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'We Must Love One Another or Die'
Auden's Love Poem for Humanity
Seventy years ago yesterday, the military might of Nazi Germany was thrown against the free state of Poland. Hitler's planes, troops and tanks swept across the northern, southern and western borders of the nation that had through treaties allied itself with Great Britain, France and other European states that had grown increasingly wary of fascism's territorial ambitions.
World War II had begun.W.H. Auden, an Englishman who was of the left that had tried to raise the alarm about Hitler, Mussolini and their minions by speaking up for the Spanish loyalists in their fight against Franco, heard the news while sitting at the Dizzy Club in New York City.
Auden did what came naturally.
He began crafting a poem. And in it was perhaps the finest line of that or any war: "We must love one another or die."
Auden's "September 1, 1939" was a political poem, with its references to "Imperialism's face/And the international wrong."
But it was, as well, a love poem--very much a hymn to humanity and the ideal of a solidarity, both personal and universal, that might sustain us.
A decade later, after the fascists had been defeated at a cost too great for imagining even now, E.M. Forster wrote of Auden in his book Two Cheers for Democracy. "Because he one wrote 'We must love one another or die' he can command me to follow him," observed Forster.
Forster was not alone. World War II was a war fought by soldiers who read poetry. The arsenal of democracy included textbooks with thin covers, and surveys of literature both classic and modern. As a child, I learned poetry first by reading the blue-covered manual my father had been issued as an 18-year-old volunteer.
Not all soldiers read Auden. But more than a few did, especially that line about loving one another or dying.
And so it is, on this anniversary of a war fought by men and women now in their 80s and 90s, that we recall a struggle not between countries but between ideologies--between those who chose "the strength of Collective Man" over the strongman, the "affirming flame" of solidarity over Hitler's "thousand-year Reich," love over hate.
And we recall it best now, as in that dark fall of 1939, with Auden as our guide:
September 1, 1939I sit in one of the dives
On Fifty-second Street
Uncertain and afraid
As the clever hopes expire
Of a low dishonest decade:
Waves of anger and fear
Circulate over the bright
And darkened lands of the earth,
Obsessing our private lives;
The unmentionable odour of death
Offends the September night.Accurate scholarship can
Unearth the whole offence
From Luther until now
That has driven a culture mad,
Find what occurred at Linz,
What huge imago made
A psychopathic god:
I and the public know
What all schoolchildren learn,
Those to whom evil is done
Do evil in return.Exiled Thucydides knew
All that a speech can say
About Democracy,
And what dictators do,
The elderly rubbish they talk
To an apathetic grave;
Analysed all in his book,
The enlightenment driven away,
The habit-forming pain,
Mismanagement and grief:
We must suffer them all again.Into this neutral air
Where blind skyscrapers use
Their full height to proclaim
The strength of Collective Man,
Each language pours its vain
Competitive excuse:
But who can live for long
In an euphoric dream;
Out of the mirror they stare,
Imperialism's face
And the international wrong.Faces along the bar
Cling to their average day:
The lights must never go out,
The music must always play,
All the conventions conspire
To make this fort assume
The furniture of home;
Lest we should see where we are,
Lost in a haunted wood,
Children afraid of the night
Who have never been happy or good.The windiest militant trash
Important Persons shout
Is not so crude as our wish:
What mad Nijinsky wrote
About Diaghilev
Is true of the normal heart;
For the error bred in the bone
Of each woman and each man
Craves what it cannot have,
Not universal love
But to be loved alone.From the conservative dark
Into the ethical life
The dense commuters come,
Repeating their morning vow;
'I will be true to the wife,
I'll concentrate more on my work,'
And helpless governors wake
To resume their compulsory game:
Who can release them now,
Who can reach the dead,
Who can speak for the dumb?All I have is a voice
To undo the folded lie,
The romantic lie in the brain
Of the sensual man-in-the-street
And the lie of Authority
Whose buildings grope the sky:
There is no such thing as the State
And no one exists alone;
Hunger allows no choice
To the citizen or the police;
We must love one another or die.Defenseless under the night
Our world in stupor lies;
Yet, dotted everywhere,
Ironic points of light
Flash out wherever the Just
Exchange their messages:
May I, composed like them
Of Eros and of dust,
Beleaguered by the same
Negation and despair,
Show an affirming flame.


21 Comments so far
Show AllAbsolutely poignant! Truth is eternal. The task is to restore "love" and "truth" as the guiding principles of our society.
We must start with our own heart/mind; will it to be so - and pass it on.
excellent...thank you...
Here's another (posted by Billmon on his blog on 11-04-08):
Today the Struggle
Tomorrow, perhaps, the future: the research on fatigue
And the movements of packers; the gradual exploring of all the
Octaves of radiation;
Tomorrow the enlarging of consciousness by diet and breathing.
Tomorrow the rediscovery of romantic love;
The photographing of ravens; all the fun under
Liberty's masterful shadow;
Tomorrow the hour of the pageant-master and the musician.
Tomorrow, for the young, the poets exploding like bombs,
The walks by the lake, the winter of perfect communion.
Tomorrow the bicycle races
Through the suburbs on summer evenings.
But today, the struggle.
W.H Auden
Spain 1937
In the US, I believe we have chosen "die." The corporatist sophists of the right have developed great expertise, part art and part science, at dividing the little people and I do not find it likely that the little people in the US will come together in the foreseeable future.
How sadly true. When Bob Dylan wrote "Blowing in the Wind" and Peter, Paul and Mary were singing "How many times must a man turn his head, and pretend that he just doesn't see?", they had hope that the great systemic rot could be stopped. They were wrong. We are a diversified modern "Nazi Germany". We will end up the same way.
At least we here at CommonDreams have voiced the warning. I believe that has merit.
Here's a poem:
I'm a rich scumbag
I just wanna glut myself
Till death
The rest of you can eat excrement and die too
Duh end
The title of the article say's it all. At the very least we must fake love,compassion kindness, until such time that we discover these qualities to be ever present. Drop a little deeper into love and realize that no object is necessary to experience "it". Not only is it self sustaining,but it is who and what we are. The personality merely floats inside of love. We have arrived at a point in our evolution, to choose love unconditionally, now, or perish. I want to make it clear the difference between mentally co opted love and unconditional love. conditional love involves a lover and an object that the lover can focus on. Unconditional love is in love with itself. It cannot be practiced or learned and need not be because it is who we are. The problem with making love a mentally conditioned rule to be followed, is that it comes with exclusivity and superiority. this creates division which is the opposite of love. The time is here to drop ALL identification with personality and all of the mental and emotional investment surrounding the personality. The secret of "how" is that there is no secret. Secrets imply a lack of possession of some thing or some knowledge. We already ARE this love ,we need only stop following the minds denial of this. Yes i hear the readers reply with " it is not as easy as you say" . true it is not as easy as i "say", it is even easier than that. It is beyond easy, because even "easy" implies doing. if we already are that , then there is no "doing' , only a stopping of "doing" With that i will stop.
The poster's comment says it all: "At the very least we must fake love,compassion kindness, until such time that we discover these qualities to be ever present." - - fake now; love, compassion, kindness later. This posting must be a parody.
Unconditional love is treating everyone with respect regrardless of how they treat you. Here in Vermont most people would heartily agree that they do this on a regular basis and, 5 seconds later, scorn some minority or practice the silent rejection technique on some flatlander. You neglect to mention the self perpetuating nature of a culture that emphazises self love by the very act of scapegoating the perceived "outsider". I remember a social science class where the college professor shocked the class by saying that the purpose of a club is not to define who is "in" but rather to feel good and chummy about ostracizing those who are "out". Without this mechanisim, the sordid glue that keeps provincial, parochial, close minded, bigoted cultures like Vermont functioning would fall apart. The scapegoat is essential to this mechanism. Hitler chose the Jews. Vermont chooses anyone who wasn't born here and doesn't "pass". Utah is the same. But then, you would be amazed to find out how related many people here in Vermont are to the folks in Utah. They will not change. They just want people who talk about their faults to go away and leave them alone with their Norman Rockwell fantasies. I feel sorry for most Vermonters in particular but you can't get water out of a rock. How can you tell a suicidally hubristic culture that they are in danger when they look down their noses at any "fool" with the "gall" to criticize their "supreme perfection"?
One Vermont Doctor, when asked by a reporter from the Burlington Free Press why it had taken so long (several years of eye mutilations) for him and his colleagues to address all the complaints about malpractice from a Vermont Opthalmic surgeon, answered that Vermont is a community that thrives on pretending that everything is fine. Even home grown Vermonters who were victims of a Vermont doctor were getting fiece resistance from the legal system to bring charges against this goon. But they just don't see it. Too bad.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
The Nazi SS in the death camps issued their own internal stock certificates for the black market trade in personal effects of victims they sent to the gas chambers. Only members of the SS (and certain well-connected Nazi elites) could acquire this stock. But this was only (in terms of the victims) a per capita one-off profit taking since the ones who originally accumulated those looted possessions were immediately exterminated.
America has been metastasized by its elites into a full-spectrum death culture that is comparatively slower and more methodical in its process. It differs from original fascism to the following degree: America's owners and operators realized that death needs more time for what it kills to grow through the life phases of maximized profitability to ensure a predicable SERIES of profit takings. The costs of old age or protracted illness and infirmity (except for the elite) don't fit into this equation. Better for our elite that such frailties drive more Americans into bankruptcy, despair and shorter more cost effective lives. No wonder their ultimate arch enemies are Medicare and Social Security. Notice how the dominant infotainment culture routinely ignores--or when it does not ignore--belittles, scorns or plays garishly and directly on the fears of people who are old. Public option "death panels." The best protest sign I've seen in months read: "Insurance Companies are Death Panels."
Our anti-kulture has successfully reduced most Americans to both products and markets for each other in a truly cannibalistic sense. The elites and their overseers harvest and the rest of us are harvested. The controllers of the means of production profit from poisoning our food, air, water, minds and children and they profit from the illnesses and stress they deliberately create to limit and shorten our potential and our lives--but not so quickly as to fail to maximize their serial profit margins. They've even learned how to prolong wars and other disasters to "privatize" them and gorge themselves on the suffering over decades at the tax payers' expense like generations of vultures and horse flies.
Sioux Rose
METAL: Brilliantly stated & analyzed. Thank you for sharing such a powerful post!
Yep.
As the rock group U-2 would say, "How long must we sing this song?"
To Sioux Rose,
Thanks, but I hope to write at length about more hopeful things. How to educate enough of the world's people so that humanity can get past where laissez-faire capitalism and misguided socialism for the rich have led us.... Enough people have to realize and understand a thing--even in a simplified form--for them to grow beyond it.
I came up with some ideas for a scientifically balancing terraformational global system for resource allocation and human population/habitat management in the late '80s and early '90s. I am now reevaluating those ideas in light of recent reading about Participatory Economics (Parecon/Particiety) and the opportunistically inferred meaning of a court decision scribbled down on a paper copy of the ruling by a judge's aide that later led a misguided Supreme Court to extend 14th Amendment equal protection to corporations (giving them the same rights as flesh and blood human beings and stripping away local town council oversight over corporate business practices via their business licenses).
Participatory Economics has its heart in the right place in most aspects but blithely incorporates some sadly naive and crudely contemplated aspects as well. It is dismissive of private ownership of ANY size business. Dismissive of money and, apparently, the whole idea of capital investments of any kind. I agree with its balanced labor environment and training every person who works in a business in every position with a combination of formal and on the job training. But I think people who are innovative in creating new products and services that benefit society need and should have incentives to develop their ideas.
In its nested hierarchies of workers and consumers councils Parecon seems to create too many chiefs endlessly reinterpreting policies and expenditures and not enough rank & file simply getting on with the process of R&D, production and distribution. Too much micromanaging of small and medium-sized businesses by fractious committees. I believe that, if U.S. corporations were rightfully stripped of their horrifically destructive "equal protection" as "artificial persons" viewed as equal under law to authentic human beings, then oversight over their business practices & business licenses by local, State, Federal and international councils (depending on the size & operating range of the corporations) could be applied directly to private owners and share holders. This would allow the continuation of private ownership and regulated stock investments because any offensive corporate entities (regardless of size) would simply have their licenses to operate revoked. Perhaps this could and should be extended to having their most significant patents seized and redistributed by government via a sweepstakes event applicable to all businesses in the same industrial product sector with a similar sized workforce.
The day to day operation of business concerns would be under the control of the worker's councils with inputs from the consumer councils, but ownership could still be private in the case of small and most medium sized businesses. The smallest businesses could still be completely owner/family operated. I think the recent history of the giant, predominantly American and European oligarchies that now control too much of the planet (Big Oil, Big Weapons, High Finance, Big Pharma/Insurance, Big Media) have all demonstrated that they would be better controlled directly by worker's councils with a more heavily weighted relationship to Congress and Federal oversight agencies that takes into account a much broader concept of the common good. To achieve this will ultimately require overturning the 1990s Supreme Court decision that equates money with free speech for the purposes of political campaign financing, and the full public financing of State and Federal elections including six month limits on the durations of campaigns.
Beyond and above that level of economics is the need for a timely, smoothly integrated scientific source of information (as inputs for the worker's and consumer's councils and local, State, Federal and international government infrastructure planning entities) on human populations, their energy, food and other sustainable resource requirements, optimized habitat/population goals necessary to support a biosphere that preserves healthy biodiversity and preserves and restores as many natural habitats and species as possible. Honestly addressing the urgent need for a fair, scientifically determined and scientifically implemented, humane global population control program is key. Such a program cannot be based on race, religion, wealth (above a local minimum necessary to support a child or two) or political persuasion. It must be based on scientifically determined, optimized sustainable long-term balances between human populations, other key species populations and available habitats. I envision an international body of scientists who work in the relevant fields who will periodically elect a member from each country to sit on population goal enforcement boards so that every nation has such a board composed of one member from their own and every other nation--so that no one race or nationality is over-represented and all enforcement rules are applied equally to each nation on the basis of objective scientific planning instead of subjective political decision making. Procreation violators who have more than two children would be sterilized as well as all violent convicted criminals and all white collar criminals who commit crimes that cost their localities, States, or nations more than $1 million dollars. Parents in 1st World countries who wish to have more children than their country's population plan will allow would be allowed to adopt children from the 3rd World in return for government subsidized technology and medicine exchanges.
As it is now, homo sapiens is already well on the road to mega-death. We really must all love each other or die.
Sioux Rose
METAL: I applaud your efforts, post, and how much thought you have given to this topic. I am not as pragmatic as you, but I am also focused on the ways and means to create a more egalitarian society, one founded on more holistic, humanitarian ideals. It was catalyzed by a contest sponsored by Ted Turner (for better visions of the future) back in l990. I recently self-published it. Instead of money, in this more utopian society in which persons reside in pods dedicated to their common area of study or interest, TIME is the basis for collateral. Each person's hours of service are logged into a computer bank from which they can draw reciprocal services. Actual things are purchased by the entire pod as it trades its goods or services with other pods. Recyclatoriums carry many things once passed off as waste, now being recyled (or rebuilt) as the need arises. It was originally titled, "2020: After the Transition," and I was not exactly sure WHAT that transition was or would be. Now I see we are living it. The combination of resource depletion (and toxic exposure) based on wasteful war spending, added to accelerating climate change, added to our own society's sense of betrayal on the part of leadership, added to paper currencies rapidly divorced from any semblance of sane bases for worth... mean that change, and how we adapt, will be coming at us very fast. Some of the mechanisms of a better social order--be they borne from my vision, yours, or some eclectic combination--are apt to prove inevitable; that is, if the mercenary prison camp approach likely to erupt in response to violent outbursts springing up among the citizenry, doesn't put these more positive approaches on hold until 2020 AD.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
In Participatory Economics they also use a form of work credits in lieu of money. What a person is paid in terms of these computerized credits is based on the number of hours worked, degree of difficulty of the work, and the personal sacrifices or level of physical and/or mental risk associated with the work. Once a credit is spent it's gone, so there is no means of investing in other socially productive enterprises. Parecon seeks to create a classless society, and although I think this is a worthy ideal, I also think of it as a mathematic asymptote: Societies can strive towards it but, given genetically in-built human nature it is not realistically possible as an absolute. I think the work credit idea can also coexist with a means to use some work credits (perhaps as a group investment) to invest in other enterprises. I would rather workers have the power to help create and develop innovative new ideas for business and scientific research (along with centers of higher learning) than our current state of affairs that sees plutocrats & corporations co-opt government and universities to support R&D that leads to products and activities that are too often against the interests of the common good. Work groups or pods of common interest trading goods, ideas and services with others would fit in well with this scenario.
In the age of the internet a given "pod of common areas of study or interest" need not be located at one physical residence, but these common interest pods would be an excellent vehicle for grouped worker credit investments in areas of research and development aligned to a given pod's common areas of study or interest. People with multiple, non-overlapping interests (relative to other pod members who might share one area of common interest but not others) could thus reside physically anywhere they want. Internet pods of common interest would also be a logical outgrowth of online social networks like Facebook, Myspace, etc., only these types of software enterprises should be operated by the government with free access to all along with free high speed broadband internet. Much greater reliance on alternative renewable energy to help run the grid, and volunteer work projects (with low worker credit "wages" like the Civilian Conservation Corps) would help drive down associated implementation costs.
I don't believe that ending all private property or private ownership and operation of very small businesses is realistic with respect to human nature and instinctive lower-class interests that extend even to commonly shared ethnic and other cultural dreams. I live in the Deep South where even the poorest blacks admire and aspire to entrepreneurialism and small business ownership. Most small business start-ups are by middle- and lower-class women. I see nothing wrong with these aspirations and I do not believe that any major attempt to reform or abolish and create a new economic & political system will be accepted by the poor and minorities that does not allow for the possible fulfillment of these basic goals of economic innovation, economic self-support and pride of ownership. It is when businesses become too big for their britches and decide to trump government and all other social, ethical and moral interests that the major problems pile on.
and the sad reality:
"ALL Wars are waged for Money and Power"....SOCRATES
For further confirmation that this metastasis has occurred and has very deep roots:
http://www.rense.com/general87/ams.htm
Torture and killing of prisoners and non combatants in the USA before it was the USA, pre- civil war, the Phillipines, during world war II, Korea, Viet Nam and the Chicago Police Department from 1972-1993. Also what goes on RIGHT NOW in most US prisons.
Systemic rot.
"I and the public know
What schoolchildren learn,
Those to whom evil is done
Do evil in return." - W H Auden
9/11 was blowback -
War and torture in return.
Time to take the toys away from the boys,
Before the cycle once more turns.
Bill from Saginaw
It goes on one at a time,
it starts when you care
to act, it starts when you do
it again after they said no,
it starts when you say We
and know you who you mean, and each
day you mean one more.
NEW YEARS DAY 2007 MUSINGS
1) Essential: To be alive; it is essential to be here to have anything happening in the new year.
2) Understood: Got to have family; without which, matters not the size, we get no genes and hence no smiles and no gene pool.
3) Pleasure, pain: Our own gene pool; If this does not describe kids I have done a Rip Van Winkle. Per cents? 95 pleasure 5 pain.
4) Nice: Neighbors; Nice neighbors are nice and since they can be so close they might be among that 5%.
5) Beautiful: Friends; Here is where many sit, mother, father, sister, brother, kids, wife, husband, gal, guy from anywhere, pets and UFO riders. As all know there can be and are some 5%ers here.
6) Fabulous: Freedom; I would not leave home without it and maybe I couldn’t.
7) Desired: No war; The only negative here besides the 5%ers and so according to my math makes it a positive. Not Bal. math.
8) Treasure Trove: Love; Can we all see that this is the treasure trove as it encompasses all the others and makes them come alive as deeds and not just as sayings that I have written down? The 5% is part of the whole and so we tuck that in with love also.
HAPPY NEW YEAR to all!!!
With love to all, Sandy and Tony 12/30/07