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Conrad, Joseph, 1857-1924

"Notes on Life and Letters"

It has managed to remove the sights and sounds
of battlefields away from our doorsteps. But it cannot be expected to
achieve the feat always and under every variety of circumstance. Some
day it must fail, and we shall have then a wealth of appallingly
unpleasant sensations brought home to us with painful intimacy. It is
not absurd to suppose that whatever war comes to us next it will _not_ be
a distant war waged by Russia either beyond the Amur or beyond the Oxus.
The Japanese armies have laid that ghost for ever, because the Russia of
the future will not, for the reasons explained above, be the Russia of to-
day. It will not have the same thoughts, resentments and aims. It is
even a question whether it will preserve its gigantic frame unaltered and
unbroken. All speculation loses itself in the magnitude of the events
made possible by the defeat of an autocracy whose only shadow of a title
to existence was the invincible power of military conquest. That
autocratic Russia will have a miserable end in harmony with its base
origin and inglorious life does not seem open to doubt. The problem of
the immediate future is posed not by the eventual manner but by the
approaching fact of its disappearance.


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