News
Garber Announces Advisory Committee for Harvard Law School Dean Search
News
First Harvard Prize Book in Kosovo Established by Harvard Alumni
News
Ryan Murdock ’25 Remembered as Dedicated Advocate and Caring Friend
News
Harvard Faculty Appeal Temporary Suspensions From Widener Library
News
Man Who Managed Clients for High-End Cambridge Brothel Network Pleads Guilty
Prince Serge Wolkonsky addressed a large audience last evening in Sanders Theatre on his impressions of America. These impressions, he said, were received from a limited observation. He, however, would freely acknowledge that he was at a disadvantage in this respect, and state his impressions, both favorable and unfavorable, in all sincerity.
Business is the Alpha and Omega of American life. To it everything else is subordinated. One of the results of this mercenary spirit is the expression that a man is "worth" so much, when the amount of his property is meant. With the early acquired idea that anything is worth nothing that costs nothing, the average American loses sight of everything but the making of money.
A thing which is everywhere noticeable in America is the prominence of denominational feeling in religion. A man's acts and his spirituality are the test by which he should be judged; and while we do not want a universal creed, we do want a feeling of the brotherhood of all men. Socialists, whose very motto is the fraternity of man, are the most inlined to be uncharitable to those outside of their own class. It is for this reason that the cause of the nihilist is not to be commended, because he tries to level society by violence instead of moulding it by love.
There is often in Americans an air of condescension in treating Russian things. For example, Americans express surprise at the excellence of Russian music, implying the contrast between the Russians and the music. The Russian is tempted to add, when a remark to this effect is made: "And I, too, am surprised at the poorness of American music, when I consider the people who produce it."
American society lacks individuality. There is an artificiality in it all that deprives it of life and freedom. In the various grades of society, aristocracy and democracy are prone to assert themselves to excess. A man who emphasizes his aristocracy shows that he is ignorant of the true position of aristocracy; the man who boasts of his democracy does the greatest harm to the cause of democracy.
Among American women there is a tendency to sacrifice the distinctive nature of their sex. The Woman's Building at the World's Fair, however successful in the character of its exhibits, is in its separateness the expression of the mistaken American idea. American children are the victims of the stern, practical life about. Childhood, which should be the time of light-hearted illusions, ends too early, if it even exists. But on the other hand, one of the best features of American life is the almost universal education of the youth.
The American artist, who is the one person who can realize the artificiality of society, and who is pained by the abnormally practical life, is worthy of the highest admiration.
One of the most impressive features of the Parliament of Religions was the brotherly feeling which was accorded the colored men who were present. This is the glory of the nation that made them free, as it is of the men who have been freed.
The lesson of a great gathering like that at the fair is that of the equality of men as men. Nations should learn to judge each other, not by their political systems, or by their national peculiarities, but by the contributions that each has made to humanity, They should not regard each other as brutes or as angels, but as men and brothers.
Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.