This page has been validated.
174
THE FORERUNNERS

It is Nicolai’s faith in the future which influences us even more than the writer’s ideas. That faith is a stimulant and a moral tonic. It awakens us and sets us free. Those of kindred spirit group themselves round him because, in the dark places of the earth where they wander chilled and with faltering steps, he is a focus of joy and fervid optimism. This prisoner, this man under sentence, smiles as he contemplates the force which thinks it has conquered him, the force of reaction let loose, and of unreason, overthrowing that which he knows to be right and true. Precisely because his faith is violated, he desires to proclaim it. “Precisely because war is in progress, I wish to write a book of peace.” Thinking of his brothers in the faith, weaker and more broken, he dedicates to them this book “to assure them that the war is but a passing phase; that we must be careful not to attach too much importance to it.” He speaks, he tells us, “to inspire fair-minded and right-thinking men with my own triumphant assurance.”[1]

May he be a model to us! May the small and persecuted band of those who refuse to share the general hatred, and whom therefore hate persecutes, be ever warmed by this inward joy! Nothing can deprive them of it. Nothing can harm them. For, amid the horror and the shames of the present, they are the contemporaries of the future.

  1. “Um dem guten und gerechten Menschen meine triumphierende Sicherheit zu geben.” Introduction [p. 10, English edition].


October 15, 1917.

“demain,” Geneva, November, 1917.