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<h2> CONSECRATING THE COLORS </h2>
<p>The Queen has recently presented new colors to the first battalion of the
Seaforth Highlanders. There was a great parade at Osborne, half the royal
family being present to witness her Majesty perform the one piece of
business to which she takes kindly in her old age. She has long been, as
Lord Beaconsfield said, physically and morally unfit for her many duties;
but she is always ready to inspect her troops, to pin a medal or a cross
on the breast of that cheap form of valor which excites such admiration in
feminine minds, or to thank her brave warriors for exhibiting their
heroism on foreign fields against naked savages and half-naked barbarians.
The ruling passion holds out strong to the last, and the respectable old
lady who is allowed to occupy the English throne because of her
harmlessness can still sing, like the Grand Duchess in Offenbach's opera,
"Oh, I dote on the military."</p>
<p>But the Queen is not my game. I am "going for" the priests behind her, the
mystery-men who give the sanction of religion to all the humbug and
hypocrisy, as well as to all the plunder and oppression, that obtain
amongst us. Those new colors were consecrated (that is the word) by the
Dean of Windsor. The old colors were consecrated forty-two years ago by
the Venerable Dr. Vernon Harcourt, Archbishop of York, who was probably a
near relative of our pious Home Secretary, the fat member for Derby. If I
were a courtier, a sycophant, or an ordinary journalist, I might spend
some time in hunting up the actual relationship between these two
Harcourts; but being neither, and not caring a straw one way or the other,
I content myself, as I shall probably content my readers, with hazarding a
conjecture.</p>
<p>Consecrating the colors! What does that mean? First of all it implies the
alliance between the soldier and the priest, who are the two arms of
tyranny. One holds and the other strikes; one guards and the other
attacks; one overawes with terror and delusion, and the other smites with
material weapons when the spiritual restraints fail. The black and the red
armies are both retainers in the service of Privilege, and they preach or
fight exactly as they are bidden. It makes no real difference that the
soldier's orders are clear and explicit, while the priest's are
mysteriously conveyed through secret channels. They alike obey the mandate
of their employers, and take their wages for the work.</p>
<p>In the next place it shows the intimate relation between religion and war.
Both belong to the age of faith. When the age of reason has fairly dawned
both will be despised and finally forgotten. They are always and
everywhere founded on ignorance and stupidity, although they are decorated
with all sorts of fine names. The man of sense sees through all these fine
disguises. He knows that the most ignorant people are the most credulous,
and that the most stupid are the most pugnacious. Educated and thoughtful
men shrink alike from the dogmas of religion and the brutalities of war.</p>
<p>Further, this consecration of the colors reminds us that the Christian
deity is still the lord of hosts, the god of battles. His eyes delight to
look over a purple sea of blood, and his devotees never invoke his name
so-much as when they are about to emulate his sanguinary characteristics.
The Dean of Windsor does not shock, he only gratifies, the feelings of the
orthodox world, when he blesses the flag which is to float over scenes of
carnage, and flame like a fiend's tongue over the hell of battle, where
brothers of the same human family, without a quarrel in the world, but set
at variance bv thieves and tricksters, maim and mangle and kill each other
with fractricidal hands, which ought to have been clasped in friendship
and brotherhood. Yet these hireling priests, who consecrate the banners of
war, dare to prate that God is a loving father and that we are all his
children. What monstrous absurdity! What disgusting hypocrisy I Surely the
parent of mankind, instead of allowing his ministers to mouth his name
over the symbols of slaughter, would command them to preach "peace,
peace!"</p>
<p>Until the war-drums beat no longer and the battle-flags are furled<br/>
In the parliament of man, the federation of the world.<br/></p>
<p>Of course there is a comic side to this, as to almost everything else. The
priests of the various nations consecrate rival banners, pray for victory
for their own side, and swear that God Almighty is sure to give it them if
they trust in him. Now what is the Lord to do when they go on in this way
on opposite sides? He is sure to disappoint one party, and he is likely to
get devilish little thanks from the other. A wise God would remain
neutral, and say, "My comical little fellows, if you will go knocking out
each other's brains because they are not strong enough to settle your
differences by peaceful means, by all means get through the beastly
business as soon as possible; but pray don't trouble me with your
petitions for assistance; both sides are fools, and I wash my hands of the
whole affair."</p>
<p>I have heard of an old Dutch commander who actually prayed the Lord to
remain neutral, although from a different motive. On the eve of battle he
addressed the deity in this fashion: "O Lord, we are ten thousand, and
they are ten thousand, but we are a darned sight better soldiers than
they, and, O Lord, do thou but keep out of it, and well give them the
soundest thrashing they ever had."</p>
<p>Our Prayer Book pays a very poor compliment to the god of battles. "Give
peace in our time, O Lord," says the preacher. "Because there is none
other that fighteth for us but only thou O God," responds the
congregation. The compilers of the Prayer Book evidently blundered, unless
they secretly felt that the Lord of hosts was used up, and not worth a keg
of gunpowder or an old musket.</p>
<p>Consecrating colors, like consecrating graveyards, is after all only a
trick of trade. The Dean of Windsor only practises the arts of his
profession, and probably laughs in his sleeve at his own public
performance. Perhaps he knows that God, as Napoleon said, is on the side
of the big battalions; just as, probably, every bishop knows that Church
corpses rot exactly like Dissenting corpses, although they lie in
consecrated ground. Priestly mummeries will last as long as there is a
demand for them. It is of little use to quarrel with this supply. The
Freethinker's duty is to lessen the demand.</p>
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