Thunder at Twilight by Frederic Morton

Thunder at Twilight by Frederic Morton

Author:Frederic Morton [Morton, Frederic]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9780306823275
Publisher: Da Capo Press


In 1914 even more than in previous years, Viktor Adler knew that his Party must not be a weak link of the international workers’ alliance. Shadows had begun to jut across Europe’s borders. Governments of major powers speechified louder than ever about national interests, patriotic valor, and automated battleships. France heard German sabers rattling. Germany protested its encirclement by England, France, and Russia. Russia denounced Austria’s pushiness in the Balkans. And Austria countered sharply; statements from Count von Berchtold’s Foreign Ministry on the Ballhausplatz, editorials in the Ballhausplatz-inspired press, all used an especially martial tone to prove that Habsburg was not crippled by the illness of the Emperor.

Yet at the same time the masses had grown more sensitive to the menace of war. In Germany, Rosa Luxemburg had just been tried for inciting troops to mutiny: If Germans were asked to murder Frenchmen—she had said in public—Germans would refuse. A court had sent her to jail for a year, but the sentence did not dim the pacifism of German Socialists or the popularity of their party. In the Berlin parliament their plurality topped their comrades’ in Vienna. No less than 35 percent of all Reichstag deputies wore the red ribbon in their lapels. In France, the people would go to the polls on May 10; all signs pointed to a Socialist triumph bound to reduce the three-year conscription. In Russia the Tsar must face strikes spreading to armament factories.

Socialist advances elsewhere would soon stare Austro-Marxism in the face. It was in Vienna that the leaders of Europe’s proletariats were to convene for the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Socialist International. Their meeting was scheduled to begin on August 23 at the Grosser Musikvereinssaal, with Viktor Adler as host.

The prospect charged Adler’s agenda in the spring of 1914. It was time to overcome the insulation of his Party; to show comrades abroad and at home that Austrian Socialism could contribute crucially to the International’s chorus: “More Bread, Fewer Guns, No War!”

For such a purpose, May Day of 1914 would be an exhilarating reveille. Most of Viktor Adler’s politics appealed to the intellect. But May Day spoke to the body’s sensuousness. Therefore it was only appropriate that Viktor Adler had invented the May Day March in the apartment later occupied by Sigmund Freud at Berggasse 19: May Day stoked the Socialist libido. The great march ritualized and rhapsodized ideals presented by the Party much more soberly during the rest of the year. In brief, May Day’s Apollonian orderliness had always carried Dionysian voltage. No wonder that the sight of the march had overwhelmed Hitler at twenty-three, or that its memory in Hitler’s brain would later set brown-shirted ecstatics goose-stepping behind the swastika. No wonder May Day had electrified Gustav Mahler, Viktor Adler’s cohort in their Nietzschean salad days. As Socialist leader, Viktor Adler defined May Day as a “waking call.” As mature composer, Mahler intended to title his Third Symphony The Gay Science (in tribute to Nietzsche’s book of the



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