登陆注册
15680700000015

第15章 BAKUNIN AND ANARCHISM(3)

Being compelled to leave France, he went to Brussels, where he renewed acquaintance with Marx.A letter of his, written at this time, shows that he entertained already that bitter hatred for which afterward he had so much reason.``The Germans, artisans, Bornstedt, Marx and Engels--and, above all, Marx--are here, doing their ordinary mischief.Vanity, spite, gossip, theoretical overbearingness and practical pusillanimity--reflections on life, action and simplicity, and complete absence of life, action and simplicity--literary and argumentative artisans and repulsive coquetry with them: `Feuerbach is a bourgeois,' and the word `bourgeois' grown into an epithet and repeated ad nauseum, but all of them themselves from head to foot, through and through, provincial bourgeois.With one word, lying and stupidity, stupidity and lying.In this society there is no possibility of drawing a free, full breath.I hold myself aloof from them, and have declared quite decidedly that I will not join their communistic union of artisans, and will have nothing to do with it.''

The Revolution of 1848 led him to return to Paris and thence to Germany.He had a quarrel with Marx over a matter in which he himselfconfessed later that Marx was in the right.He became a member of the Slav Congress in Prague, where he vainly endeavored to promote a Slav insurrection.Toward the end of 1848, he wrote an ``Appeal to Slavs,'' calling on them to combine with other revolutionaries to destroy the three oppressive monarchies, Russia, Austria and Prussia.Marx attacked him in print, saying, in effect, that the movement for Bohemian independence was futile because the Slavs had no future, at any rate in those regions where they hap- pened to be subject to Germany and Austria.Bakunin accused Mars of German patriotism in this matter, and Marx accused him of Pan-Slavism, no doubt in both cases justly.Before this dispute, however, a much more serious quarrel had taken place.Marx's paper, the ``Neue Rheinische Zeitung,'' stated that George Sand had papers proving Bakunin to be a Russian Government agent and one of those responsible for the recent arrest of Poles.Bakunin, of course, repudiated the charge, and George Sand wrote to the ``Neue Rheinische Zeitung,'' denying this statement in toto.The denials were published by Marx, and there was a nominal reconciliation, but from this time onward there was never any real abatement of the hostility between these rival leaders, who did not meet again until 1864.

Meanwhile, the reaction had been everywhere gaining ground.In May, 1849, an insurrection in Dresden for a moment made the revolutionaries masters of the town.They held it for five days and established a revolutionary government.Bakunin was the soul of the defense which they made against the Prussian troops.But they were overpowered, and at last Bakunin was captured while trying to escape with Heubner and Richard Wagner, the last of whom, fortunately for music, was not captured.

Now began a long period of imprisonment in many prisons and various countries.Bakunin was sentenced to death on the 14th of January, 1850, but his sentence was commuted after five months, and he was delivered over to Austria, which claimed the privilege of punishing him.The Austrians, in their turn, condemned him to death in May, 1851, and again his sentence was commuted to imprisonment for life.In the Austrian prisons he had fetters on hands and feet, and in one of them he was evenchained to the wall by the belt.There seems to have been some peculiar pleasure to be derived from the punishment of Bakunin, for the Russian Government in its turn demanded him of the Austrians, who delivered him up.In Russia he was confined, first in the Peter and Paul fortress and then in the Schluesselburg.There be suffered from scurvy and all his teeth fell out.His health gave way completely, and he found almost all food impossible to assimilate.``But, if his body became enfeebled, his spirit remained inflexible.He feared one thing above all.It was to find himself some day led, by the debilitating action of prison, to the condition of degradation of which Silvio Pellico offers a well-known type.He feared that he might cease to hate, that he might feel the sentiment of revolt which upheld him becoming extinguished in his hearts that he might come to pardon his persecutors and resign himself to his fate.But this fear was superfluous; his energy did not abandon him a single day, and he emerged from his cell the same man as when he entered.''[14]

[14] Ibid.p.xxvi.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 衍天使者

    衍天使者

    苍溟大陆,诸子百家,且看一小小厨家如何从中崛起,所谓治大国如烹小鲜,小小人物又如何将那天地蒸煮其中。欢迎加入天梦人生——衍天使者,群号码:511286299
  • 关于爱情的事

    关于爱情的事

    也许一个人一个世界是错误的,你孤独的走来。也许一个人一个世界是苍凉的,满世界只有灰色。也许你是一个独特的男子或女子,厌倦了俗世挣扎彷徨。也许你一个人无力改变周遭的世界!也许你要让这天再不遮眼视野无边无际。要这束缚都无影无踪、身心自由自在。也许你可以让诸佛都烟消云散、无法无天。也许你要爱你的人忘记怯懦,无拘无束、无法无天、并且无可救药的爱你-----也许这世界是灰暗的,你散发光彩;全世界因你而精彩!也许这世界是孤独的,你精彩演出;全世界因你而互相拥抱。
  • 地狱花开君不见

    地狱花开君不见

    爱到极致,就会成为疯狂。到底是什么?让人痴迷,让人沉醉,让人迷失了自己。为何付出了,却没有得到回报。“是你被黑暗遮住了双目,还是我被光芒遮蔽了眼前的真相?”“……你忘了啊,这些,我都不想要,我要的,只是……”你,你的爱。“我曾以为一切都不能相信,除了我自己,可是,还是忍不住做出了相信你的蠢事,那你又怎忍心这样对我?”“我不愿耗尽一切我所有的一切等到你,等待太久,我只愿我所有的一切,换来这一生见你一面,足矣。”地狱之花绽放,是什么迷失了双眼,明明你就在我身旁,我却找不到你?疯狂过后,才恍然发觉错了,可还有后悔的机会么?多少人被这世间繁华迷了眼,却终究看不到自己真正想要的,无法守护属于自己的。
  • 兰台妙选

    兰台妙选

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 邪魅归来

    邪魅归来

    他为了自己的女神而奋斗,欠下了一屁股的高利贷,逃亡任命时不幸遭到了天雷所劈,卷进了念战大陆在卷雄风。。。。。。。。。
  • 极品小相师

    极品小相师

    【免费精品】女施主别乱来!道爷只卖艺,不卖…钱多的话也可以考虑的!
  • 天域灵帝

    天域灵帝

    一个平凡的少年,一场悲惨的意外,一页神秘的金书,一位绝世老魔,造就了一个无双大帝
  • 执天神门

    执天神门

    修炼一途,窃阴阳,夺造化,与天斗,亦与人斗。然人力有时尽,天意命难为,纵尔机关算尽,也不过明日黄花。唯我彭凡,执天之神门,掌世之造化,可赐人生息,可断人命数,睥睨天下,引无数英雄竞折腰。
  • 穿越美杜莎

    穿越美杜莎

    乱世硝烟弥漫,我们一家穿越了,遇上很多有趣的事。敬请期待
  • 永恒裁决

    永恒裁决

    历史由胜者书写。败者将失去一切。这是个弱肉强食的时代。这,也是个最初的时代。