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Jospeh Freeman (стр. 3 из 3)

O

times

In which the meagre, stale, forbidding ways

Of custom, law and statute took at once

The attraction of a country in romance!

When Reason seemed the most to assert her rights,

When most intent on making of herself

A prime enchantress, to assist the work

Which then was going forward in her name!

Not favored spots alone, but the whole Earth

The beauty wore of promise!

The

inert

Were roused and lively natures rapt away!

Yes, everybody is swept away by the excitement of the promise, the vision of the

good life, the better world; and whoever you are, whatever your skills may be, there is

room for you in the movement of redemption and liberation. You are called upon to exercise

your skill, to help realize the vision — where? In some far off place and time? No, here,

today, now! This was as true in the Nineteen Thirties as of the days of the French

Revolution. Nowhere has this aspect of the twentieth century vision been stated with

greater precision and power than in THE PRELUDE.

Were called upon to exercise their skill

Not in Utopia—subterranean fields—

Or some seculded island, Heaven knows where!

But in the very world which is the world

Of all of us, the place where in the end

We find our happiness or not at all.

For between the vision of the Book of Revelations, as interpreted by the Middle Ages,

and the French Revolution — of which the twentieth century revolution is a direct

continuation — a tremendous change had taken place in the minds of men in regard to

history and historic time.

Men are not content to wait milennia for their redemption and liberation through

miracle; they want to work for it here and now and to achieve it step by step not in

eternity alone but first in time.

In our own time, William Butler Yeats wrote a hymn to the vision in his poem about the

Easter uprising of 1916. This was the Irish manifestation of the basic dream with the

changing name, but it was part of the universal dream which roused Mexico in 1910, China

and Turkey in 1912, Russia in 1912, America in the Nineteen Thirties, the dream of a world

so changed that it is better.

We know their dream; enough

To know they dreamed and are dead;

And what if excess of love

Bewildered them till they died?

All changed, changed utterly–

A terrible beauty is born.

[Candide bows]

Thank you, gentlemen.

(EXIT CANDIDE. END OF COMEDY)

Toward the end of his life, Walt Whitman wrote a poem in which he said that everything

he had ever written had one purport – Freedom; yet freedom eluded his songs.

Freedom is not only the hardest thing in the world to achieve; it is the hardest thing in

the world to write about; for freedom is at once the deepest of human desires and the

greatest of the world’s riddles.

Ours is a world where there is no darkness without light and no light without darkness.

This is the ying and the yang of Chinese thought. Out of the great darkness comes great

light; out of the great light, great darkness, (and out of great darkness again great

light.)

The hopes of the Puritan Revolution are followed by the defeat of that revolution and

the despair which the Restoration brought to lovers of liberty. Milton voiced the hope in

his great pamphlet; the mitigated despair in great Samson Agonistes.

In The Prelude, Wordsworth voices the tremendous hopes roused by the French

Revolution, then the tremendous disappointment, then the refuge in reason, friendship and

love.

The Thirties opened with many American and European writers immensely enthusiastic

about the Russian Revolution, by that time a decade and a half old. Before the Thirties

were over, most of them were disappointed in and many of them were hostile to the Stalin

regime, which they felt had brutally, cynically and with unparalleled cruelty betrayed the

vision, the Good Old Cause, the Great Idea.

In the Thirties Andr? Gide entered Russia an enthusiast and came out an opponent.

Andr? Malraux fought with the Loyalists in Spain and came out an anti-communist. John Dos

Passos was also shocked in Spain and hasn’t gotten over that shock to this day. In the

mid-thirties, many American writers lost their enthusiasm for Russia without losing their

enthusiasm for socialism. These joined Trotsky.

The Moscow Trials and Stalin’s Great Purge in the mid-Thirties and the assassination of

Trotsky in 1940 disillusioned many American writers, yet it is amazing how many remained

among the faithful in spite of the blood.

It was not till the Soviet-Nazi pact of 1939 that there was general disillusion and a

general exodus of those intellectuals who in the Thirties had seen Marxism and the USSR as

the twentieth century embodiment of the basic dream with the changing name.

In World War II, Russia became our great and gallant ally and both President Roosevelt

and Winston Churchill paid Stalin the most extravagant compliments; a courtesy which

Stalin, not being bourgeois, failed to return. Under these circumstances new American

writers jumped on the pro-Soviet bandwagon. But the Nineteen Forties were something else

again. Now the vision centered on the war against fascism and many people hoped that after

the foe was defeated, the Allies would usher in a new era of peaceful coexistence and

peaceful construction. Instead we got the Cold War, the battle between East and West, the

threat of global atomic war and, in literature, an outburst of necessary but uninspiring

muckraking in which disillusioned radical writers denounced the Stalinite empire for its

barbarism and for betraying the vision.

In the Fifties came our own Great Persecution and writers lost interest in political

reform. The vision was forgotten or distrusted and freedom was sought in modern art, in

Zen Buddhism, in nothing.

But every night ends and gives way to morning. It’s the ying and the yang. I have a

feeling that we are about to see a new awakening, a new spirit that will flourish in the

Nineteen Sixties.

You are a fortunate generation because you are an uncommitted generation.

Forty years separate us from two key events which have shaped this epoch and its

literature: America’s entry into World War I and the fall of the Winter Palace. It is an

immense distance — the distance between the fall of the Bastille in 1789 and the novels

of Stendhal and Balzac in 1830, the distance between the election of Lincoln in 1860 and

the re-election of McKinley in 1900.

Forty years is a long, long time and this epoch is now dosed and a new one is about to

begin. The writers of the Thirties, Forties and Fifties are by no means through but the

coming decade will belong to the writers of your generation.

And because you are an uncommitted generation, you are free to begin not only with the

Perennial Vision of man redeemed and liberated, but also with some truths which are

clearer to all of us today than they were to some of us two decades ago.

In the Thirties many of us thought that the source of the problems which plague man is

society. We know better now. The source of the problems which plague man is — man.

Man cannot live without society and society cannot live without man. Man without

society is a solitary savage. Society without man is the collective savage of the

mechanical nightmare we have today.

What YOU, the uncommitted generation, have to find is not an imaginary but an actual,

living, creative inter-relationship, a true dialectic of man and society.

We cannot give you any specific prescriptions for this. Nobody has the one and only key

that opens all doors; nobody has the one and only answer that is valid for all time and

all the world and all the problems of man. We cannot even give you specific answers to the

specific questions you will encounter in the next stage of the human enterprise, which is

yours. We cannot foresee your questions and answers because we cannot foresee your world

any more than you can; and we won’t be there but you will.

That world will evolve out of ours, but it will be uniquely yours. You will have to

advance your heritage and achieve your goals by asking your own questions and finding your

own answers. Better still, you will create your answers and thereby you will create

your world.

And if your questions are right, your answers will be right; and if your answers are

right, your world will be right.

The literary spokesmen of the new spring will be young writers who are now between

twenty and thirty; the writers of your generation. I have a feeling that your generation

will — in new forms appropriate to the second half of the 20th century — bring to

life again the vision, the basic dream with the changing name, the Good Old Cause, the

Great Idea.

You will turn out a new fraternity of what Professor Aaron has felicitously called men

of good hope.

And you will incorporate into your dream what many of us have learned since the

Thirties and will say, after your own fashion, what Saint Clement of Alexandria told the

Greeks in his famous exhortation:

As are men’s wishes, such also are their words,

And as are their words, such also are their deeds,

And as are their deeds, such also is their life.

Good luck and Godspeed!