Essays in Rebellion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 343 pages of information about Essays in Rebellion.

Essays in Rebellion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 343 pages of information about Essays in Rebellion.
be stronger still.  Something has thus been gained; but the greatest gain ever yet won for the cause of peace was the refusal of the Catalonian reservists to serve in the war against the Riff mountaineers of Morocco in July 1909.  “Risk our lives and the subsistence of our little families to secure dividends for shareholders in mining concessions illegally inveigled from a semi-savage chieftain?  Never!  We will raise hell rather, and die in revolution upon our native streets.”  So Barcelona flared to heaven, and for nearly a week the people held the vast city.  I have seen many noble, as well as many terrible, events, but none more noble or of finer promise for mankind than the sudden uprising of the Catalan working people against a dastardly and inglorious war, waged for the benefit of a few speculators in Paris and Madrid.  Ferrer had no direct part in that rising; his only part lay in sowing the seed of freedom by his writings.  It was a pity he had no other part.  He lost an opportunity such as comes in few men’s lives—­and he was executed just the same.[18]

The event was small and brief, but it was one of the most significant in modern times.  If the working classes refuse to fight, what will the kings, ministers, speculators, and contractors do?  Will they go out to fight each other?  Then, indeed, warfare would become a blessing undisguised, and we could freely join the poet in calling carnage God’s daughter.  When I was a child I drew up a scheme for a vast British army recruited from our lunatic asylums.  With lunatic soldiers, as I explained to my mother, the heavier our losses, the greater would be our gain.  It seems to me still a promising idea.  But an army recruited from kings, lords, Cabinet Ministers, Members of Parliament, speculators, contractors, and officials—­the people who are the primary originators of our wars—­would have even greater advantages, and the losses in battle would be balanced by still greater compensations.

The Barcelona rising was, indeed, full of promise.  It marked the gradual approach of a time when the working-people, who always supply most of the men to be killed in war, will refuse to fight for the ruling classes, as they would now refuse to fight for dynasties.  If they refuse to fight in the ordinary Government wars, either war will cease, or it will rise to the higher stage of war between class and class.  It will become either civil war—­the most terrible and difficult, but the finest kind of war, because some principle of the highest value must be at stake before civil war can arise; or it will become a combined war of the classes in various countries between whom there is a feeling of sympathy and common interest.  That would take the form of a civil war extended throughout Europe, and perhaps America and the highly-developed parts of Asia.  The allied forces in the various countries would then strike where the need was greatest, the French or English army corps of working-men going

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Essays in Rebellion from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.