Notes on Life & Letters - Joseph Conrad

(Perpustakaan Sri Jauhari) #1

A NOTE ON THE POLISH PROBLEM—1916


We must start from the assumption that promises made by proclamation at the
beginning of this war may be binding on the individuals who made them under
the stress of coming events, but cannot be regarded as binding the Governments
after the end of the war.


Poland has been presented with three proclamations. Two of them were in such
contrast with the avowed principles and the historic action for the last hundred
years (since the Congress of Vienna) of the Powers concerned, that they were
more like cynical insults to the nation’s deepest feelings, its memory and its
intelligence, than state papers of a conciliatory nature.


The German promises awoke nothing but indignant contempt; the Russian a
bitter incredulity of the most complete kind. The Austrian proclamation, which
made no promises and contented itself with pointing out the Austro-Polish
relations for the last forty-five years, was received in silence. For it is a fact that
in Austrian Poland alone Polish nationality was recognised as an element of the
Empire, and individuals could breathe the air of freedom, of civil life, if not of
political independence.


But for Poles to be Germanophile is unthinkable. To be Russophile or
Austrophile is at best a counsel of despair in view of a European situation which,
because of the grouping of the powers, seems to shut from them every hope,
expressed or unexpressed, of a national future nursed through more than a
hundred years of suffering and oppression.


Through most of these years, and especially since 1830, Poland (I use this
expression since Poland exists as a spiritual entity to-day as definitely as it ever
existed in her past) has put her faith in the Western Powers. Politically it may
have been nothing more than a consoling illusion, and the nation had a half-
consciousness of this. But what Poland was looking for from the Western
Powers without discouragement and with unbroken confidence was moral
support.


This is a fact of the sentimental order. But such facts have their positive value,
for their idealism derives from perhaps the highest kind of reality. A sentiment
asserts its claim by its force, persistence and universality. In Poland that
sentimental attitude towards the Western Powers is universal. It extends to all

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