Capitolo 23
all both our destiny. Neither some correct-prepared men can abstain his/her tribute to
the good one what Socialist nervousness has done. Any man can say how much
uneasiness that has prevented, or how much it will prevent. Then, also, while us
you/he/she can repent the sentimentalism as which an intellect makes even so acute
that of Karl Marx a dangerous guide, we owe, when we read his/her description
of conditions for which he looked for remedy, self-acknowledged that he had been less
a man had been him less sensitive person. The man that I contact daily with
remediable uneasiness won't make incompetent to logically write always,
I would not desire to know. But it is the mission of such men to wake up
action and finally not to determine his/her purpose. The promoter cannot be
the judge. My animosity is that I desire of heart the most greater part if not all the ends
proposed by abstract Socialism that I understand to perfectly be a
only distribution of comfort. If, therefore, I am a critic of the Socialism,
I am a friendly critic, my objections to his/her progress that he/she mainly remains on
a sentence that would not remove, but it would intensify, the evils
what he intends that I/you/he/she mitigate." That is rather enough in respect to
the personal equation.
There you seem to be, unfortunately as a lot of seven of Socialists as of
Cristiano, and if "Capital" pits a more clearly book writing that I owe
both of the opinion as which it would be very best for Socialist if everybody
the other books on Socialism destroyed him as you/he/she would have been for Cristiano
and Hebrews if everybody the books on Theology were destroyed, omits the Bible. From
Socialism I intend what some Socialist writers call "Scientific
Socialism." "Marxism", it is probable that has called. "Humanism", I think Marx
you/he/she would have preferred to call him/it, and I believe he/she called him/it, for him it gave
with applicable abstract doctrine to men and not to nations and his
propaganda was her/it "International." Incidentally, as we pass on, we am able