The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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against Russian tyranny. And the Tzar's Government, stupidly confident  
in its apparently unassailable position, instead of taking warning  
from the first rebukes, seems to mock this humanitarian age by the  
aggravation of brutalities. Not satisfied with slowly killing its  
prisoners, and with burying the flower of our young generation in the  
Siberian desserts, the Government of Alexander III. resolved to break  
their spirit by deliberately submitting them to a regime of unheard-of  
brutality and degradation."  
When one reads that paragraph in the glare of George Kennan's  
revelations, and considers how much it means; considers that all earthly  
figures fail to typify the Czar's government, and that one must descend  
into hell to find its counterpart, one turns hopefully to your statement  
of the objects of the several liberation-parties--and is disappointed.  
Apparently none of them can bear to think of losing the present hell  
entirely, they merely want the temperature cooled down a little.  
I now perceive why all men are the deadly and uncompromising enemies of  
the rattlesnake: it is merely because the rattlesnake has not speech.  
Monarchy has speech, and by it has been able to persuade men that it  
differs somehow from the rattlesnake, has something valuable about it  
somewhere, something worth preserving, something even good and high and  
fine, when properly "modified," something entitling it to protection  
from the club of the first comer who catches it out of its hole. It  
seems a most strange delusion and not reconcilable with our superstition  
that man is a reasoning being. If a house is afire, we reason  
780  


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