Harper's Weekly/Perfidious Imperialism
THE Hon. Carl Schurz has delivered himself
of a ten-column philippic against Perfidious
Imperialism, in which he flays alive everybody
who has had anything to do with the situation
in the Philippine Islands, excepting, of course,
Aguinaldo find his followers, Mr.
Bryan and his
Concerning
Mr. Schurz
aides, and the Spaniards, who are
primarily responsible for the
whole trouble. He admits in the
course of his arguments that his blood boils, and it
is unquestionably true that his eloquence seethes.
It is a pity that when Mr. Schurz's blood begins
to boil he draws himself away from that good-tempered
method of debate in which he has often
shown himself a master, and that as a result of
this departure he places himself in a position
which in the eyes of his friends and well-wishers
is a deplorable one. In days gone by, despite certain
peculiarities of temperament over which Mr.
Schurz no more than any other man similarly
constructed can exercise control, he has been a power
in argumentation. We know of no man to whose
words we should prefer to listen rather than to
those of Mr. Schurz when engaged in making an
address upon a purely academic question. There is
a fine quality to fill his utterances of this nature.
There is a subtle humor suggesting the rapier
rather than the bludgeon running through most
of his periods, and when listening to the sound of
his pleasant voice it becomes well nigh impossible
to doubt his sincerity. But when it comes to the
discussion of existing conditions Mr. Schurz is a
dreamer. He cannot quite see things as they are,
and he is so wedded to his visions that he is a hard
man to wake up. It is our honest conviction that
Mr. Schurz was designed by nature to write poetry.
He has in his soul that feeling of divine discontent
which has carried many a less gifted man to
the fore, and which has resulted in the enrichment
of our Anthologies. By some unkind provision of
the powers, however — possibly because of his own
resentment of a preconceived ideal of the life he
should lead — Mr. Schurz has spent most of his
days in politics, and in American politics at that,
than which there is probably nowhere in the world
to be found a kind more calculated to keep the
blood of the poet simmering at least, if not actually
boiling, and as a result he has been in a perpetual
state of fermentation as long as we can remember.
Discontent with conditions in the father-land gave
to us the benefit and the distinction of his citizenship.
Discontent with conditions during the civil-
war period secured for him a stinging rebuke from
no less a personage than Abraham Lincoln.
Discontent with conditions led him into an alliance
with the Democratic party when President Grant,
for the second time, ran for the Presidential office.
Discontent with his new associates made of him a
staunch supporter of Rutherford B. Hayes and
the Republican party four years later. Discontent
with his party in 1884 drew him away once more
from the Republican ranks and made a Democrat
of him. Discontent in 1896 drew him away from
the Democratic ranks into an advocacy of the election
of Mr. McKinley, and to-day he is consistently
following his political system of alternation, has
deserted Republicanism and joined hands with the
forces of anarchy and disorder. He has been right
and he has been wrong, but he has always been himself.
We think that on the whole he is a valuable
sort of citizen to have, because the nation does not
exist which does not need for its political development
an intelligent party of opposition. If Mr.
Schurz by going over to Bryanism can make Bryanism
intelligent, his present attitude is not quite
so deplorable as at first sight it seems to be. Ardent
supporters of the Administration as we are in this
campaign, we recognize the fact that a sincere and
intelligent opposition is a thing it has conspicuously
lacked, and we are wholly willing to express our
astonishment that it should have got along so well
without it. If Mr. Schurz is used by the people he
supports, or by the people he opposes, in the right
way, there can be no question that he will remain
as he has been in the past, a type of citizen which a
strong and growing country really needs to have
during its formative period. He can at least call
attention to what he considers to be our mistakes,
and if the people can only perceive wherein Mr.
Schurz is right and wherein he is wrong, much
good may ultimately come from his fermentations.
MR. SCHURZ'S address on Perfidious Imperialism,
as printed in full by the flirtatious
but not yet completely Bryanized organ of
the Populist candidate, the Evening Post, as a
piece of literature is really worth reading. As a
serious offset to the comprehensive treatment of
Perfidious
Imperialism
the Philippine question by President
McKinley in his letter of
acceptance, it is not to be reckoned
with, and for a precise reason. Mr. Schurz
in its preparation has been influenced rather by
the ideal surroundings of the beautiful northern
lake upon whose borders he has passed the summer,
than by the salient facts of the situation.
There all is peace. The placid waters speak not
of war. The rustling breezes blowing through
the trees speak only of idleness and of dreams.
The hills hide their heads in the clouds, and the
poetic side of man, with its license and its
independence of the sordid realities of life, willy-nilly
obtains control. Had Mr. Schurz gone to Washington,
with its brutal heat and the awful anxieties
of the past summer, to study the question from the
“hidden sources of information” which Mr.
McKinley has so nefariously used, instead of dreaming
of things is they might be beneath the soft
spell of Lake George, we think he would have
spoken differently. He would not have forgotten,
as he seems to have done, that we went into the
Philippines as an act of formal and declared war
— a war which for many years we had been striving
to avoid. He would not have forgotten the
fact that in a conflict we did not seek, but which
we could not honorably escape, we effected the
conquest of the Philippine Islands. He would not
have forgotten, as he appears to have done, that
by the formal and legal and inevitable ceding and
relinquishment to us of the Philippine Islands by
their only properly constituted sovereign power we
assumed a responsibility to shirk which would have
made us worthy of the pillory into which Mr.
Bryan and his followers, and even
Mr. Schurz
himself, would doubtless have been the first to
place the Administration. He would not have
forgotten that there rests upon the shoulders of the
American people in this matter a duty the proper
performance of which is to be the test of our honor,
of our strength, and of our right to take part in
the councils of the nations of earth, by which
alone we may hope to be influential in the spreading
of the principles of civilization.
Had the essential facts of Mr. Schurz's arraignment of the Administration been these, his argument would have been unassailable. Lacking the solid foundation of truth, the address falls to the ground, and in so far as criticism is required comes more properly into the realm of literature than into that of politics. As literature we cannot deny its excellence. We know of no more interesting bit of fiction published this fall. As a statesmanlike utterance we think it will find little commendation outside of the exclusive circle represented by John P. Altgeld, William Jennings Bryan, Richard Olney, Erving Winslow, Richard Croker, and E. L. Godwin.
This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1929.
This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.
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