deprive them of king and country, drive them into
exile, and make them despised by those who formerly
feared and respected them. But these warnings
remained unheeded, and the prophecies were fulfilled
to the letter. Elective kingship, pacta conventa,
[Footnote: Terms which a candidate for the throne
had to subscribe on his election. They were of
course dictated by the electors—i.e., by
the selfish interest of one class, the szlachta (nobility),
or rather the most powerful of them.] liberum veto,
[Footnote: The right of any member to stop the
proceedings of the Diet by pronouncing the words “Nie
pozwalam” (I do not permit), or others of the
same import.] degradation of the burgher class, enslavement
of the peasantry, and other devices of an ever-encroaching
nobility, transformed the once powerful and flourishing
commonwealth into one “lying as if broken-backed
on the public highway; a nation anarchic every fibre
of it, and under the feet and hoofs of travelling
neighbours.” [Footnote: Thomas Carlyle,
Frederick the Great, vol. viii., p. 105.] In the rottenness
of the social organism, venality, unprincipled ambition,
and religious intolerance found a congenial soil;
and favoured by and favouring foreign intrigues and
interferences, they bore deadly fruit—confederations,
civil wars, Russian occupation of the country and
dominion over king, council, and diet, and the beginning
of the end, the first partition (1772) by which Poland
lost a third of her territory with five millions of
inhabitants. Even worse, however, was to come.
For the partitioning powers—Russia, Prussia,
and Austria— knew how by bribes and threats
to induce the Diet not only to sanction the spoliation,
but also so to alter the constitution as to enable
them to have a permanent influence over the internal
affairs of the Republic.
The Pole Francis Grzymala remarks truly that if instead
of some thousand individuals swaying the destinies
of Poland, the whole nation had enjoyed equal rights,
and, instead of being plunged in darkness and ignorance,
the people had been free and consequently capable
of feeling and thinking, the national cause, imperilled
by the indolence and perversity of one part of the
citizens, would have been saved by those who now looked
on without giving a sign of life. The “some
thousands” here spoken of are of course the
nobles, who had grasped all the political power and
almost all the wealth of the nation, and, imitating
the proud language of Louis XIV, could, without exaggeration,
have said: “L’etat c’est nous.”
As for the king and the commonalty, the one had been
deprived of almost all his prerogatives, and the other
had become a rightless rabble of wretched peasants,
impoverished burghers, and chaffering Jews. Rousseau,
in his Considerations sur le gouvernement de Pologne,
says pithily that the three orders of which the Republic
of Poland was composed were not, as had been so often
and illogically stated, the equestrian order, the
senate, and the king, but the nobles who were everything,
the burghers who were nothing, and the peasants who
were less than nothing. The nobility of Poland
differed from that of Other countries not only in
its supreme political and social position, but also
in its numerousness, character, and internal constitution.