3097
My conversation with the poet took place in the summer before the war. A
year later the war broke out and robbed the world of its beauties. It destroyed
not only the beauty of the countrysides through which it passed and the works of
art which it met with on its path but it also shattered our pride in the
achievements of our civilization, our admiration for many philosophers and artists
and our hopes of a final triumph over the differences between nations and races.
It tarnished the lofty impartiality of our science, it revealed our instincts
in all their nakedness and let loose the evil spirits within us which we
thought had been tamed for ever by centuries of continuous education by the noblest
minds. It made our country small again and made the rest of the world far
remote. It robbed us of very much that we had loved, and showed us how ephemeral were
many things that we had regarded as changeless.
We cannot be surprised that our libido, thus bereft of so many of its
objects, has clung with all the greater intensity to what is left to us, that our
love of our country, our affection for those nearest us and our pride in what is
common to us have suddenly grown stronger. But have those other possessions,
which we have now lost, really ceased to have any worth for us because they have
proved so perishable and so unresistant? To many of us this seems to be so, but
once more wrongly, in my view. I believe that those who think thus, and seem
ready to make a permanent renunciation because what was precious has proved not
to be lasting, are simply in a state of mourning for what is Lost. Mourning, as
we know, however painful it may becomes to a spontaneous end. When it has
renounced everything that has been lost, then it has consumed itself, and our libido
is once more free (in so far as we are still young and active) to replace the
lost objects by fresh ones equally or still more precious. It is to be hoped
that the same will be true of the losses caused by this war. When once the
mourning is over, it will be found that our high opinion of the riches of
civilization has lost nothing from our discovery of their fragility. We shall build up
again all that war has destroyed, and perhaps on firmer ground and more lastingly
than before.