Renaissance of Manhood, The - Magyar HP Lovecraft Portál

Magyar H. P. Lovecraft Portál - hplovecraft.hu
Renaissance of Manhood, The
Szerző: Howard Phillips Lovecraft • Év: 1915
After the degrading debauch of craven pacifism through which our sodden and feminised public
has lately floundered, a slight sense of shame seems to be appearing, and the outcries of peace-atany-price maniacs are less violent than they were a few months ago. Military training for business
and professional men has been provided at Plattsburg, N.Y., and the high schools of Providence,
R.I. have established, and despite the wails of the unwarlike, efficient courses in martial instruction
and drilling.
Why any sane human being can believe in the possibility of universal peace is more than the
Conservative can fathom. The essential pugnacity and treachery of mankind is only too evident; and
that every nation, even though pledged, would actually abolish means of warfare is absolutely
unthinkable. Should the entire civilised world agree simultaneously to disarm, one or more nations
would undoubtedly retain secret armaments and at the proper time take advantage of their more
altruistic and less astute contemporaries in a wild career of conquest against unarmed victims. To
say that higher culture would reason away the causes of war is complete idiocy. Germany, generally
conceded to have been the world’s most philosophical and intellectual nation, has achieved an
equal fame in martial cruelty and bestiality. No country is, or can ever be, “above” warfare, until
the basic impulses of the human animal shall have miraculously changed.
Aversion to just war can arise from one of four causes: (1) unconscious physical cowardice
engendered by long years of peace, (2) hysterical idealism produced from incomplete training in
pure science, (3) mental bias derived from an erratic, temperamental intellect, and (4) that plain,
obtuse servility which copies and spreads the opinions of others. Under the first head of
unconscious physical cowards we must group the sobbing sisterhood who sigh forth in melody of
questionable musical and poetical value that “They Didn’t Raise Their Boys to be Soldiers”! Physical
cowardice is not always for one’s self; it may be sympathetic cowardice for others; but its unfailing
sign is the exaggerated importance and gravity of human suffering. This “cowardice” may
sometimes do immense good in lessening the minor discomforts of life, but it must not be allowed
to exceed its province and sap the virile vigour of a nation. Among the hysterical idealists we may
group the well-meaning clergymen who, in spite of Martin Luther’s defence of the soldier, declares
that “war is un-Christian”; as well as the ethical enthusiast who tells us that „man has outgrown
war”. Quite as hysterical is the socialist or anarchist who in his beer-barrel declamation screams
out that “war is only the tool of rulers to aggrandise themselves at the expense of the masses”. The
Quakers are an organised embodiment of this erratic idealism. The third or mentally biased class of
pacifist is seldom to be distinguished from the idealist—perhaps idealism itself is a form of mental
bias—but the line must be drawn to distinguish betwixt those whose idealism comes from defective
education and those who are idealists from defective comprehension. Class four, the copyist
element, is probably the most abundant of all. It embraces every part of our lower orders, and could
be turned into a fiery, militaristic body if the suitable demagogue were provided.
In the opinion of the Conservative, Theodore Roosevelt’s famous speech of August 25, 1915,
marks a momentous change in American public sentiment. It is the beginning of the end of supine
submissiveness and womanish ideals on the part of the majority. Americans will henceforth be less
eager to drug themselves with arguments and theories; they will prefer to face bare Truth, and to
know that men must fight to keep what they have; that in this world of sin nothing exists unless
there exists behind it the stern physical power to defend and preserve it.
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