been subjected
by all those foreign royalties who, on coming to
Rome, have pointedly abstained from calling at the Quirinal
for fear of offending the Vatican.
"Had it not been for Queen Marie Amelie of Portugal, a
strong-minded woman like her mother, the Countess of
Paris, King Carlos would have long since relinquished the
throne to his son, with his younger brother as Regent, while
King Charles of Roumania and the Prince Regent of Bavaria
are each credited with being on the eve of making
way for their next of kin. Finally there is Prince Ferdinand
of Bulgaria, who has been strongly urged by his Russophile
friends to abdicate, they undertaking to have him re-elected
under Muscovite protection. But he has thus far refrained
from yielding to their solicitations, realizing that there is
many a slip between the cup and the lip, and that, if he were
once voluntarily to surrender his crown, many things might
interfere to prevent his recovering possession thereof.
"Thus, taking one thing and another, the cause of the
people, from their own point of view, is not likely to be in
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any way improved or furthered by the impending abdications,
which, on the contrary, will probably involve a renewal
of the struggle of fifty years ago for constitutional
right and parliamentary privileges."
Noisy demonstrations of Socialism in the German
Reichstag, the Belgian Parliament and the French Chamber
of Deputies were by no means calculated to allay the
fears of those in authority. The German Socialist members
refused to join in a cheer for the Emperor at the instance of
the President, or even to rise from their seats; Belgian socialists
in reply to a proposal of cheers for the king, whose
sympathies were understood to be on the side of aristocracy
and capital, cried, "Long live the people! Down with the
capitalists!" and French members of the Chamber of Deputies,
disappointed in a measure tending to favor the Socialist
cause, declared that revolution would yet accomplish
what was peaceably asked, but refused.
It is significant, too, that a bill tending to check the
growth of Socialism in Germany, which was introduced in
the Reichstag, failed to become a law; the reasons for the
rejection of the bill being as follows, as reported by the
press:
"The recent rejection by the Reichstag of the 'anti-revolution
bill,' the latest measure elaborated by the
German government to combat Socialism, makes an interesting
chapter in the history of a nation with which, despite
differences of language and institutions, we ourselves have
much in common.
"It is now many years since attention began to be attracted
to the remarkable increase of the Socialistic party in
Germany. But it was not until 1878, in which two attempts
were made upon the life of the Emperor, that the government
determined upon repressive measures. The first law
against the socialists was passed in 1878 for a period of two
years, and was renewed in 1880, 1882, 1884, 1886.
"By this time additional legislation was deemed necessary,
and in 1887 Chancellor Bismarck proposed to the
[D128]
Reichstag a new law which gave the authorities the power
to confine the socialistic leaders within a given locality, to
deprive them of their rights as citizens, and to expel them
from the country. Parliament declined to accept the chancellor's
proposals; it contented itself by renewing the old
law.
"It was now hoped in some quarters that the occasion for
further repressive legislation would pass away. But the continued
growth of the Socialistic party, the increased boldness
of its propaganda, together with the occurrence of anarchistic
outrages in Germany and other parts of Europe,
impelled the government to further intervention. In December,
1894, the emperor intimated that it had been decided
to meet with fresh legislation the acts of those who
were endeavoring to stir up internal disorder.
"Before the end of that year the anti-revolution bill was
laid before the popular assembly. It consisted of a series of
amendments to the ordinary criminal law of the country,
and was proposed as a permanent feature of the criminal
code. In these amendments, fines or imprisonment were
provided for all who, in a manner dangerous to the public
peace, publicly attacked religion, the monarchy, marriage,
the family, or property, with expressions of abuse, or who
publicly asserted or disseminated statements, invented or
distorted, which they knew, or according to the circumstances,
must conclude to be invented or distorted, having
in view to render contemptible the institutions of the state
or the decrees of the authorities.
"The new law also contained provisions of similar character
aimed at the socialistic propaganda in the army and
navy.
"Had the opposition proceeded only from the Socialists
in and out of Parliament, the government would have carried
its bill in triumph. But the character of the offenses
specified, together with the extent to which the interpretation
of the law was left to police judges, awoke the distrust,
even the alarm, of large sections of the people, who
saw in its provisions a menace to freedom of speech, freedom
of teaching, and freedom of public assembly.
"Accordingly, when the Reichstag took up the consideration
[D129]
of the measure, a movement began the like of which
is not often seen in the fatherland. Petitions from authors,
editors, artists, university professors, students and citizens
poured into Parliament until, it is asserted, more than a
million and a half protesting signatures had been received.
"Great newspapers like the Berliner Tageblatt forwarded to
the Reichstag petitions from their readers containing from
twenty thousand to one hundred thousand names. Meanwhile
the opposition of four hundred and fifty German universities
was recorded against the bill at a mass-meeting of
delegates held in the capital.
"The rejection of a measure thus widely opposed was inevitable,
and the Socialist party will doubtless make the
most of the government defeat. Yet the Reichstag condemned
the bill, not because it was aimed at the Socialists,
but because, in striking at anarchical tendencies, the measure
was believed to endanger the rights of the people at
large."
In London it is said that Socialism is constantly gaining
ground while Anarchism is apparently dead. The Independent
Labor Party, which was the greatest power of organized
labor in England, is now avowedly a socialistic
organization. It expects a bloody revolution to come ere
long, which will result in the establishment of a Socialistic
republic upon the ruins of the present monarchy.
Noting these facts and tendencies, it is no wonder that we
see kings and rulers taking extra precautions to protect
themselves and their interests from the threatening dangers
of revolution and world-wide anarchy. In fear and distress
they seek alliance one with another, though so great is their
mutual distrust that they have little to hope for in any alliance.
The attitude of every nation toward every other nation
is that of animosity, jealousy, revenge and hatred, and
their communications one with another are based only
upon principles of self-interest. Hence their alliances one
with another can only be depended upon so long as their
selfish plans and policies seem to run parallel. There is no
[D130]
love or benevolence in it; and the daily press is a constant
witness to the inability of the nations to strike any line of
policy which would bring them all into harmonious cooperation.
Vain is the hope, therefore, to be expected from any
coalition of the powers.
Ecclesiasticism No Longer a Bulwark!
Realizing this as they do, to some extent at least, we see
them anxiously looking to the church (not the faithful few
saints known and recognized of God as his church, but the
great nominal church, which alone the world recognizes) to
see what of moral suasion or ecclesiastical authority can be
brought to bear upon the great questions at issue between
the rulers and the peoples. The church, too, is anxious to
step into the breach, and would gladly assist in restoring
amicable relations between princes and peoples; for the interests
of the ecclesiastical aristocracy and the civil aristocracy
are linked together. But in vain is help looked for from
this source; for the awakened masses have little reverence
left for priestcraft or statecraft. Nevertheless, the expediency
of soliciting the aid of the church is being put to the
test. The German Reichstag, for instance, which, through
the influence of Prince Bismarck, banished the Jesuits from
Germany in 1870, deeming them inimical to the welfare of
Germany, afterwards repealed the measure, hoping thus to
conciliate the Catholic party and gain its influence in support
of the army measures. A significant remark was made
on the occasion of the debate of the question, which,
though it will prove most true as a prophecy, at the time
served only to convulse the house with laughter. The remark
was that the recall of the Jesuits would not be dangerous,
since the deluge (Socialism--Anarchy) was sure to
come soon and drown them too.
[D131]
In the attempted reconciliations of the king and government
of Italy with the Church of Rome the motive has evidently
been fear of the spread of anarchy and the prospects
of social warfare. With reference to this Premier Crispi, in a
notable speech beginning with a historical review of current
Italian politics, and closing with a declaration as to the
social problems of the day, especially the revolutionary
movement, said:
"The social system is now passing through a momentous
crisis. The situation has become so acute that it seems absolutely
necessary for civil and religious authority to unite
and work harmoniously against that infamous band on
whose flag is inscribed, 'No God, no king!' This band, he
said, had declared war on society. Let society accept the
declaration, and shout back the battle-cry, 'For God, king
and country!'"
This same fearful foreboding on the part of the civil powers
throughout all civilized nations is that upon which is
based the recent conciliatory attitude of all the civil powers
of Europe toward the Pope of Rome, and which now begins
to look quite favorable to his long-cherished hope of regaining
much of his lost temporal power. This attitude of the
nations was most remarkably illustrated in the costly gifts
presented to the Pope, on the occasion of the Papal Jubilee
some years ago, by the heads of all the governments of
Christendom. Feeling their own incompetency to cope with
the mighty power of the awakening world, the civil authorities,
in sheer desperation, call to mind the former power of
Papacy, the tyrant, which once held all Christendom in its
grasp; and though they hate the tyrant, they are willing to
make large concessions, if by this means they may succeed
in holding in check the discontented peoples.
Many acknowledge the claim so earnestly set forth by the
Roman Catholic Church, that it will be the only reliable
bulwark against the rising tide of Socialism and Anarchism.
[D132]
In reference to this delusion a former member of the Jesuit
order, Count Paul von Hoensbrouck, now a convert to Protestantism,
points to Catholic Belgium and the progress of
Social Democracy there to show the hopelessness of any
help from that quarter. In his article which appeared in the
Preussische Jahrbuch, Berlin, 1895, he said:
"Belgium has for centuries been Catholic and Ultra-montane
to the core. This country has a population of more
than six millions, of whom only fifteen thousand are Protestant
and three thousand Jews. All the rest are Catholic.
Here is confessional solidity. The Catholic church has been
the leading factor and force in the life and history of
Belgium, and here she has celebrated her greatest
triumphs and has again and again boasted of them. With
some few exceptional cases she has controlled the educational
system of the country, especially the elementary and
public schools...
"Now, how has Social Democracy fared in Catholic Belgium?
This the last elections have shown. Nearly one-fifth
of all the votes cast have been given for the candidates of
the Social Democrats, and we must remember that on the
side of non-Socialistic candidates are found a great many
more 'plural votes' than on the side of the Social Democrats
--it being the rule in Belgium that the wealthy and
educated exercise the right of 'plural votes,' i.e., their votes
are counted two or three times. The Ultra-montanes indeed
claim that this increase in the Socialistic vote is to be attributed
to the growth from the Liberal Party. To a certain extent
this is the case, but the claims of the Clericals that it is
the bulwark against Socialism, irreligion and moral degeneracy
thereby become none the less absurd. Whence did
these Liberals come, if the Catholic church is the physician
for all the ills the state and society are heir to?
"Catholicism can save the people as little from 'Atheistic
Liberalism' as it can from Social Democracy. In the year
1886 a circular letter was sent to representative men in all
the different stations in life with questions pertaining to the
condition of the workingmen. Three-fourths of the replies
[D133]
declared that religiously the people 'deteriorated,' or 'had
disappeared altogether,' or 'Catholicism was losing its hold
more and more.' Liege, with its thirty-eight churches and
thirty-five cloisters returned a hopeless answer; Brussels
declared that 'nine-tenths of the children are illegitimate, and
immorality beyond description.' And all this is so, although
the Belgian Social Democrat, in so far as he has attended a
school at all, has been a pupil in the Catholic Ultra-montane
public schools, and in a country in which each
year more than half a million Catholic sermons and catechetical
lectures are delivered. The country which, with
right and reason has been called the 'land of cloister
and the clergy,' has become the Eldorado of Social
Revolution."
Extravagant Preparations for War
The fear of impending revolution is driving every nation
in "Christendom" to extravagant preparations for war. A
metropolitan journal says, "Five of the leading nations of
Europe have locked up in special treasuries 6,525,000,000
francs for the purpose of destroying men and material in
war. Germany was the first of the nations to get together a
reserve fund for this deadly purpose. She has 1,500,000,000
francs; France has 2,000,000,000 francs, Russia, despite the
ravages of cholera and famine, 2,125,000,000 francs;
Austria, 750,000,000 francs; Italy, the poorest of all, less
than 250,000,000 francs. These immense sums of money are
lying idle. They cannot or will not be touched, except in
case of war. Emperor William of Germany said he would
rather that the name of Germany be dishonored financially
than touch a single mark of the war fund."
Even as early as 1895 the U.S. War Dept.'s prepared figures
showed the size of the armies of foreign countries as follows:
Austro-Hungary, 1,794,175; Belgium, 140,000;
Colombia, 30,000; England, 662,000; France, 3,200,000;
Germany, 3,700,000; Italy, 3,155,036; Mexico, 162,000;
[D134]
Russia, 13,014,865; Spain, 400,000; Switzerland, 486,000.
It costs $631,226,825 annually to maintain these troops.
The militia force of the United States, as reported by the
Secretary of War to the House of Representatives in the
same year aggregates a body of 141,846 men, while its
available, but unorganized, military strength, or what, in
European countries, is called the "war footing" of the
country, the Secretary places at 9,582,806 men.
Said a correspondent for the New York Herald, having just
returned from a tour in Europe:
"The next war in Europe, come when it may, will be of a
destructive violence unknown up to this day. Every source
of revenue has been strained, if not drained, for the martial
effect. It would be idle to say that the world has not yet seen
the like, because never before has it had such destructive
warlike means. Europe is a great military camp. The chief
Powers are armed to the teeth. It is the combination of general
effort, and not for parade or amusement. Enormous armies
in the highest condition of discipline and armed to
perfection, leaning on their muskets or bridle in hand, are
waiting in camp and field for the signal to march against
each other. A war in Europe settles only one thing definitely,
and that is the necessity for another war.
"It is said that large standing armies are guarantees of
peace; this may be so for a time, but not in the long run: for
armed inactivity on such an enormous scale involves too
many sacrifices, and the heavy burdens will inevitably force
action."
Modern Implements of War
A correspondent of the Pittsburgh Dispatch writes from
Washington, D.C.:
"What a ghastly curiosity shop are the stores of arms and
projectiles and warlike models of all kinds in various nooks
and corners of the War and Navy Departments! They are
scattered and meager by comparison, to be sure, but they
are enough to set the most thoughtless a-thinking as to
[D135]
what we are coming to, and what will be the end of the
wonderful impetus of invention in the direction of weapons
for the destruction of human kind. All that we possess up to
this time, in this our new country, in the way of examples of
such invention, would hardly compare in interest or volume
with a single room of the vast collection in the old
Tower of London, but it is enough to tell the whole story.
To look at all this murderous machinery one would think
the governors of the world were bent on the extermination
of the human race, instead of its improvement and
preservation.
"Along with the modern inventions which enable one
man to kill 1,000 in the twinkling of an eye are the crude
weapons of those simpler days when men fought hand to
hand in battle. But we need not refer to them to illustrate
progress in the art of warfare. Even the machinery used in
the very latest of the great wars is now antiquated. Were a
new civil war to begin tomorrow in the United States, or
were we to become involved in a war with a foreign country,
we would as soon think of taking wings and battling in
the air as to fight with the weapons of a quarter of a century
ago. A few of the guns and ships which came into vogue towards
the closing days of the war, remodeled and improved
almost out of their original shape, might be employed under
some conditions, but the great bulk of the murderous
machinery would be supplanted with entirely new inventions,
compared with which the best of the old would be
weak and wholly powerless. I never was more forcibly reminded
of this progress in the domain of the horrific than
yesterday when on an errand to the Navy Department I
was shown the model and plans of the new Maxim automatic
mitrailleuse. It (and the Maxim gun with other
names) is certainly the most ingenious and the wickedest of
all the curious weapons of warfare recently invented. It is
the intention to manufacture them up to the size of a six-inch
cannon, which will automatically fire about 600
rounds in a minute. This, of course, has been exceeded by
the Gatling and other guns, carrying very small projectiles,
but these, compared with the Maxim, are cumbersome to
operate, require more attendants, are much heavier and far
[D136]
less accurate. One man can operate the Maxim gun, or one
woman, or one child, for that matter, and after setting it going
the gunner can stroll away for a quick lunch while his
gun is engaged in killing a few hundred people. The gunner
sits on a seat at the rear of the gun behind his bullet proof
shield, if he desires to use one. When he wants to mow down
an army in a few minutes he simply awaits till the aforesaid
army gets into a position favorable for his work. Then he
pulls a crank which fires the first cartridge, and the work of
the automatic machinery begins. The explosion of the first
cartridge causes a recoil which throws the empty shell out
of the breach, brings another shell into place and fires it.
The recoil of that explosion does a similar service, and so on
to infinity. It is murder in perpetual motion.
"One of Mr. Maxim's inventions is called the 'riot gun,' a
light little affair that can be transported in one's arms with
enough ammunition to drive any ordinary mob out of the
streets or out of existence. It is curious how all of the most
recent inventions in this line look toward a certainty of riotous
mobs. Since when did the inventor turn prophet? Well,
this 'riot gun' can be worked at the rate of ten murderous
shots a second, with the gunner all the time concealed, and
in perfect safety, even from a mob armed with guns or even
pistols, provided that same mob does not conclude to make
a rush and capture gun and gunner. It seems to be expected
by inventors like Mr. Maxim that modern mobs will stand
in the streets to be shot down without acting either on the
defensive or the aggressive, and that they will not stand
around safe corners with bombs, or blow up or burn a city
in their frenzy. However this may be, he has done all he can
in the way of a gun for mobs. This little weapon can carry
enough ammunition with it to clean out a street at one
round, and in a few seconds, and it can be operated from
walls or windows with as great facility as in the open street.
With a twist of the wrist it can be turned up or down on the
point of its carriage, and made to kill directly above or below
the gunner without endangering the life or limb of that
devotee of the fine art of murder.
"While this is one of the latest and most destructive of the
[D137]
recent inventions, it by no means follows that it is the last or
most effective that will be contrived. It gradually dawns on
the mind of one whose attention is called to this matter that
we are but well begun in this thing. We have been trying to
keep pace in the matter of defenses with the progress of the
means of effective attack, but in vain. No vessel can be constructed
to float that will withstand an explosion of the
modern torpedo. No nation is rich enough to build forts
that cannot be destroyed in a short time with the latest and
most villainous form of dynamite projectile. Balloons can
now be steered with almost the same facility as a vessel in
the water, and will be extensively used, in the wars soon to
occur, for the destruction of armies and forts. Death-dealing
machinery is being made so simple and inexpensive
that one man can destroy an army. If the strong are more
fully equipped to destroy the weak, on the other hand the
weak may easily be made strong enough to destroy the
strongest. On both sides war will mean annihilation. The
armies of the land, the monsters of the sea and war cruisers
of the air will simply wipe each other out of existence if they
come to blows at all."
But there is a still more recent improvement. The New
York World gives the following account of the gun and
powder:
"Maxim, the gun maker, and Dr. Schupphaus, the gunpowder
expert, have invented a new cannon and torpedo
powder, which will throw a huge cannon-ball full of explosives
ten miles, and where it strikes it will smash into kindling-wood
everything within hundreds of feet.
"The discovery is called the 'Maxim-Schupphaus system
of throwing aerial torpedoes from guns by means of a special
powder, which starts the projectile with a low pressure
and increases its velocity by keeping the pressure well up
throughout the whole length of the gun.' Patents on the system
have been taken out in the United States and European
countries.
"The special powder employed is almost pure gun cotton,
compounded with such a small percent of nitro-glycerine
[D138]
as to possess none of the disadvantages of nitro-glycerine
powders, and preserved from decomposition
through a slight admixture of urea. It is perfectly safe to
handle, and can be beaten with a heavy hammer on an anvil
without exploding. The secret of its remarkable power
lies in a single mathematical truth which no one had previously
thought of. High explosive powder is now loaded
into cannon in the form of strips, small cubes or solid cylindrical
rods from one-half to three-fourths of an inch in diameter,
several feet in length and looking like a bundle of
sticks of dark beeswax. When the powder is touched off the
ends and circumference of each rod of powder ignite instantaneously
and burn toward the center.
"The volume of gases generated by combustion grows
constantly less, because the burning surface is less, and as it
is the volume of gas which gives velocity to the projectile
shot from the gun, a loss of velocity is the inevitable result.
The projectile does not go so far as it would if the pressure
of the gases had increased, or had at least been maintained.
"In each piece of the Maxim and Schupphaus powder is
a lot of small holes running through the entire length of the
rod. When the powder is ignited the flame spreads instaneously
not only over the circumference of each rod, but
throughout the perforations as well. These little holes are
burnt out with such rapidity that the difference in the volume
of explosive gases generated at the beginning and at
the end of the bore of the gun is about in the ratio of sixteen
to one.
"The projectile therefore leaves the gun with terrific velocity,
and each little hole in the rods of the powder does its
share toward hurrying it on its mission of destruction miles
away from the scene. With a big gun the havoc wrought by
this new wonder of modern ordnance would be incalculable.
This new death-dealing powder has been fired in
field-guns and in the heavy coast-defense rifles at Sandy
Hook with surprising results. From a ten-inch gun loaded
with 128 pounds of this powder, a projectile weighing 571
pounds was thrown eight miles out to sea. The pressures on
the rods of powder were more uniform than any yet
recorded, which is a most important point in deciding the
[D139]
value of a high explosive powder. Without uniform pressures
accuracy of aims is impossible.
"The big gun which Messrs. Maxim and Schupphaus
propose to construct will be a twenty-inch gun, especially
adapted for coast defense. This gun will show some peculiarities.
It will not be built up, that is, composed of many
pieces of steel bound together, but will consist of a single
thin steel tube about thirty feet long, with walls not over
two inches in thickness, in marked contrast with the mortars
whose walls are made eight or ten inches thick in order
to resist the pressure of the discharge. The recoil of the gun
will be offset by hydraulic buffers underneath, containing
water and oil. A twenty-inch gun of this type, using the new
powder, could be planted at the entrance to New York harbor,
either in Ft. Washington or Ft. Wadsworth and command
the entire sea for a radius of ten miles. So uniform are
the pressures and velocities obtained that a wonderful accuracy
of fire is possible. It would only be necessary to train
the gun upon any ship sighted by the range-finder within
this radius to insure its complete destruction. The quantity
of explosives thrown would be sufficient to sink a man-of-war
if the projectile exploded in the water within fifty feet
of its side. At one hundred and fifty feet the concussion of a
five hundred pound projectile would be severe enough to
cause dangerous leaks and disable a ship."
Dr. R.J. Gatling, the inventor of the wonderful machine
gun that bears his name, said, with reference to the new invention
of smokeless powder:
"People are not yet educated to appreciate the enormous
revolution in future warfare caused by the invention of
smokeless powder. Already it has made obsolete between
3,000,000 and 4,000,000 of muskets in Europe, that were
built to shoot black powder, not to speak of the millions of
cartridges, all of which the countries possessing would be
willing to sell for a song. Here is a vast sum of wasted capital,
but it is the inevitable result of progress. Our army guns
in this country will soon be in the obsolete category, for to
keep pace with the rest of the world we will have to adopt
smokeless powder, too. A gun loaded with it will send a bullet
[D140]
just twice as far as the black powder does. Again, the new
invention changes military tactics entirely, for in the battles
of the future troops will never display themselves en masse
to the enemy. Open fighting, as has been customary
through all the ages, is a thing of the past, for it would mean
utter annihilation. If smokeless powder had been in use
during the late civil strife, the war between the States would
not have lasted ninety days.
"'What is the difference between a raped firing gun and
a machine gun?'
"A rapid firing gun doesn't begin to fire with the rapidity
of a machine gun. The former is usually of one barrel, and
is loaded with shells. It is a great gun for torpedo boats, but
fifteen times to the minute is pretty good time for one of
them. A machine gun of the Gatling type has from six to
twelve barrels, and with three men to operate, practically
never ceases firing, one volley succeeding another at a speed
of 1,200 discharges per minute. These three men can
do more killing than a whole brigade armed with old-fashioned
muskets."
A writer in the Cincinnati Enquirer says:
"The physiognomy of the next war, whenever it happens,
will assume features entirely new, and so horrible as to leave
forever the reproach of barbarism engraved upon the brow
of civilization. The new military organizations which have
quadruplicated the armies, the smokeless and terrible new
powder that nothing can resist, the present fulminant artillery
and rifle magazine which will now down the armies
like a tornado shakes down the apples of a tree, the balloon
observatories and balloon batteries which will drop masses
of powder on cities and fortresses, laying them waste in a
short time and much more effectively than a bombardment;
the movable railways for artillery, the electric light
and telephone, etc., have reversed all tactics of warfare. The
next war will be conducted upon an entirely different system,
unexperimented on as yet, and from which will arise
great surprises. 'We arm for defense and not for offense,'
says every power; 'our strength is our safeguard: it imposes
peace on our neighbors and inspires all with the respect due
us.'
[D141]
"But every power follows on the same policy, which is
equivalent to saying that all that formidable, murderous
display is directed to only protect peace from the clutches of
war. Though this be the climax of irony, I sincerely believe
it, because it is evident, and I think peace well guarded
against war by the very instruments of the latter, or rather
by the apprehension caused by their magnitude and ugliness.
But those unrelenting armaments are like an ever-absorbing
vortex into which the public fortune is drifting, and
going, as it were, to fill up a fathomless volcano in the form
of an explosive substance. Strange as it may be, this is the
true situation. Europe is lying upon a vast volcano dug out
by herself, and which she laboriously fills up with the most
dangerous element. But conscious of its danger, she diligently
keeps all firebrands away from the crater. But whenever
her caution relaxes and the explosion occurs, mind
this, the entire world will feel the shock, and shudder. Barbarism
will exhibit so much ugliness that a universal curse
will spread from one nation to another, and will cause the
peoples to devise some means more worthy of our time to
settle international affairs, and war will be buried by her
own hands beneath the ruins she will have raised."
Another Peace-Compelling Gun
Wake up the mighty men. Let all the men of war draw
near. Gather ye together in the Valley of Jehoshaphat (the
valley of death). Let the weak say, I am strong. Beat your
pruning-hooks into spears and your plowshare steel use for
swords. Joel 3:10
What it will by and by mean to go to war may be guessed
at from the description of the gun given below. In connection
with this preparation for war between nations let us
not overlook the fact that governments and generals are becoming
afraid of their troops. As the militia declined to
serve in Ohio in connection with the strike disturbances,
and as the marines rebelled against the government in Brazil,
and the soldiers of Portugal against their generals, so it
may soon be in every land in the world.
Germany with her great army is becoming fearful because
[D142]
Socialism is gradually making its way amongst the
soldiers. And even in Great Britain it was recently found
necessary to disarm some of the militia or yeomanry. The
secret of all this insubordination is knowledge, and behind
the knowledge lies education, and behind education the
printing press and God's wonderful enlightening power,
lifting the veil of ignorance and preparing mankind for the
great day of Messiah with its prelude of trouble.
We wondered some time ago how the insurrection, such
as the Scriptures seem to imply, could ever sweep over the
whole earth; how anarchy could break loose in spite of all
the combined power and influence of capital and civilization
opposed to it. But now we see that education
(knowledge), is preparing the way for the world's great disaster,
which the Scriptures seem to indicate may be expected
within the next few years. Now we can see that the
very men who have been trained to use the most up-to-date
apparatus for the destruction of human life may be found
amongst those who have the charge and care of the armories
and ammunitions of war. Following is the article referred
to:
"This gun, weighing less than twenty pounds, and manipulated
like an ordinary fowling piece, pours out a
stream of bullets when in action at the rate of 400 shots per
minute. The new arm is called the Benet-Mercier, and is of
French invention. It has a stock that is placed against the
shoulder. In action the soldier lies on the ground, resting
the gun on two supports. This gives an advantage in safety
over the Hiram Maxim rapid-firing model, since the operator
of that gun is compelled to stand in feeding it. This
brings him into full sight of the enemy--or rather it brings
all three men into sight, for three are required for the manipulation
of this heavier weapon."
The prophecy of Joel (3:9-11)is surely being fulfilled in
the wonderful preparations for war now being made
among the nations. Prophetically, he voiced the sentiments
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of these times, saying, "Proclaim ye this among the Gentiles:
Prepare war, wake up the mighty men, let all the men
of war draw near; let them come up. Beat your plowshares
into swords, and your pruning hooks into spears: let the
weak say, I am strong. Assemble yourselves and come, all ye
nations, gather yourselves together round about." Is not
this the world-wide proclamation of the present time? Are
not the mighty and the weak all nerving themselves for the
coming conflict? Is not even the professed church of Christ
marshalling the young boys and inspiring them with the
spirit of war? Are not the men who otherwise would be following
the plow and pruning the trees forging and handling
instead the weapons of war? And are not the nations
all assembling their mighty hosts and draining their financial
resources beyond the powers of long endurance, in order
thus to prepare for the exigencies of war--the great
trouble which they see fast approaching?
The United States Unique in Her Position, Yet
Threatened with Even Greater Evils Than the Old World
The position of the United States of America among the
nations is unique in almost every respect; and so much so
that some are inclined to regard this country as the special
child of divine providence, and to think that in the event of
world-wide revolution it will escape. But such fancied security
is not consistent with sound judgment, in view of either
the signs of the times or the certain operations of those just
laws of retribution by which nations, as well as individuals,
are judged.
That the peculiar circumstances of the discovery of this
continent and the planting of this nation on its virgin soil,
to breathe its free air and develop its wonderful resources,
was a step in the course of divine providence, the thoughtful
and unbiased cannot doubt. The time and circumstances
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all indicate it. Emerson once said, "Our whole
history looks like the last effort by Divine Providence in behalf
of the human race." He would not have said that, however,
had he understood the divine plan of the ages, in the
light of which it is quite clear that it is not a "last effort of
divine providence," but a well defined link in the chain of
providential circumstances for the accomplishment of the
divine purpose. Here has been afforded a refuge for the oppressed
of all lands from the tyranny of civil and ecclesiastical
despotism. Here, separated from the old despotisms by
the vast ocean wilderness, the spirit of liberty found a
breathing place, and the experiment of popular government
became a reality. Under these favoring circumstances
the great work of the Gospel age--the selecting of the true
Church--has been greatly facilitated; and here we have every
reason to believe the greatest harvest of the age will be
gathered.
In no other country could the blessed harvest message--
the plan of the ages and its times and seasons and privileges
--have been so untrammeled in its proclamation and
so widely and freely heralded. And nowhere, except under
the free institutions of this favored land, are so many minds
sufficiently released from the fetters of superstition and religious
dogmatism as to be able to receive the truth now due,
and in turn to bear its good tidings abroad. It was, we believe,
for this very purpose that the providence of God has
been, in a measure, over this country. There was a work to
be done here for his people which could not so well be done
elsewhere, and therefore when the hand of oppression
sought to throttle the spirit of liberty, a Washington was
raised up to lead the impoverished but daring liberty-lovers
on to national independence. And again when disruption
threatened the nation, and when the time had come for the
liberation of four millions of slaves God raised up another
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brave and noble spirit in the person of Abraham Lincoln,
who struck off the shackles of the enslaved and preserved
the unity of the nation.
Yet the nation, as a nation, has not, and never had, any
claims upon divine providence. The providential overruling
in some of its affairs has been only in the interests of
the people of God. The nation, as a nation, is without God
and without hope of perpetuity when, through it, God shall
have served his own wise purposes for his people--when he
shall have gathered "his elect." Then the winds of the great
tribulation may blow upon it, as upon the other nations,
because, like them, it is one of the "kingdoms of this world"
which must give place to the Kingdom of God's dear Son.
While the conditions of the masses of the population here
are much more favorable than those of any other land,
there is an appreciation of comfort and of individual rights
and privileges here among the poorer classes which does not
exist to the same extent in any other land. In this country,
from the ranks of its humblest citizens, imbued with the
spirit of its institutions--the spirit of liberty, of ambition, of
industry and intelligence--have come many of the wisest
and best statesmen--presidents, legislators, lawyers, jurists
and distinguished men in every station. No hereditary aristocracy
here has enjoyed a monopoly of offices of trust or
profit, but the child of the humblest wayfarer might aspire
to and win the prizes of honor, wealth and preferment.
What American schoolboy has not been pointed to the
possibilities of his one day becoming president of the country?
In fact, all the attainments of great men in every rank
and station have been viewed as the future possibilities of
the American youth. Nothing in the spirit of its institutions
has ever checked such ambition; but, on the contrary, it
has always been stimulated and encouraged. The influence
of these open avenues to the highest and to all the intermediate
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positions of honor and trust in the nation has been
to the elevation of the whole people, from the lowest strata
upward. It has stimulated the desire for education and culture,
and as well all the demands of education and culture.
The free school system has largely met this demand, bringing
all classes into intelligent communication through the
daily press, books, periodicals, etc., thus enabling them, as
individuals, to compare notes and to judge for themselves
on all questions of interest, and accordingly to wield their
influence in national matters by the use of the ballot.
A sovereign people, thus dignified and brought to an appreciation
of the rights of manhood, is therefore naturally
one of the first to resist, and that most determinedly, any
apparent tendencies to curb its ambition or to restrain its
operations. Even now, notwithstanding the liberal spirit of
its institutions and the immense advantages they have conferred
upon all classes of the nation, the intelligence of the
masses begins to discern influences at work which are destined
are long to bring them into bondage, to despoil them
of their rights as freemen and to deprive them of the blessings
of bountiful nature.
The American people are being aroused to a sense of
danger to their liberties, and to action in view of such danger,
with the energy which has been their marked characteristic
in every branch of industry and every avenue of
trade, though the real causes of their danger are not clearly
enough discerned by the masses to direct their energies
wisely. They only see that congested wealth is impoverishing
the many, influencing legislation so as to still further
amass wealth and power in the hands of the few, and so creating
an aristocracy of wealth whose power will in time
prove as despotic and relentless as any despotism of the Old
World. While this is, alas! only too true, it is not the only
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danger. A religious despotism, whose hateful tyranny can
best be judged by the records of the past days of its power,
also threatens this country. That danger is Romanism.* Yet
this danger is not generally discerned, because Rome is
making her conquests here by cunning art and base flattery.
She professes great admiration for the free institutions
and self-government of the United States; she courts and
flatters the Protestant "heretics" who form so large a proportion
of the intelligent population, and now calls them
her "separated brethren," for whom she has an "undying
affection"; and yet, at the same time, she lays her clammy
hand upon the public school system, which she is anxious to
turn into an agent for the further propagation of her doctrines
and the extension of her influence. She is making her
influence felt in both political and religious circles, and the
continuous tide of immigration to this country is largely of
her subjects.
*Vol. II, Chapter 10.
The danger of Romanism to this country was foreseen by
Lafayette, who, though himself a Roman Catholic, helped
to win, and greatly admired, the liberty of this country. He
said, "If the liberties of the American people are ever destroyed,
they will fall by the hands of the Romish clergy."
Thus from congested wealth, from Romanism and from
immigration, we see great dangers.
But alas! the remedy which the masses will eventually
apply will be worse than the disease. When the social revolution
does come here, it will come with all the turbulence
and violence which American energy and love of liberty
can throw into it. It is by no means reasonable, therefore, to
expect that this country will escape the fate of all the nations
of Christendom. Like all the rest, it is doomed to disruption,
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overthrow and anarchy. It also is a part of
Babylon. The spirit of liberty fostered here for several generations,
already threatens to run riot with a vehemence
and speed unequaled in the old world, and unrestrained by
the more potent agencies of the monarchical governments.
That many men of wealth see this, and to some extent
fear that the threatening troubles may culminate here first,
is manifest from various indications, of which the following,
from The Sentinel, Washington, D.C., of some years ago,
is an illustration:
"EMIGRATING FROM THE UNITED STATES--Mr. James Gordon
Bennett, owner of the New York Herald, says the National
Watchman, has resided so long in Europe as to be considered
an alien. Mr. Pulitzer, owner of the New York World, it is said
has taken up his permanent residence in France. Andrew
Carnegie, the millionaire iron king, has bought a castle in
Scotland and is making it his home. Henry Villard, the
Northern Pacific Railroad magnate, has sold his holdings
and gone permanently to Europe with about $8,000,000.
W. W. Astor has removed from New York to London, where
he has bought a magnificent residence, and made application
to become a British subject. Mr. Van Alen, who recently
secured the ambassadorship to Italy by a $50,000
contribution to the Democratic campaign fund, is a foreigner
to all intents and purposes, and declares this country
unfit for a gentleman to live in."
But in vain will protection and security be sought under
any of the kingdoms of this world. All are now trembling
with fear and alarm, and realize their inability to cope with
the mighty, pent-up forces with which they will have to
deal when the terrible crisis arrives. Then indeed "The loftiness
of man shall be bowed down, and the haughtiness of
men shall be made low." "In that day [now so very close at
hand--'even at the door'] a man shall cast his idols of silver
and his idols of gold...to the moles and to the bats, and to
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go into the clefts of the rocks, and into the tops of the ragged
rocks, for fear of the Lord and for the glory of his majesty
when he ariseth to shake terribly the earth." Isa. 2:17-21
Then "All hands shall be feeble, and all knees shall be
weak as water. They shall also gird themselves with sackcloth,
and horror shall cover them, and shame shall be
upon all faces, and baldness upon all their heads. They
shall cast their silver in the streets, and their gold shall be
removed. Their silver and their gold shall not be able to deliver
them in the day of the wrath of the Lord." Ezek. 7:17-19
Of little avail will be the protection which any government
can provide, when the judgments of the Lord and the
fruits of their folly are precipitated upon them all. In their
pride of power they have "treasured up wrath against the
day of wrath:" they have selfishly sought the aggrandizement
of the few, and have been heedless of the cries of the
poor and needy, and their cries have entered into the ears of
the Lord of armies, and he has espoused their cause; and he
declares, "I will punish the world for their evil and the
wicked for their iniquity; and I will cause the arrogancy of
the proud to cease, and will lay low the haughtiness of the
terrible. I will make a man more precious than fine gold,
even a man than the golden wedge of Ophir." Isa. 13:11,12
Thus we are assured that the Lord's overruling providence
in the final catastrophe shall bring deliverance to the
oppressed. The lives of multitudes will not then be sacrificed
nor will the inequalities of society that now exist be
perpetuated.
Truly this is the predicted time of distress of nations with
perplexity. The voice of the discontented masses is aptly
symbolized by the roaring of the sea, and the hearts of
thinking men are failing them for fear of the dread calamity
which all can now see rapidly approaching; for the
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powers of heaven (the present ruling powers) are being terribly
shaken. Indeed some, instructed by these signs, and
calling to mind that scripture, "Behold, he cometh with
clouds," are already beginning to suggest the presence of the
Son of man, although they greatly misapprehend the subject
and God's remedy.
Said Prof. Herron in a lecture given in San Francisco on
"The Christian Revival of the Nation"--"CHRIST IS HERE!
AND THE JUDGMENT IS TODAY! Our social conviction of sin--
the heavy hand of God on the conscience--shows this! Men
and institutions are being judged by his teachings!"
But amidst all the shaking of the earth (organized society)
and of the heavens (the ecclesiastical powers) those
who discern in it the outworking of the divine plan of the
ages rejoice in the assurance that this terrible shaking will
be the last that the earth will ever have or need; for, as the
Apostle Paul assures us, it signifieth the removing of those
things that are shaken--the overturning of the whole present
order of things--that those things which cannot be shaken
--the Kingdom of God, the Kingdom of light and
peace--may remain. For our God is a consuming fire. In his
wrath he will consume every system of evil and oppression,
and he will firmly establish truth and righteousness in the
earth.
The Cry of "Peace! Peace! When There Is No Peace"
But notwithstanding the manifest judgment of God
upon all nations, notwithstanding the fact that the volume
of testimony from multitudes of witnesses is pressing with
resistless logic against the whole present order of things,
and that the verdict and penalty are anticipated with
an almost universal dread, there are those who illy conceal
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their fears by cries of "Peace! Peace!" when there is no
peace.
Such a proclamation, participated in by all the nations
of Christendom was that which was issued from the great
naval display on the occasion of the opening of the Baltic
Canal. The canal was projected by the grandfather of the
present German Emperor, and the work was begun by his
father, for the benefit of Germany's commerce, as well as for
her navy. The present Emperor, whose faith in the sword as
a never failing remedy for the interruptions of peace, and
whose accompaniments of cannon and gunpowder are
equally relied upon, determined to make the opening of the
finished canal the occasion of a grand international proclamation
of peace, and a grand display of the potentialities
upon which it must rest. Accordingly, he invited all the nations
to send representative battleships (peace makers) to
the great Naval Parade through the Baltic Canal on June
20, 1895.
In response to that call there came more than a hundred
floating steel fortresses, including twenty giant "battleships,"
technically so-called, all fully armed, and all capable
of a speed of at least seventeen miles an hour. "It is
difficult," said the London Spectator, "to realize such a
concentration
of power, which could in a few hours sweep the
greatest seaport out of existence, or brush the concentrated
commercial fleets of the world to the bottom of the ocean.
There is, in fact, nothing on the seaboard of the world
which could even pretend to resist such a force; and Europe,
considered as an entity, may fairly pronounce herself
at once unassailable at sea and irresistible...The fleet assembled
at Kiel was probably the highest embodiment possible
of power for fighting, provided that the fight shall
never last longer than its explosive stores."
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The cost of the vessels and their armaments amounted to
hundreds of millions of dollars. One salute, fired simultaneously
by 2,500 guns, consumed in an instant thousands of
dollars worth of powder; and the entertainment of the distinquished
guests cost the German people $2,000,000. The
speeches of the German Emperor and foreign representatives
dwelt on "the new era of peace" ushered in by the
opening of the great canal and the cooperation of the nations
in the demonstration. But the fair speeches, and the
mighty roar of cannon by which the kings and emperors
proclaimed Peace! Peace! with threats of vengeance to any
who refuse it upon their terms, were not interpreted by the
people as the fulfilment of the prophetic message of "Peace
on earth and good will toward men." It had no soothing effect
upon the socialist element; it suggested no panacea for
the healing of social disorders, for lightening the cares or reducing
the burdens of the masses of the poor and unfortunate;
nor did it give any assurance of good will on earth,
nor indicate how good will could be secured and maintained,
either between nation and nation, or between governments
and peoples. It was therefore a grand farce, a
great, bold, national falsehood; and it was so regarded by
the people.
The London Spectator voiced the sentiments of thinking
people with reference to the display in the following truthful
comment:
"The irony of the situation is very keen. It was a grand
festival of peace and constructive industry, but its highest
glory was the presence of the fleets prepared at great sacrifice
of treasure and of energy solely for war and destruction.
An ironclad has no meaning, unless it is a mighty engine for
slaughter. There is but one phrase which describes fully the
grandeur of that 'peaceful' fleet, and that is that it could in
a day destroy any port on earth, or sink the commercial
navies of the world, if gathered before it, to the bottom of
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the sea. And what depths of human hatred were concealed
under all that fair show of human amity! One squadron
was French, and its officers were panting to avenge on that
exultant Emperor the dismemberment of their country.
Another was Russian, and its Admirals must have been
conscious that their great foe and rival was the Power they
were so ostentatiously honoring, and had only the day before
broken naval rules to compliment the Emperor's most
persistent and dangerous foe. A third was Austrian, whose
master has been driven out of the dominion which has
made the canal, and jockeyed out of his half-right in the
province through which the canal in its entire length winds
its way. And there were ships from Denmark, from which
Holstein had been torn by its present owners, and from
Holland, where every man fears that some day or other
Germany will, by another conquest, acquire at a blow, colonies,
commerce and a transmarine career. The Emperor
talked of peace, the Admirals hoped for peace, the newspapers
of the world in chorus declare that it is peace, but
everything in that show speaks of war just past, or, on some
day not far distant, to arrive. Never was there a ceremonial
so grand in this world, or one so penetrated through and
through with the taint of insincerity."
The New York Evening Post commented as follows:
"In the very gathering of war-vessels there is manifest a
spirit the reverse of peace-loving. Each nation sends its biggest
ships and heaviest guns, not simply as an act of courtesy,
but also as a kind of international showing of teeth.
The British navy despatches ten of its most powerful vessels
merely as a sample of what it has in reserve, and with the air
as of one saying, 'Be warned in time, O ye nations, and provoke
not the mistress of the seas.' French and Russian
squadrons, in like manner, put on their ugliest frown lest
host William should presume upon the jollification to make
too friendly advances. Our own American ships join the
fleet with the feeling doubtless animating many an officer
and sailor on board that it is time the haughty Europeans
learned that there is a rising naval power across the sea
which they had better not trifle with.
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"An especial air of bouffe attaches to the presence of the
French and Russians. As lovers of international peace, especially
as lovers of Germany, they are truly comic. Fury over
the thing in some parts of France is great...
"But the most striking insincerity of all is to be found in
the opening of the Kiel canal itself. It is dedicated to 'the
traffic of the world.' Hence its international significance,
hence all the rejoicing and glorification. But what do Germany
and France and the other continental Powers really
think about the traffic of the world? Why at this very moment,
as for twenty years past, they are straining every nerve
to fetter and hinder and reduce as far as possible the free
commercial intercourse of nations...Until this proscriptive
spirit of commercial hostility and jealousy passes away,
or wears itself out through sheer absurdity, you may open
as many inter-oceanic canals as you please, but you cannot
persuade sensible people that your talk about their significance
for international good feeling and the general love of
peace is anything but a bit of transparent insincerity."
The Chicago Chronicle said:
"It is the purest barbarism, this pageant at Kiel. Held in
celebration of a work of peace, it assumes the form of an
apotheosis of war. Mortal enemies gather there, displaying
their weapons while they conceal their enmity behind
forced friendliness. Cannon planned for war are fired for
courtesy. The Emperor himself eulogizes the display of
armaments. 'The iron-armed might which is assembled in
Kiel harbor,' he said, 'should at the same time serve as a
symbol of peace and of the cooperation of all European
peoples to the advancement and maintenance of Europe's
mission of civilization.' Experience controverts this theory.
He who has a gun wishes to shoot with it. The nation which
is fit for war wants to make war. The one serious menace to
European peace today is the fact that every European nation
is prepared for war.
"The digging of the Kiel canal was a distinct service to
civilization; the manner of its celebration is a tribute to barbarism.
It was dug, theoretically, to encourage maritime
commerce, and most of the vessels gathered to celebrate its
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completion were of the type known as commerce destroyers."
According to The St. Paul Globe, royalty and privilege
rather than industry, were on exhibition at Kiel. It said:
"What is the place of a fleet of ironclads today in the advancement
of civilization? What pirate fleets are there to be
swept from the high seas? What inferior and savage nation
exists to whom we might convey an illuminating influence
of modern civilization by casting upon it the searchlights of
a squadron of war-ships? There is but one assault at this
moment in which the nations might unite their forces
heartily on the plea that they were working for modern civilization.
Yet not one of the governments represented at
Kiel would dare to propose an armed alliance with the others
for the purpose of chasing out of Europe the hideous
and cruel Turk.
"Would a conflict between the splendid ironclads, or any
two of the nations represented at Kiel, aid in any way the
cause of civilization? Are not these armaments, on the contrary,
the relics and witnesses of surviving barbarism? The
most savage features of any nation are its munitions of war.
The purpose of most of those which Europe provides in
such profusion by taxes upon a burdened people is to keep
those people themselves in humble subjection to the powers
above them."
The "Pageantry of Oppression," is what The Minneapolis
Times called the Kiel naval pageant, upon which it commented
as follows:
"The fact that the opening of this magnificent waterway
is valued more for its military than for its commercial advantages,
and that it was celebrated by the booming of ordnance
from the assembled war fleets of the world, is an indictment
of civilization. For if the so-called 'civilized' nations
of the world need such vast enterprises for military
operations and such enormous navies as are now maintained
at the expense of the people, then the human nature
of the Caucasian race has not improved in the least since
the time of Columbus or by the great discovery he made. If
such navies are necessary, then liberty is impossible and
despotism is a condition necessary for the human race."
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This loud and united cry of the nations, through their
representatives, of "Peace! Peace! when there is no peace,"
calls forcibly to mind the word of the Lord through the
Prophet Jeremiah, who says:
"From the least of them even unto the greatest of them
every one is given to covetousness; and from the prophet
even unto the priest every one practiseth falsehood. And
they heal the breach of the daughter of my people very
lightly, saying, Peace! Peace! when there is no peace. They
should have been ashamed because they had committed an
abomination; but they neither felt the least shame, nor did
they know how to blush: therefore shall they fall among
those that fall; at the time that I punish their sin shall they
stumble, saith the Lord." Jer. 6:13-15
This great international proclamation of peace bearing
on its very face the stamp of insincerity, is a forcible reminder
of the words of John G. Whittier which so graphically
describe the present peace conditions:
"'Great Peace in Europe! Order reigns
From Tiber's hills to Danube's plains!"
So say her kings and priests; so say
The lying prophets of our day.
"Go lay to earth a list'ning ear;
The tramp of measured marches hear,
The rolling of the cannon's wheel,
The shotted musket's murd'rous peal,
The night alarm, the sentry's call,
The quick-eared spy in hut and hall,
From polar sea and tropic fen
The dying groans of exiled men,
The bolted cell, the galley's chains,
The scaffold smoking with its stains!
Order--the hush of brooding slaves!
Peace--in the dungeon vaults and graves!
Speak, Prince and Kaiser, Priest and Czar!
If this be peace, pray, what is war?
"Stern herald of Thy better day,
Before Thee to prepare Thy way
The Baptist shade of Liberty,
Gray, scarred and hairy-robed must press
With bleeding feet the wilderness!
O that its voice might pierce the ear
Of priests and princes while they hear
A cry as of the Hebrew seer:
Repent! God's Kingdom draweth near."
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